If you've got electric heating, that bill looks reasonable enough to me.
You've been charged for an average of 21.75 kWh per day. That's equivalent to having just a two-bar electric fire (or its more modern equivalent) heating a single room for around 10 hours each day, plus some additional usage for lighting, using your computer, boiling kettles, using a washing machine, keeping a fridge running, etc.
The rate per hour looks to be a highly competitive one at just 9.5 cents per kWh. (Many UK tariffs are at around 15p or 16p per kWh).
The standing charge at 76 cents per day, which you'd have to pay even if you'd used no electricity at all, accounts for just over a quarter of what you've been charged for the 71 days.
Based upon that bill alone, your electricity usage is equivalent to €256.34 per quarter, or €85.45 per month, but that's for one of the dearest periods of the year (assuming that your home is heated by electricity). Your actual average figure throughout the year will be significantly lower than that. My average bill per month for electricity is around £100 (for a 1-bedroom starter home, occupied throughout the day) but I obviously expect to pay quite a bit more than that during the colder months (and quite a bit less in the summer).