A tonne is a measure of mass so there can be no such thing as a cubic tonne.
petroleum typically has a density of 0.8 so 1/0.8 = 1.25 cubic metres
The conversion from cubic meters to tons depends on the density of the material you are measuring. Without that information, it's not possible to convert directly from cubic meters to tons.
1 cubic metre of water weighs a tonne.
One tonne in cubic metres is equal to 2.831684659 cubic
There can be no such measure as a cubic tonne: that is mass cubed and you would probably need 12 dimensional space for that!
Here is an answer only possible when water is assumed. 1 cubic meter of pure water weighs 1 tonne. 1 tonne is 1 cubic meter. 2000 tonnes are 2000 cubic meters.
You mean a cubic metre. It depends on the type of soil and how wet it is. Sand, wet - 1.92 tonne/cubic metre Sand, wet, packed - 2.08 tonne/cubic metre Sand, dry - 1.60 tonne/cubic metre Sand, loose - 1.44 tonne/cubic metre Sand, rammed - 1.68 tonne/cubic metre You can measure it yourself on a small scale, because gram/cubic centimetre is the same as tonne/cubic metre. So one cc of wet sand weighs about 1.92 grams.
A tonne is a measure of weight A cubic meter is a measure of volume There is no direct conversion. They are related by the density of the substance, the greater the density, the smaller 1 tonne will take up, for example 1 tonne of Hydrogen takes about 11000 m3 whereas 1 tonne of mercury takes about 0.074 m3.
1 tonne
The question as stated makes no sense. a cubic foot is a measure of volume; a tonne is a measure of weight. The two are related by density = weight ÷ volume => volume = weight ÷ density So the number of cubic feet (an imperial measure) in 1 tonne (a metric measure) all depends upon the density of the substance weighing 1 tonne - Mercury is many times more dense than Hydrogen and so 1 tonne of Mercury will be much smaller in cubic feet than 1 tonne of Hydrogen.
1.5 tonne