Sunday, May 05, 2019

Why Your Gasoline Won’t Take You as Far as It Used To - by Robert Rapier


The EIA doesn’t directly tabulate the energy content of gasoline.  But they do provide two pieces of data that let us calculate it ourselves from two relevant tables in the April 2019 Monthly Energy Review.

Table 3.5 provides Petroleum Products Supplied by Type in thousands of barrels per day, while Table 3.6 provides Heat Content of Petroleum Products Supplied by Type in trillion Btus per year.


 The energy content of gasoline 1949-2018 Desktop: (Credit: oilprice.com) Click to Enlarge.
From the annual numbers, doing the appropriate conversions (which includes accounting for leap years) provides the energy content of gasoline, in BTUs per gallon, since 1949.  What we find is that the EIA reported a constant energy content of gasoline from 1949 to 1992 of 125,071 Btu/gallon. I have always typically used 125,000 Btu/gal as the standard value for gasoline.

The energy content of gasoline
Starting in 1993, the EIA shows the energy content start to decline.  The decline accelerates in 2006.  What happened then? I have seen two explanations floated.

I have heard some suggest that the shale oil boom in the U.S., which created an abundance of light oil, ultimately lowered the BTU value of gasoline.  This is unlikely for a couple of reasons.

First, to change the energy content of gasoline you must change the composition.  As I explained in a previous article, adding butane is a recipe change that takes place seasonally.  It impacts the vapor pressure of the gasoline, but it also impacts the energy content.  Butane has an energy content of 103,000 BTU/gal, so the more butane, the lower the energy content of the gasoline blend.  This means that winter gasoline, which contains more butane, has a lower energy content.

But the other reason that shale oil can’t be the culprit is that U.S. oil production didn’t start to move higher until 2009.  By then, the EIA was already reporting that U.S. gasoline’s energy content had fallen to 121,167 BTU/gal.

Read more at Why Your Gasoline Won’t Take You as Far as It Used To

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