Maps and Data - Fuel Use by Transportation Mode in 2019
Find maps and charts showing transportation data and trends related to alternative fuels and vehicles.
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119 results
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Alternative Fueling Stations
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U.S. Private Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure
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U.S. Public and Private Alternative Fueling Stations by Fuel Type
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U.S. Public and Private Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure
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U.S. Public Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Idle Reduction
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Clean Cities and Communities Energy Use Impact through Idle Reduction
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Transportation Infrastructure
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Miles of U.S. Transportation Infrastructure in 2021
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Biofuels Production
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Global Ethanol Production by Country or Region
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Legislated Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) Volume Requirements
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Renewable Fuel RFS2 Mandates and Net RINs Generated
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RFS2 Mandates and Net RINs Generated for Cellulosic Biofuels
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Total Advanced Biofuel RFS2 Mandates and Net RINs Generated
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Total RFS2 Mandates and Net RINs Generated
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U.S. Biodiesel Production, Exports, and Consumption
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U.S. Corn Production and Portion Used for Fuel Ethanol
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U.S. Corn Use by Market Year
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U.S. Ethanol Plants, Capacity, and Production
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U.S. Production, Consumption, and Trade of Ethanol
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U.S. Soybean and Corn Prices
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Vehicles
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Efficiency Ratios for Light-Duty All-Electric Vehicles in the United States
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Electric Vehicle Registrations by State
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TransAtlas
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Vehicles: AFVs and HEVs
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AFV Acquisitions by Regulated Fleets (by Fleet Type)
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AFV Acquisitions by Regulated Fleets (by Fuel Type)
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AFV and HEV Model Offerings, by Manufacturer
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Annual Vehicle Credits Earned and Used by Regulated Fleets
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Fuel Use by Transportation Mode in 2019
Source: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Transportation Energy Data Book #40, Table 2.8
This chart shows the fuel used for domestic transportation in the United States. The largest amount is used in the form of gasoline by light-duty vehicles. The second largest portion is used in the form of diesel fuel in medium- and heavy-duty vehicles. Air travel consumes 7% of transportation petroleum, primarily in the form of jet fuel. Water and rail travel together consume 5% in the form of diesel fuel and some gasoline and electricity. Finally, pipelines consume 3% of transportation fuel, mostly in the form of natural gas.
To view more details, notes, and acronyms, please download the Excel spreadsheet.
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