Maps and Data - Average Fuel Consumption at Increasing Road Grades
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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Average Fuel Consumption at Increasing Road Grades
-5% | -4% | -3% | -2% | -1% | 0% | 1% | 2% | 3% | 4% | 5% | |
Midsize Sedan CV | 2.212322749812019 | 2.36766164522267 | 2.495770064622012 | 2.636553348642097 | 2.982695746841343 | 3.213049168323817 | 3.794709942123399 | 4.368556382225906 | 5.025996675413267 | 5.585506182994677 | 6.114217819808835 |
Midsize Sedan HEV | 0.06471518799422755 | 0.1207160001492086 | 0.3871097988083085 | 0.852631071086249 | 1.477828516727381 | 1.982395144086719 | 2.459731696562222 | 3.064530212926774 | 3.664884515843766 | 4.231399756380166 | 4.901545916710673 |
SUV CV | 3.065539608604173 | 3.273855523510499 | 3.420836190911564 | 3.589394941202374 | 4.033754789367468 | 4.324228778886487 | 5.127724528576058 | 5.91483125776826 | 6.82831985483853 | 7.612961459419679 | 8.318293132500528 |
SUV HEV | 0.1473609150416523 | 0.2839799317354622 | 0.7415337357049412 | 1.401011103070829 | 2.27142620109198 | 2.995425496301589 | 3.654543601245803 | 4.495553904190317 | 5.301192512295914 | 6.067823170637369 | 7.027572988237496 |
Midsize Sedan BEV | 0.06835185897300808 | 0.09554780711770813 | 0.1870588137526468 | 0.3370352002267759 | 0.5681504177346842 | 0.7592989231518441 | 0.9200317010408517 | 1.136251942986255 | 1.336960439408474 | 1.515825263612701 | 1.777452401046374 |
Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory: Contribution of Road Grade to the Energy Use of Modern Automobiles Across Large Datasets of Real-World Drive Cycles, January 2014.
Notes: The majority of available data were for the 0% road grade. The amount of data tapers off with grade until it is not significant at 6% grade.
This chart shows how many gallons (in gasoline gallon equivalents [GGEs]) five different vehicle types consume over 100 miles as the road grade increases from -5% to 5%. As the hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) and battery electric vehicles (BEVs) go downhill, their consumption drops to zero gallons per hundred miles as a result of their regenerative braking systems. In contrast, the conventional vehicles (CVs) still consume fuel at -5% grade. On an uphill grade, all cars consume more fuel than at a 0% grade. For HEVs and BEVs, fuel consumption increases steadily as road grade increases from -3% to 5%. On the other hand, conventional vehicle consumption increases steadily as the grade changes from downhill to flat, and then drastically increases on uphill grades. Both conventional and hybrid SUVs were more affected by incline than their sedan counterparts, most likely because they are heavier.
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