About 142.5 billion gallons of gasoline are used each year in the United States. This represents 392 million gallons per day.
This is based on an estimated figure of 9.12 million barrels per day, 43 gallons per barrel, 365 days in a year.
Take the car you drive, miles you drive per year, mileage of the vehicle divided into total miles will give you gallons used.6,000 miles driven by a car getting 30 mpg means it used 200 gallons.
146/9=16.216.2x14=227.1Your answer is: 227.1
Estimate 30 mpg
179/6.04 = 29.63 mpg
Brenda is driving her car on a trip. She has already driven 84 miles. Her car gets 20 miles per gallon of gasoline. the total number of miles she traveled can be modeled by the equation m= 84 + 20g, where m is the total number of miles traveled and g is the number of gallons of gasoline used after traveling 84 miles. Graph the equation. How many miles she travel used 7 1/2 gallons of gasoline?
depends
The U.S consumed about 64.3 billion gallons of finished motor gasoline in 2008. There are approximately 43 gallons of motor gasoline per barrel (and 19.6 gallons can be refined from each barrel of crude oil). This statistic does not include other distillates such as jet fuel and heating oil. The estimated use by the US Department of Energy was higher: For 2010, it was estimated at 138 billion gallons. For 2011, projected use was 142 billion gallons (9.12 million barrels a day).
According to the Florida department of environmental studies, Florida used about 8,406.2 in millions gallons of gasoline in 2007. This was actually a 2.4% drop from previous years!
Gallons of gasoline will be used to measure the English system. Liters in the metric system.
The entire barrel is used and each barrel produces about 19.6 gallons of gasoline. Each barrel contains 42 gallons of crude oil.
Divide the number of miles travelled by the number of gallons of gasoline used.
It depends on what fluid you have. If it's water, it's about 435.9 gallons, depending on temperature. If you have that weight of gasoline, it's be more gallons, because gasoline is relatively light. If it's carbon tetrachloride (a solvent used for cleaning), it'd be fewer gallons. A 55-gallon drum of water weighs 458 pounds plus tare. Fill that same drum with gasoline and it's 336 pounds. Carbon tet and it's 733 pounds, more than twice as much as gasoline. And if it was mercury, it'd be REALLY heavy. Don't drop that drum on your toes!
Actually, all 42 gallons of crude oil in a barrel is used to produce that amount of gasoline.Each 42-gallon barrel of oil produces about 19.6 gallons of gasoline.
215 divided by 30 = 7.166 gallons of fuel used.
My old truck gets about 10 mpg, that is 1/10 of a gallon used per mile.
The official statistics according to the EIA (Energy Information Administration) are that the US uses 9,253,000 barrels/day or 388.6 million gallons/day.
The U.S. uses 46% of the total worldwide use of gasoline. The US consumes 400 million gallons of gasoline per day. That translates to about 869 million gallons consumed worlwide per day.