Fuel Energy Content

Comparing Gasoline, Diesel, and Other Fuels

Compare Fuels

Why does a diesel truck get better mileage than a gasoline one? Why do electric cars use "MPGe" instead of MPG? The answer lies in energy content—different fuels pack different amounts of energy per gallon, pound, or cubic foot. Understanding fuel energy content helps compare vehicles, heating systems, and energy costs.

Liquid Fuels Energy Content

FuelBTU/GallonMJ/LiterkWh/Gallon
Gasoline (regular)120,28634.233.4
Gasoline (premium)121,46334.533.7
Diesel (#2)137,38138.638.2
Biodiesel (B100)126,20635.737.0
Ethanol (E100)84,53023.424.8
E85 (85% ethanol)90,66025.626.6
Propane (LPG)91,50225.426.8
Heating oil138,50038.740.6
Jet fuel (Jet A)128,10035.037.5

Gaseous Fuels Energy Content

FuelBTU/UnitMJ/UnitkWh/Unit
Natural gas (per therm)100,000105.529.3
Natural gas (per CCF)103,000108.730.2
Natural gas (per cubic ft)1,0301.090.302
Propane (per gallon)91,50296.526.8
Hydrogen (per kg)134,000141.439.3
Compressed natural gas (GGE)*120,000126.635.2

*GGE = Gasoline Gallon Equivalent

Solid Fuels Energy Content

FuelBTU/lbMJ/kgkWh/kg
Anthracite coal12,000-13,00030-328.3-8.9
Bituminous coal10,500-12,50026-317.2-8.6
Sub-bituminous coal8,000-10,00020-255.6-6.9
Lignite5,000-7,00012-173.3-4.7
Wood (air dried)6,400154.2
Wood pellets8,00018.65.2

Why Energy Content Matters

Vehicle Fuel Efficiency

A diesel vehicle getting 35 MPG actually travels further per BTU than a gasoline car at 30 MPG:

  • Diesel: 35 miles ÷ 137,381 BTU = 0.000255 miles/BTU
  • Gasoline: 30 miles ÷ 120,286 BTU = 0.000249 miles/BTU

The diesel is 2.4% more efficient per unit of energy, not just per gallon.

Heating Cost Comparison

To deliver 1 million BTU of heat:

FuelAmount NeededCost*
Natural gas10 therms~$12
Propane10.9 gallons~$33
Heating oil7.2 gallons~$29
Electricity293 kWh~$35

*Approximate 2024 prices, varies by region

Energy Density Comparison

Energy density (energy per unit weight) affects what fuels are practical for different uses:

FuelMJ/kgUse Case
Hydrogen142Highest by weight; hard to store
Gasoline46Cars, aircraft
Diesel45Trucks, ships, generators
Jet fuel43Aircraft
Natural gas55Heating, power plants
Lithium battery0.5-1EVs (low energy density)

Batteries store ~50× less energy per kg than gasoline—why EVs need heavy battery packs.

Converting Between Fuels

Gasoline Gallon Equivalents (GGE)

FuelAmount = 1 GGE
Gasoline1 gallon
Diesel0.88 gallons
Ethanol (E100)1.42 gallons
E851.33 gallons
Propane1.31 gallons
Natural gas126.67 cubic feet
Electricity33.7 kWh

Conclusion

Different fuels contain vastly different amounts of energy. Diesel packs about 14% more energy per gallon than gasoline; ethanol has about 30% less. Understanding these differences helps you compare fuel costs, vehicle efficiency, and heating options on an equal energy basis rather than just price per gallon.

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