2 million
Wrong...
10000 mt = 10,000,000 kg
gasoline weighs .75 kg /l
10000000/.75 = 13,333,333.333333 liters
Only when you mean pure water (!) you can say 1,000 litres weigh 1 metric tonne. 10,000 metric tonnes of water are10,000,000 litres. Don't use this conversion for gasoline!
10000 l
4
About 300 million metric tones per annum
1,183 litres of jet fuel in a metric tonne
1 cm3 = 1 mL 1 mL = 0.001 L 10000 cm3 = 10000 mL 10000 mL = 10 L
One thousand.
Approximately 1.27 metric tons of Low Pour Fuel Oil (LPFO) is equivalent to 1,000 liters.
No. Liters are metric and cups are English. You can't divide them evenly into each other.
A comma has nothing to do with the metric system. You put it there to make it easier to read large strings of digits. Alternatively, you could use spaces or other "delimiters". 10000 = 10,000 = 10 000 etc.
The density of petrol is approximately 0.75 kilograms per liter. To convert metric tons to kilograms, we multiply by 1000. Therefore, 1 metric ton is equivalent to 1000 kilograms. To find the volume in liters, we divide the mass in kilograms by the density in kilograms per liter. Thus, 1 metric ton of petrol is approximately equal to 1333.33 liters.
Ah, metric tons and liters, what a wonderful combination! You see, a metric ton is equal to 1000 kilograms, and 1 liter of Palm Olein weighs about 0.9 kilograms. So, in a metric ton, you would have roughly 1111 liters of Palm Olein. Isn't that just a happy little calculation?