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Miles per gallon gasoline equivalent

Miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (MPGe or MPGge) is a measure of the average distance traveled per unit of energy consumed. MPGe is used by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to compare energy consumption of alternative fuel vehicles, plug-in electric vehicles and other advanced technology vehicles with the energy consumption[1] of conventional internal combustion vehicles rated in miles per U.S. gallon.[2][3]

Monroney label showing the EPA's fuel economy equivalent ratings for the 2011 Chevrolet Volt. The rating for all-electric mode (left) is expressed in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (mpg).

The unit of energy consumed is deemed to be 33.7 kilowatt-hours without regard to the efficiency of conversion of heat energy into electrical energy, also measured in kilowatt-hours (kWh). The equivalence of this unit to energy in a gallon of gasoline is true if and only if the heat engine, generating equipment, and power delivery to the car battery are 100% efficient. Actual heat engines differ vastly from this assumption.

MPGe does not necessarily represent an equivalency in the operating costs between alternative fuel vehicles and the MPG rating of internal combustion engine vehicles due to the wide variation in costs for the fuel sources regionally[4][5] since the EPA assumes prices that represents the national averages.[6][7] Miles per gallon equivalent cost for alternate fuel can be calculated with a simple conversion to the conventional mpg (miles per gallon, miles/gal). See conversion to MPG by cost below.

The MPGe metric was introduced in November 2010 by EPA in the Monroney sticker of the Nissan Leaf electric car and the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid. The ratings are based on EPA's formula, in which 33.7 kWh (121 MJ) of electricity is equivalent to one (U.S.) gallon of gasoline,[8] and the energy consumption of each vehicle during EPA's five standard drive cycle tests simulating varying driving conditions.[9][10] All new cars and light-duty trucks sold in the U.S. are required to have this label showing the EPA's estimate of fuel economy of the vehicle.[3]

In a joint ruling issued in May 2011 the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and EPA established the new requirements for a fuel economy and environment label that is mandatory for all new passenger cars and trucks starting with model year 2013. This ruling uses miles per gallon gasoline equivalent for all fuel and advanced technology vehicles available in the U.S. market including plug-in hybrids, electric vehicles, flexible-fuel vehicles, hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, natural gas vehicles, diesel-powered vehicles, and gasoline-powered vehicles.[11][12] In addition to being displayed on new vehicles, fuel economy ratings are used by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to publish the annual Fuel Economy Guide; the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to administer the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) program; and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to collect gas guzzler taxes.[3]

Fuel economy estimates for window stickers and CAFE standard compliance are different. The EPA MPGe rating shown in the Monroney label is based on the consumption of the on-board energy content stored in the fuel tank or in the vehicle's battery, or any other energy source, and only represents the tank-to-wheel energy consumption. CAFE estimates are based on a well-to-wheel basis and in the case of liquid fuels and electric drive vehicles also account for the energy consumed upstream to produce the fuel or electricity and deliver it to the vehicle. Fuel economy for CAFE purposes include an incentive adjustment for alternative fuel vehicles and plug-in electric vehicles which results in higher MPGe than those estimated for window stickers.[13][14]

Background edit

1988: Alternative Motor Fuels Act edit

The Alternative Motor Fuels Act (AMFA) enacted in 1988[15] provides Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) incentives for manufacturing alternative fuel vehicles (AFVs) that are powered by ethanol, methanol, or natural gas fuels, either exclusively or in conjunction with gasoline or diesel fuel. These dual-fuel vehicles also are known as flexible-fuel vehicles (FFVs). To provide incentives for the widespread use of these fuels and to promote the production of AFVs and FFVs, AMFA grants AFV/FFV manufacturers CAFE credits, which allows them to raise their overall fleet fuel economy levels to comply with the CAFE standards.[16][17]

Beginning in 1993, manufacturers of qualified AFVs can improve their CAFE estimation by computing the weighted average of the fuel economy when operating on conventional fuel (gasoline and diesel) and when operating on alternative fuel(s).[16]: 9–10  AMFA provides the following energy content-based equivalency factors:[15]: §513 

  • 1 gal (alcohol) = 0.15 gal (gasoline)
  • 100 ft3 (natural gas) = 0.823 gal-equivalent (natural gas)
    • 1 gal-equivalent (natural gas) = 0.15 gal (gasoline)

A dedicated AFV which operates solely on alcohol would divide the alcohol fuel economy by the energy-equivalency factor of 0.15. As an example, a dedicated AFV that achieves 15 mpg fuel economy while operating on alcohol would have a CAFE calculated as follows:[16]: 10 

 

For FFVs, an assumption is made that the vehicles would operate 50% of the time on the alternative fuel and 50% of the time on conventional fuel, resulting in a fuel economy that is based on a harmonic average of alternative fuel and conventional fuel. For example, for an alternative dual-fuel model that achieves 15 miles per gallon operating on an alcohol fuel and 25 mpg on the conventional fuel, the resulting CAFE would be:[16]: 10 

 

Calculation of fuel economy for natural gas vehicles is similar. For the purposes of this calculation, the fuel economy is equal to the weighted average of the fuel economy while operating on natural gas and while operating on either gasoline or diesel fuel. AMFA specifies the energy content of 100 cubic feet of natural gas to be equal to 0.823 gallons-equivalent of natural gas, and the gallon equivalency of natural gas is considered to have a fuel content, similar to that for alcohol fuels, equal to 0.15 gallons of fuel. For example, under this conversion and gallon equivalency, a dedicated natural gas vehicle that achieves 25 miles per 100 cubic feet of natural gas would have a CAFE value as follows:[16]: 10 

 

The Energy Policy Act of 1992 expanded the definition of alternative fuel to include liquefied petroleum gas, hydrogen, liquid fuels derived from coal and biological materials, electricity and any other fuel that the Secretary of Transportation determines to be substantially non-petroleum based and has environmental and energy security benefits. Beginning in 1993, manufacturers of these other alternative fuel automobiles that meet the qualifying requirements can also benefit for special treatment in the calculation of their CAFE.[17]

1994: Gasoline gallon equivalent edit

In 1994 the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) introduced gasoline gallon equivalent (GGE) as a metric for fuel economy for natural gas vehicles. NIST defined a gasoline gallon equivalent (GGE) as 5.660 pounds of natural gas, and gasoline liter equivalent (GLE) as 0.678 kilograms of natural gas.[18]

2000: Petroleum-equivalent fuel economy edit

Energy efficiency for selected electric cars leased in California between 1996 and 2003
Vehicle Model year Type of battery Energy use (kWh/mile) Energy efficiency (miles/kWh) Energy efficiency (MPGe, miles/33.7 kWh)
GM EV1[19] 1997 Lead acid 0.164 6.10 205[note 1]
GM EV1[20] 1999 NiMH 0.179 5.59 188[note 1]
Toyota RAV4 EV[21] 1996 Lead acid 0.235 4.28 143
Toyota RAV4 EV[22] 2000 NiMH 0.400 2.50 84
Ford Ranger EV[23] 1998 Lead acid 0.337 2.98 100
Chevrolet S-10 EV[24] 1997 Lead acid 0.292 3.42 115

During the late 1990s and early 2000s several electric cars were produced in limited quantities as a result of the California Air Resources Board (CARB) mandate for more fuel-efficient zero-emissions vehicles. Popular models available in California included the General Motors EV1 and the Toyota RAV4 EV.[25][26] The U.S. DoE and EPA rating for on board energy efficiency for these electric vehicles was expressed as kilowatt hour/mile (KWh/mi), the most commonly known metric in science and engineering for measuring energy consumption, and used as the billing unit for energy delivered to consumers by electric utilities.[27]

In order to address the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) regulations mandated by the U.S. Congress in 1975, the U.S. Department of Energy established in July 2000 a methodology for calculating the petroleum-equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles on a well-to-wheel basis. The methodology considers the upstream efficiency of the processes involved in the two fuel cycles. The energy content of gasoline is reduced from 33,705 Wh/gal to 83% of that, or about 27,975 Wh/gal well-to-tank, to account for the energy used in refinement and distribution. Similarly, the energy value for electricity produced from fossil fuel is reduced to 30.3% due to energy lost in generation and transmission, according to the national average. This is normalized to the previous gasoline value, resulting in a well-to-vehicle gasoline-equivalent energy content of electricity of only 12,307 Wh/gal.[14]

The formula also includes a "fuel content factor" of 1/0.15 (about 6.667) to benefit electric vehicles, raising the value from 12,307 to 82,049 Wh/gal. This reward factor is intended provide an incentive for vehicle manufactures to produce and sell electric vehicles, as a higher equivalent fuel economy for EVs improves the carmaker overall fleet fuel economy levels in complying with the CAFE standards, and Congress anticipated that such an incentive would help accelerate the commercialization of electric vehicles. The incentive factor chosen by DoE for EVs is the same 1/0.15 factor already applied in the regulatory treatment of other types of alternative fuel vehicles.[14] When all factors are considered in DoE's formula, the energy efficiency or equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles increases, being calculated in miles per the petroleum-equivalency factor of 82,049 Wh/gal rather than miles per the usual gasoline gallon equivalent of 33,705 Wh/gallon, for the purposes of CAFE credits to manufacturers.[27]

2007: X Prize edit

The Automotive X Prize competition was intended to encourage development of automobiles that would be capable of operating 100 miles on a gallon of gasoline (mpg). Comparison of electric vehicles to vehicles that carried their own engine was debated, since the notion of a miles per gallon equivalent as a metric for electric vehicles made the competition trivial for electric vehicles and a corresponding miles per gallon as a metric for the others extremely difficult for the others. Miastrada Company made the case that this defeated the purpose of the competition, to no avail. In April 2007, as part of Draft Competition Guidelines released at the New York Auto Show, MPGe was announced as the main merit metric for the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize, a competition developed by the X Prize Foundation for super-efficient vehicles that can achieve at least 100 MPGe.[28] In February 2009, Consumer Reports announced that, as part of a partnership with the X Prize Foundation, they planned to report MPGe as one of several measures that will help consumers understand and compare vehicle efficiency for alternative fuel vehicles.[29]

2010–2011: Miles per gallon equivalent edit

 
Old Monroney label for electric cars showing in prominent larger font the fuel economy rating in kWh/100 miles for the 2009 Mini E
 
New Monroney label for electric cars showing in prominent larger font the fuel economy rating in miles per USgallon gasoline equivalent for the 2011 Nissan Leaf. The rating in kWh/100 miles is shown below MPG-e in smaller font.

As required by the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA), with the introduction of advanced-technology vehicles in the U.S. new information should be incorporated in the Monroney label of new cars and light-duty trucks sold in the country, such as ratings on fuel economy, greenhouse gas emissions, and other air pollutants. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) have conducted a series of studies to determine the best way to redesign this label to provide consumers with simple energy and environmental comparisons across all vehicles types, including battery electric vehicles (BEV), plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV), and conventional internal combustion engine vehicles powered by gasoline and diesel, in order to help consumers choose more efficient and environmentally friendly vehicles. These changes were proposed to be introduced in new vehicles beginning with model year 2012.[3][30]

The EPA rating for on board energy efficiency for electric vehicles before 2010 was expressed as kilowatt hour per 100 miles (kWh/100 mi).[27][31] For example, the window sticker of the 2009 Mini E showed an energy consumption of 33 kWh/100 mi for city driving and 36 kWh/100 mi on the highway, technically equivalent to 100 mpg‑e city and 94 mpg‑e highway.[31] Similarly, the 2009 Tesla Roadster was rated 32 kWh/100 mi (110 mpg‑e) in city and 33 kWh/100 mi (100 mpg‑e) on the highway.[32][33]

As part of the research and redesign process, EPA conducted focus groups where participants were presented with several options to express the consumption of electricity for plug-in electric vehicles. The research showed that participants did not understand the concept of a kilowatt hour as a measure of electric energy use despite the use of this unit in their monthly electric bills. Instead, participants favored a miles per gallon equivalent, MPGe, as the metric to compare with the familiar miles per gallon used for gasoline vehicles. The research also concluded that the kWh per 100 miles metric was more confusing to focus group participants compared to a miles per kWh. Based on these results, EPA decided to use the following fuel economy and fuel consumption metrics on the redesigned labels: MPG (city and highway, and combined); MPGe (city and highway, and combined); Gallons per 100 miles; kWh per 100 miles.[30]

The proposed design and final content for two options of the new sticker label that would be introduced in 2013 model year cars and trucks were consulted for 60 days with the public in 2010, and both include miles per gallon equivalent and kWh per 100 miles as the fuel economy metrics for plug-in cars, but in one option MPGe and annual electricity cost are the two most prominent metrics.[34][35] In November 2010, EPA introduced MPGe as comparison metric on its new sticker for fuel economy for the Nissan Leaf and the Chevrolet Volt.[9][10]

 
Typical label for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles expressed in MPGe, mandatory starting with 2013 model year

In May 2011, the NHTSA and EPA issued a joint final rule establishing new requirements for a fuel economy and environment label that is mandatory for all new passenger cars and trucks starting with model year 2013. The ruling includes new labels for alternative fuel and alternative propulsion vehicles available in the US market, such as plug-in hybrids, electric vehicles, flexible-fuel vehicles, hydrogen fuel cell vehicle, and natural gas vehicles.[11][12] The common fuel economy metric adopted to allow the comparison of alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles with conventional internal combustion engine vehicles is miles per gallon of gasoline equivalent (MPGe). A gallon of gasoline equivalent means the number of kilowatt hours of electricity, cubic feet of compressed natural gas (CNG), or kilograms of hydrogen that is equal to the energy in a gallon of gasoline.[11]

The new labels also show for the first time an estimate of how much fuel or electricity it takes to drive 100 miles (160 km), introducing to U.S. consumers with fuel consumption per distance traveled, a metric commonly used in other countries. EPA explained that the objective is to avoid the traditional miles per gallon metric that can be potentially misleading when consumers compare fuel economy improvements, and known as the "MPG illusion".[11]

As mentioned above, confusion and misinterpretation is common in the public between the two types of "fuel efficiency". Fuel economy measures how far a vehicle will go per amount of fuel (units of MPGe). Fuel consumption is the reciprocal of fuel economy, and measures the fuel used to drive a fixed distance (units of gal/100 miles or kWh/100 miles).[36] The unit of Gal/100 miles is accurately described as fuel consumption in some EPA brochures, but this unit appears in the fuel economy section of the Monroney label (which does not use the term fuel consumption).[37][38]

Description edit

The miles per gallon gasoline equivalent is based on the energy content of gasoline. The energy obtainable from burning one US gallon of gasoline is 115,000 BTU, 33.70 kWh, or 121.3 MJ.[8]

To convert the mile per gallon rating into other units of distance per unit energy used, the mile per gallon value can be multiplied by one of the following factors to obtain other units:

1 MPGe ≈ 1 mi/(33.70 kW·h)
≈ 8.696  mi/(million BTU)
≈ 0.02967 mi/kW·h
≈ 0.04775 km/kW·h
≈ 0.013 km/MJ

Conversion to MPGe edit

MPGe is determined by converting the vehicle consumption per unit distance, as determined through computer modeling or completion of an actual driving cycle, from its native units into a gasoline energy equivalent. Examples of native units include W·h for electric vehicles, kg-H
2
for hydrogen vehicles, gallons for biodiesel or liquefied natural gas vehicles, cubic feet for compressed natural gas vehicles, and pounds for propane or Liquefied petroleum gas vehicles. Special cases for specific alternative fuels are discussed below, but a general formula for MPGe is:

 

For EPA, this considers the tank-to-wheel for liquids and wall-to-wheel energy consumption for electricity, i.e. it measures the energy for which the owner usually pays. For EVs the energy cost includes the conversions from AC to charge the battery.[39] The EPA MPGe ratings displayed in window stickers do not account for the energy consumption upstream, which includes the energy or fuel required to generate the electricity or to extract and produce the liquid fuel; the energy losses due to power transmission; or the energy consumed for the transportation of the fuel from the well to the station.[14][40]

Basic values for the energy content of various fuels are given by the defaults used in the Department of Energy GREET (Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy used in Transportation) model,[41] as follows:

Note: 1 kWh is equivalent to 3,412 BTU

Fuel Unit Energy/unit GGE
gasoline gallon 116,090 BTU (34.02 kWh) 1.0000
diesel gallon 129,488 BTU (37.95 kWh) 0.8965
biodiesel gallon 119,550 BTU (35.04 kWh) 0.9711
ethanol gallon 76,330 BTU (22.37 kWh) 1.5209
E85 gallon 82,000 BTU (24.03 kWh) 1.4157
CNG 100 SCF 98,300 BTU (28.81 kWh) 1.181
H
2
KG 114,000 BTU (33.41 kWh) 1.0183
LPG gallon 84,950 BTU (24.90 kWh) 1.3666
methanol gallon 57,250 BTU (16.78 kWh) 2.0278

The energy content of a particular fuel can vary somewhat given its specific chemistry and production method. For example, in the new efficiency ratings that have been developed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for battery electric vehicles (BEVs) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) – see below – the energy content of a gallon of gasoline is assumed to be 114,989.12 BTU or 33.7 kWh.[8]

Conversion to MPG by cost edit

The miles per gallon equivalent cost of an alternative fuel vehicle can be calculated by a simple formula to directly compare the MPG operating costs (rather than the energy consumption of MPGe[7]) with traditional vehicles since the cost of resources varies substantially from region to region.[5][4] For reference, the complete equation is:

 

Also for those that prefer kWh/100 mi an equivalent is simply:

 

This equation reduces down to a simple formula that works with only the capacity of the fuel source and its possible range to compare vehicles. With your local rates for gasoline and your fuel source you can easily compare your alternative fuel vehicle operating cost directly with a gasoline engine model with the following:

 

The formula includes the inherent efficiency of the vehicle as the range capability of a specific fuel source capacity directly represents the EPA testing, it then becomes universal regardless of weight, vehicle size, co-efficient of drag, rolling resistance as these directly influence the range possible and are accounted for. Driving style and weather conditions can be accounted for by using the achieved range instead of the advertised range for the calculation.

The formula works by deriving how much alternative fuel can be purchased for the cost of a gallon of gasoline, creating a ratio of this quantity to the storage capacity of the vehicle, and then multiplies this ratio by the vehicle's possible range. The result is number of miles the vehicle travels on alternative fuel for the same cost of a single gallon of gasoline.

The end computation results in MPG unit and is directly comparable to a standard internal combustion engine vehicle's fuel costs for its rated MPG.

Examples edit

The formula with the correct units for a BEV or PHEV in all electric mode is like this.

 

Using EPA 2018 Fuel Economy Guides assumptions for national average pricing of $2.56/gal regular gasoline and $0.13/kWh[42] we can calculate a vehicle that is rated at 84 MPGe or 40 kW/100 Mi efficiency and has a 16.5 kW EV battery of which 13.5 kWh is usable for electric driving with an advertised range of 33 miles per charge.

Note: Using the battery size instead of the usable charge will provide a conservative value. Using actual charge and actual range driven will provide actual economy.

 

Calculate how many kWh per gallon

 

Now the same vehicle where gasoline with worth $3.20/gal and electricity is $0.085/kWh.

 

Calculate how many kWh per gallon

 

Electric and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles edit

 
Monroney label showing the EPA's fuel economy equivalent ratings for the 2011 Smart ED electric car

Between 2008 and 2010 several major automakers began commercializing battery electric vehicles (BEVs), which are powered exclusively on electricity, and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), which use electricity together with a liquid fuel stored in an on-board fuel tank, usually gasoline, but it might be also powered by diesel, ethanol, or flex-fuel engines.

For battery electric vehicles, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's formula to calculate the well-to-wheel MPGe is based on energy standards established by the U.S. Department of Energy in 2000:[2][13][14] The well-to-wheel conversion is used in calculation of corporate-average fuel economy (CAFE) but not for window sticker (Monroney) fuel economy. For Monroney fuel economy the equation is

 

where

  is expressed as miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (as shown in the Monroney label)
  energy content per gallon of gasoline = 115,000 Btu/gallon, as set by U.S. DoE and reported by the Alternative Fuel Data Center.[14]
  wall-to-wheel electrical energy consumed per mile (Wh/mi) as measured through EPA's five standard drive cycle tests for electric cars and SAE test procedures[13][39]
  energy unit conversion factor (rounded) = 3.412 Btu/Wh[14]

The formula employed by the EPA for calculating their rated MPGe does not account for any fuel or energy consumed upstream such as the generation and transmission of electrical power, or well-to-wheel life cycle, as EPA's comparison with internal combustion vehicles is made on a tank-to-wheel versus battery-to wheel basis.

The California Air Resources Board uses a different dynamometer testing than EPA, and considers reformulated gasoline sold in that state. For CARB estimates the formula becomes:[13]

 

The new SAE J1711 standard for measuring the exhaust emissions and fuel economy of hybrid electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids was approved in July 2010. The recommended procedures for PHEVs were revised at Argonne National Laboratory, and EPA's new regulation to define PHEV fuel economy reporting protocol is expected to be based on SAE J1711.[43][44] In November 2010 EPA decided to rate electric mode and gasoline only mode separately, and these are the two figures prominently displayed in the window sticker of the 2011 Chevrolet Volt. In electric mode the Volt's rating is estimated with the same formula as an electric car.[10][13] The overall or composite fuel economy rating combining electricity and gasoline powered are displayed in the Monroney label in a much smaller type, and as part of the comparison of the Volt's fuel economy among all vehicles and within compact cars.[45] EPA has considered several methodologies for rating the overall fuel economy of PHEVs, but as of February 2011 EPA has not announced the final methodology that will be applied for the purposes of estimating the new manufacture's 2012–2016 Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) credits for plug-in hybrids.[13][46]

Examples edit

In November 2010 the EPA began including "MPGe" in its new sticker for fuel economy and environmental comparisons. The EPA rated the Nissan Leaf electric car with a combined fuel economy of 99 MPGe,[9] and rated the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid with a combined fuel economy of 93 MPGe in all-electric mode, 37 MPG when operating with gasoline only, and an overall fuel economy rating of 60 mpg-US (3.9 L/100 km) combining power from electricity and gasoline.[10][45][47] For both vehicles EPA calculated the MPGe rating under its five-cycle tests using the formula displayed earlier with a conversion factor of 33.7 kWh of electricity being the energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline.[10]

All-electric cars edit

The following table compares official EPA ratings for fuel economy (in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent, mpg-e or MPGe, for plug-in electric vehicles) for series production all-electric passenger vehicles rated by the EPA for model years 2015,[48] 2016,[49] 2017,[50] and 2023[51] versus the model year 2016 vehicles that were rated the most efficient by the EPA with plug-in hybrid drivetrains (Chevrolet Volt – second generation), gasoline-electric hybrid drivetrains (Toyota Prius Eco - fourth generation),[52][53][54] and the average new vehicle for that model year, which has a fuel economy of 25 mpg‑US (9.4 L/100 km; 30 mpg‑imp).[49][52]

EPA rating data are taken from manufacturer testing of their own vehicles, usually conducted using pre-production prototypes. Manufacturers report the results to EPA, which reviews the results and confirms about 15%–20% of them through their own tests at the National Vehicles and Fuel Emissions Laboratory.[55]

Comparison of top fuel efficient battery-electric vehicles versus most efficient fossil fuel vehicles (including hybrid-electric vehicles)
(Fuel economy as displayed in the Monroney label)[48][49][50]
Vehicle Model
year
EPA rated fuel economy Notes
Combined City Highway
Toyota Prius HEV[51] 2023 57 mpg 57 mpg 56 mpg (9)
Hyundai Ioniq 6 Long Range AWD w/ 18-inch wheels[51] 2023 140 mpg‑e
24.1 kWh/100 mi; 15.0 kWh/100 km
153 mpg‑e
22.0 kWh/100 mi; 13.7 kWh/100 km
127 mpg‑e
26.5 kWh/100 mi; 16.5 kWh/100 km
(1)
Lucid Air Pure AWD w/ 19-inch wheels[51] 2023 140 mpg‑e
24.1 kWh/100 mi; 15.0 kWh/100 km
141 mpg‑e
23.9 kWh/100 mi; 14.9 kWh/100 km
140 mpg‑e
24.1 kWh/100 mi; 15.0 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model Y AWD[51] 2023 123 mpg‑e
27.4 kWh/100 mi; 17.0 kWh/100 km
129 mpg‑e
26.1 kWh/100 mi; 16.2 kWh/100 km
116 mpg‑e
29.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.1 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model 3[56] Standard Range[57] 2020 141 mpg‑e
23.9 kWh/100 mi; 14.9 kWh/100 km
148 mpg‑e
22.8 kWh/100 mi; 14.2 kWh/100 km
132 mpg‑e
25.5 kWh/100 mi; 15.9 kWh/100 km
(1)
Hyundai Ioniq Electric[50][58] 2017 136 mpg‑e
24.8 kWh/100 mi; 15.4 kWh/100 km
150 mpg‑e
22.5 kWh/100 mi; 14.0 kWh/100 km
122 mpg‑e
27.6 kWh/100 mi; 17.2 kWh/100 km
(1) (4)
BMW i3 (60 A·h)[59][60] 2014/15/16 124 mpg‑e
27.2 kWh/100 mi; 16.9 kWh/100 km
137 mpg‑e
24.6 kWh/100 mi; 15.3 kWh/100 km
111 mpg‑e
30.4 kWh/100 mi; 18.9 kWh/100 km
(1) (3) (4) (5)
Scion iQ EV[61] 2013 121 mpg‑e
27.9 kWh/100 mi; 17.3 kWh/100 km
138 mpg‑e
24.4 kWh/100 mi; 15.2 kWh/100 km
105 mpg‑e
32.1 kWh/100 mi; 19.9 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model 3 Long Range AWD[62] 2020 121 mpg‑e
27.9 kWh/100 mi; 17.3 kWh/100 km
124 mpg‑e
27.2 kWh/100 mi; 16.9 kWh/100 km
116 mpg‑e
29.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.1 kWh/100 km
(1)
Chevrolet Bolt EV[63] 2017 119 mpg‑e
28.3 kWh/100 mi; 17.6 kWh/100 km
121 mpg‑e
27.9 kWh/100 mi; 17.3 kWh/100 km
110 mpg‑e
30.6 kWh/100 mi; 19.0 kWh/100 km
Chevrolet Spark EV[64] 2014/15/16 119 mpg‑e
28.3 kWh/100 mi; 17.6 kWh/100 km
128 mpg‑e
26.3 kWh/100 mi; 16.4 kWh/100 km
109 mpg‑e
30.9 kWh/100 mi; 19.2 kWh/100 km
(1)
BMW i3 (94 A·h)[59] 2017 118 mpg‑e
28.6 kWh/100 mi; 17.7 kWh/100 km
129 mpg‑e
26.1 kWh/100 mi; 16.2 kWh/100 km
106 mpg‑e
31.8 kWh/100 mi; 19.8 kWh/100 km
(1)
Honda Fit EV[65] 2013/14 118 mpg‑e
28.6 kWh/100 mi; 17.7 kWh/100 km
132 mpg‑e
25.5 kWh/100 mi; 15.9 kWh/100 km
105 mpg‑e
32.1 kWh/100 mi; 19.9 kWh/100 km
(1)
Fiat 500e[66] 2013/14/15 116 mpg‑e
29.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.1 kWh/100 km
122 mpg‑e
27.6 kWh/100 mi; 17.2 kWh/100 km
108 mpg‑e
31.2 kWh/100 mi; 19.4 kWh/100 km
(1)
Volkswagen e-Golf[67] 2015/16 116 mpg‑e
29.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.1 kWh/100 km
126 mpg‑e
26.8 kWh/100 mi; 16.6 kWh/100 km
105 mpg‑e
32.1 kWh/100 mi; 19.9 kWh/100 km
(1)
Nissan Leaf (24 kW-h)[68] 2013/14/15/16 114 mpg‑e
29.6 kWh/100 mi; 18.4 kWh/100 km
126 mpg‑e
26.8 kWh/100 mi; 16.6 kWh/100 km
101 mpg‑e
33.4 kWh/100 mi; 20.7 kWh/100 km
(1) (6)
Mitsubishi i[69] 2012/13/14/16 112 mpg‑e
30.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.7 kWh/100 km
126 mpg‑e
26.8 kWh/100 mi; 16.6 kWh/100 km
99 mpg‑e
34.0 kWh/100 mi; 21.2 kWh/100 km
(1)
Nissan Leaf (30 kW-h)[68] 2016 112 mpg‑e
30.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.7 kWh/100 km
124 mpg‑e
27.2 kWh/100 mi; 16.9 kWh/100 km
101 mpg‑e
33.4 kWh/100 mi; 20.7 kWh/100 km
(1)
Fiat 500e[70] 2016 112 mpg‑e
30.1 kWh/100 mi; 18.7 kWh/100 km
121 mpg‑e
27.9 kWh/100 mi; 17.3 kWh/100 km
103 mpg‑e
32.7 kWh/100 mi; 20.3 kWh/100 km
(1)
Smart electric drive[71] 2013/14/15/16 107 mpg‑e
31.5 kWh/100 mi; 19.6 kWh/100 km
122 mpg‑e
27.6 kWh/100 mi; 17.2 kWh/100 km
93 mpg‑e
36.2 kWh/100 mi; 22.5 kWh/100 km
(1) (7)
Kia Soul EV[72] 2015/16 105 mpg‑e
32.1 kWh/100 mi; 19.9 kWh/100 km
120 mpg‑e
28.1 kWh/100 mi; 17.5 kWh/100 km
92 mpg‑e
36.6 kWh/100 mi; 22.8 kWh/100 km
(1)
Ford Focus Electric[73] 2012/13/14/15/16 105 mpg‑e
32.1 kWh/100 mi; 19.9 kWh/100 km
110 mpg‑e
30.6 kWh/100 mi; 19.0 kWh/100 km
99 mpg‑e
34.0 kWh/100 mi; 21.2 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model S AWD - 70D[49][74] 2015/16 101 mpg‑e
33.4 kWh/100 mi; 20.7 kWh/100 km
101 mpg‑e
33.4 kWh/100 mi; 20.7 kWh/100 km
102 mpg‑e
33.0 kWh/100 mi; 20.5 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model S AWD - 85D[49][75] & 90D[49][74] 2015/16 100 mpg‑e
33.7 kWh/100 mi; 20.9 kWh/100 km
95 mpg‑e
35.5 kWh/100 mi; 22.0 kWh/100 km
106 mpg‑e
31.8 kWh/100 mi; 19.8 kWh/100 km
(1) (8)
Tesla Model S (60 kW·h)[49][74] 2014/15/16 95 mpg‑e
35.5 kWh/100 mi; 22.0 kWh/100 km
94 mpg‑e
35.9 kWh/100 mi; 22.3 kWh/100 km
97 mpg‑e
34.7 kWh/100 mi; 21.6 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model S AWD - P85D[49][75] & P90D[49][74] 2015/16 93 mpg‑e
36.2 kWh/100 mi; 22.5 kWh/100 km
89 mpg‑e
37.9 kWh/100 mi; 23.5 kWh/100 km
98 mpg‑e
34.4 kWh/100 mi; 21.4 kWh/100 km
(1) (8)
Tesla Model X AWD – 90D[76] 2016 92 mpg‑e
36.6 kWh/100 mi; 22.8 kWh/100 km
90 mpg‑e
37.5 kWh/100 mi; 23.3 kWh/100 km
94 mpg‑e
35.9 kWh/100 mi; 22.3 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model X AWD – P90D[76] 2016 89 mpg‑e
37.9 kWh/100 mi; 23.5 kWh/100 km
89 mpg‑e
37.9 kWh/100 mi; 23.5 kWh/100 km
90 mpg‑e
37.5 kWh/100 mi; 23.3 kWh/100 km
(1)
Tesla Model S (85 kW·h)[77] 2012/13/14/15 89 mpg‑e
37.9 kWh/100 mi; 23.5 kWh/100 km
88 mpg‑e
38.3 kWh/100 mi; 23.8 kWh/100 km
90 mpg‑e
37.5 kWh/100 mi; 23.3 kWh/100 km
(1)
Mercedes-Benz B-Class Electric Drive[78] 2014/15/16 84 mpg‑e
40.1 kWh/100 mi; 24.9 kWh/100 km
85 mpg‑e
39.7 kWh/100 mi; 24.6 kWh/100 km
83 mpg‑e
40.6 kWh/100 mi; 25.2 kWh/100 km
(1)
Toyota RAV4 EV[79] 2012/13/14 76 mpg‑e
44.3 kWh/100 mi; 27.6 kWh/100 km
78 mpg‑e
43.2 kWh/100 mi; 26.9 kWh/100 km
74 mpg‑e
45.5 kWh/100 mi; 28.3 kWh/100 km
(1)
BYD e6[49][80] 2012/13/14/15/16 63 mpg‑e
53.5 kWh/100 mi; 33.2 kWh/100 km
61 mpg‑e
55.3 kWh/100 mi; 34.3 kWh/100 km
65 mpg‑e
51.9 kWh/100 mi; 32.2 kWh/100 km
(1)
Second gen Chevrolet Volt[49][81][82]
Plug-in hybrid (PHEV)
Electricity only
2016 106 mpg‑e
31.8 kWh/100 mi; 19.8 kWh/100 km
113 mpg‑e
29.8 kWh/100 mi; 18.5 kWh/100 km
99 mpg‑e
34.0 kWh/100 mi; 21.2 kWh/100 km
(1) (2) (9)
Volt, Gasoline only 42 mpg 43 mpg 42 mpg
Toyota Prius Eco (4th gen)[53]
Hybrid electric vehicle (HEV)
Gasoline-electric hybrid
2016 56 mpg 58 mpg 53 mpg (2) (10)
Ford Fusion AWD A-S6 2.0L[49][83]
Gasoline-powered
(Average new vehicle)
2016 25 mpg 22 mpg 31 mpg (2) (11)
Notes: All estimated fuel economy based on 15,000 miles (24,000 km) annual driving, 45% highway and 55% city

(1) Conversion 1 gallon of gasoline=33.7 kW·h.
(2) The 2014 i3 REx is classified by EPA as a series plug-in hybrid, while for CARB is a range-extended battery-electric vehicle (BEVx). The i3 REx is the most fuel economic EPA-certified current year vehicle with a gasoline engine with a combined gasoline/electricity rating of 88 mpg-e, but its total range is limited to 150 mi (240 km).[52][84]
(3) The 2014/16 BMW i3 (60 A·h) ranked as the most fuel economic EPA-certified vehicle of all fuel types considered in all years until MY 2016. It was surpassed by the 2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric in November 2016.[84]
(4) The i3 REx has a combined fuel economy in all-electric mode of 117 mpg-e (29 kW·h/100 mi; 18 kW⋅h/100 km).[85]
(5) The 2016 model year Leaf correspond to the variant with the 24 kW·h battery pack.
(6) Ratings correspond to both convertible and coupe models.
(7) Model with 85 kW·h battery pack
(8) Most fuel economic plug-in hybrid capable of long distance travel. The 2016 Volt has a rating of 77 mpg-e for combined gasoline/electricity operation.[52]
(9) Most fuel economic hybrid electric car.[49][52]
(10) Other 2016 MY cars achieving 25 mpg‑US (9.4 L/100 km; 30 mpg‑imp) combined city/hwy include the Honda Accord A-S6 3.5L, Toyota Camry A-S6 3.5L and Toyota RAV4 A-S6 2.5L.[49][83]


Plug-in hybrids edit

The following table compares EPA's estimated out-of-pocket fuel costs and fuel economy ratings of serial production plug-in hybrid electric vehicles rated by EPA as of January 2017 expressed in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (mpg-e),[6][86] versus the most fuel efficient gasoline-electric hybrid car, the 2016 Toyota Prius Eco (fourth generation), rated 56 mpg‑US (4.2 L/100 km; 67 mpg‑imp), and EPA's average new 2016 vehicle, which has a fuel economy of 25 mpg‑US (9.4 L/100 km; 30 mpg‑imp).[86][87][88] The table also shows the fuel efficiency for plug-in hybrids in all-electric mode expressed as KWh/100 mile, the metric used by EPA to rate electric cars before November 2010.[27]

Comparison of out-of-pocket fuel costs and fuel economy for plug-in hybrid electric cars
rated by EPA as of January 2017 with MPGe and conventional MPG(1)
(as displayed in the Monroney label and the US DoE fueleconomy.gov website)
Vehicle Year
model
Operating
mode
(EV range)
EPA rated
Combined
fuel economy
EPA rated
city/highway
fuel economy
Fuel cost
to drive
25 miles
Annual
fuel cost(1)
(15,000 mi)
Notes
Toyota Prius Prime[6][89] 2017 Electricity
(25 mi)
133 mpg-e
(25 kWh/100 mi)
- $0.82 $550 The Prius Prime is the most energy-efficient
vehicle with a gasoline engine in EV mode.[90]
During the first 25 mi might use some gasoline.[89]
The 2017 Prime has a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 78 mpg-e
(city 83 mpg-e/hwy 73 mpg-e).[91]
Gasoline only 54 mpg 55 mpg/
53 mpg
$1.08
BMW i3 REx (60 A·h)[92][93] 2014
2015
2016
Electricity only
(72 mi)
117 mpg-e
(29 kWh/100 mi)
97 mpg‑e (35 kW⋅h/100 mi)/
79 mpg‑e (43 kW⋅h/100 mi)
$0.94 $650 The EPA classifies the i3 REx as a
series plug-in hybrid while CARB as a
range-extended battery-electric vehicle (BEVx).
The 2014/16 i3 REx is the most fuel efficient
EPA-certified current year vehicle with
a gasoline engine with a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 88 mpg-e
(city 97 mpg-e/hwy 79 mpg-e).[94][91]
Gasoline only
(78 mi)
39 mpg 41 mpg/
37 mpg
$1.79
Honda Accord Plug-in Hybrid[95] 2014 Electricity
and gasoline
(13 mi)
115 mpg-e
(29 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.03 $650 The 2014 Accord is the most fuel
efficient plug-in hybrid in blended EV mode
with a rating of 115 mpg-e.
The Accord has a rating for combined
EV/hybrid operation of 57 mpg-e.[96]
Gasoline only 46 mpg 47 mpg/
46 mpg
$1.11
BMW i3 REx (94 A·h)[6][59] 2017 Electricity only
(97 mi)
111 mpg-e
(30 kWh/100 mi)
- $0.98 $650 The EPA classifies the i3 REx as a
series plug-in hybrid while CARB as a
range-extended battery-electric vehicle (BEVx).
The 2017 i3 REx (94 A·h) has a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 88 mpg-e
(city 95 mpg-e/hwy 81 mpg-e), the highest
rating among 2017 MY plug-in hybrids.[91]
Gasoline only
(83 mi)
35 mpg 36 mpg/
33 mpg
$1.99
Chevrolet Volt (2nd gen)[97][98] 2016
2017
Electricity only
(53 mi)
106 mpg-e
(31 kWh/100 mi)
113 mpg-e
(29 kWh/100 mi)/
99 mpg-e
(34 kWh/100 mi)
$1.01 $650 The 2016/17 Volt has a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 77 mpg-e
(city 82 mpg-e/hwy 72 mpg-e).[91]
Regular gasoline.
Gasoline only 42 mpg 43 mpg/
42 mpg
$1.39
Hyundai Sonata PHEV[99] 2016 Electricity
and gasoline
(27 mi)
99mpg-e
(34 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.19 $700 During the first 27 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 27 mi.[99]
Gasoline only 40 mpg - $1.28
Chevrolet Volt (1st gen)[100][101] 2013
2014
2015
Electricity only
(38 mi)
98 mpg-e
(35 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.01 $650 The 2013/15 Volt has a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 62 mpg-e
(city 63 mpg-e/hwy 61 mpg-e).[94]
Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 37 mpg 35 mpg/
40 mpg
$1.21
Ford Fusion Energi[102] 2017 Electricity
and gasoline
(22 mi)
97 mpg-e
(35 kW-h/100 mi)
- $1.14 $700 The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 21 mi.[102]
Gasoline only 42 mpg - $1.21
Toyota Prius PHV[103] 2012
2013
2014
2015
Electricity
and gasoline
(11 mi)
95 mpg-e
(29 kWh/100 mi
plus 0.2 gallons/100 mi)
- $1.03 $600 After the first 11 miles the car
functions like a regular Prius hybrid
The 2012/15 Prius has a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 58 mpg-e
(city 59 mpg-e/hwy 56 mpg-e).[94]
Gasoline only 50 mpg 51 mpg/
49 mpg
$1.02
Chevrolet Volt[104] 2011
2012
Electricity only 94 mpg-e
(36 kWh/100 mi)
95 mpg-e
(36 kWh/100 mi)/
93 mpg-e
(37 kWh/100 mi)
$1.17 $800 Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 37 mpg 35 mpg/
40 mpg
$1.70
Ford C-Max Energi[105]

Ford Fusion Energi[105]
2013
2014
2015
2016
Electricity
and gasoline
(20 mi)
88 mpg-e
(37 kWh/100 mi)
95 mpg‑e (35 kW⋅h/100 mi)/
81 mpg‑e (42 kW⋅h/100 mi)
$1.25 $750 The Energi did not use any gasoline
for the first 20 miles in EPA tests,
but depending on the driving style,
the car may use both gasoline
and electricity during EV mode.
The Energi models have a combined
EV/hybrid operation rating of 51 mpg-e
(city 55 mpg-e/hwy 46 mpg-e).[94]
Gasoline only 38 mpg 40 mpg/
36 mpg
$1.34
Audi A3 e-tron ultra[106] 2016 Electricity only
(17 mi)
86 mpg-e
(38 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.37 $900 During the first 17 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 17 mi.[106]
Gasoline only 39 mpg - $1.61
Cadillac ELR[107] 2014
2015
Electricity only
(37 mi)
82 mpg-e
(41 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.33 $900 The 2014/15 ELR has a combined
gasoline/electricity rating of 54 mpg-e
(city 54 mpg-e/hwy 55 mpg-e).[94]
Gasoline only 33 mpg 31 mpg/
35 mpg
$1.90
Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid[108] 2017 Electricity only
(33 mi)
84 mpg-e
(40 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.73 $900 During the first 33 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 33 mi.[108]
Gasoline only 32 mpg - $1.83
Audi A3 e-tron[106] 2016 Electricity only
(16 mi)
83 mpg-e
(40 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.49 $950 During the first 16 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 16 mi.[106]
Gasoline only 35 mpg - $1.79
BMW i8[92][109] 2014
2015
2016
Electricity
and
gasoline
(15 mi)
76 mpg-e
(43 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.77 $1,150 The i8 does not run on 100% electricity
as it consumes 0.1 gallons per 100 mi
in EV mode (all-electric range = 0 mi)
The i8 has a rating for combined EV/hybrid
operation of 37 mpg-e.[96]
Gasoline only 28 mpg 28 mpg/
29 mpg
$2.24
BMW 330e[110] 2016 Electricity
and gasoline
(14 mi)
72 mpg-e
(47 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.74 $1,050 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 14 mi.[110]
Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 31 mpg - $2.02
Porsche 918 Spyder[92][111] 2015 Electricity only
(12 mi)
67 mpg-e
(50 kWh/100 mi)
- $1.62 $1,500 Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 22 mpg 20 mpg/
24 mpg
$2.85
BMW 740e iPerformance[112] 2017 Electricity only
(14 mi)
64 mpg-e
(52 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.03 $1,350 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 14 mi.[112]
Gasoline only 27 mpg - $2.48
BMW X5 xDrive40e[113] 2016 Electricity only
(14 mi)
56 mpg-e
(59 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.23 $1,450 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 14 mi.[113]
Gasoline only 24 mpg - $2.61
Mercedes-Benz S 500 e[114] 2015 Electricity
and gasoline
(14 mi)
58 mpg-e
(59 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.13 $1,350 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 12 mi.[114]
Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 26 mpg - $2.41
Fisker Karma[115] 2012 Electricity only
(33 mi)
54 mpg-e
(62 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.02 $1,450 Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 20 mpg 20 mpg/
21 mpg
$3.14
Volvo XC90 T8[116] 2016 Electricity
and gasoline
(14 mi)
53 mpg-e
(58 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.19 $1,400 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline.
The actual all-electric range is between 0 to 13 mi.[116]
Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 25 mpg - $2.51
Porsche Panamera S E-Hybrid[117] 2016 Electricity
and gasoline
(16 mi)
51 mpg-e
(51 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.15 $1,350 The all-electric range is between 0 to 15 mi
Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 25 mpg 23 mpg/
29 mpg
$2.51
Porsche Panamera S E-Hybrid[117] 2014
2015
Electricity
and gasoline
(16 mi)
50 mpg-e
(52 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.18 $1,400 The all-electric range is between 0 to 15 mi
The S E-Hybrid has a rating for combined
EV/hybrid operation of 31 mpg-e.[96]
Gasoline only 25 mpg 23 mpg/
29 mpg
$2.51
Porsche Cayenne S E-Hybrid[92][118] 2015
2016
Electricity
and gasoline
(14 mi)
47 mpg-e
(69 kWh/100 mi)
- $2.24 $1,550 Premium gasoline.
Gasoline only 22 mpg 21 mpg/
24 mpg
$2.85
McLaren P1[92][119] 2014
2015
Electricity
and gasoline
(19 mi)
18 mpg-e
(25 kWh/100 mi)
- $3.79 $2,200 The P1 does not run on 100% electricity
as it consumes 4.8 gallons per 100 mi
in EV mode (all-electric range = 0 mi)[119]
The P1 has a rating for combined EV/hybrid
operation of 17 mpg-e.[96]
Gasoline only 17 mpg 16 mpg/
20 mpg
$3.69
2016 Toyota Prius Eco (4th gen)[88] 2016 Gasoline-electric
hybrid
56 mpg 58 mpg/
53 mpg
$0.91 $550 Most fuel efficient hybrid electric car.[86]
Ford Fusion AWD 2.0L[86][83]
(Average new vehicle)
2016 Gasoline only 25 mpg 22 mpg/
31 mpg
$2.04 $1,200 Other 2016 MY cars achieving 25 mpg combined
city/hwy include the Honda Accord 3.5L,
Toyota Camry 3.5L and Toyota RAV4 2.5L.[86][83]
Notes: (1) Based on 45% highway and 55% city driving. Electricity cost of US$0.13/kWh, premium gasoline price of US$2.51 per gallon (used by the 2015 Volt, i3 REx, ELR, i8, Mercedes S500e, Karma and all Porsche models), and regular gasoline price of US$2.04 per gallon (as of 18 December 2015). Conversion 1 gallon of gasoline=33.7 kWh.

Fuel cell vehicles edit

The following table compares EPA's fuel economy expressed in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (MPGe) for the two models of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles rated by the EPA as of September 2021, and available in California.[120]

Comparison of fuel economy expressed in MPGe for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles

available for sale or lease in California and rated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as of September 2021[120]

Vehicle Model year Combined

fuel economy

City

fuel economy

Highway

fuel economy

Range Annual

fuel cost

Hyundai Nexo 2019–2021 61 mpg-e 65 mpg-e 58 mpg-e 380 mi (610 km)
Toyota Mirai 2016–20 66 mpg-e 66 mpg-e 66 mpg-e 312 mi (502 km)
Toyota Mirai 2021 74 mpg-e 76 mpg-e 71 mpg-e 402 mi (647 km)
Notes: One kg of hydrogen is roughly equivalent to one U.S. gallon of gasoline.

Conversion using GGE edit

The same method can be applied to any other alternative fuel vehicle when that vehicle's energy consumption is known. Generally the energy consumption of the vehicle is expressed in units other than W·h/mile, or Btu/mile so additional arithmetic is required to convert to a gasoline gallon equivalent (GGE), using 33.7 kWh / gallon = 114989.17 btu / gallon.[8]

Hydrogen example with GGE edit

The 2008 Honda FCX Clarity is advertised to have a vehicle consumption of 72 mi/kg-H
2
.[121] Hydrogen at atmospheric pressure has an energy density of 120 MJ/kg (113,738 BTU/kg),[122] by converting this energy density to a GGE, it is found that 1.011 kg of hydrogen is needed to meet the equivalent energy of one gallon of gasoline. This conversion factor can now be used to calculate the MPGe for this vehicle.

 ,
 

Life cycle assessment edit

Pump/Well-to-wheel edit

EPA's miles per gallon equivalent metric shown in the window sticker does not measure a vehicle's full cycle energy efficiency or well-to-wheel life cycle. Rather, the EPA presents MPGe in the same manner as MPG for conventional internal combustion engine vehicles as displayed in the Monroney sticker, and in both cases the rating only considers the pump-to-wheel or wall-to-wheel energy consumption, i.e. it measures the energy for which the owner usually pays. For EVs the energy cost includes the conversions from AC from the wall used to charge the battery[39] The EPA ratings displayed in window stickers do not account for the energy consumption upstream, which includes the energy or fuel required to generate the electricity or to extract and produce the liquid fuel; the energy losses due to power transmission; or the energy consumed for the transportation of the fuel from the well to the station.[14][40]

Petroleum-equivalency factor (PEF) – a CAFE metric edit

In 2000 the United States Department of Energy (DOE) established the methodology for calculating the petroleum-equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles based on the well-to-wheel (WTW) gasoline-equivalent energy content of electricity ( ). The methodology considers the upstream efficiency of the processes involved in the two fuel cycles, and considers the national average electricity generation and transmission efficiencies because a battery electric vehicle burns its fuel (mainly fossil fuels) off-board at the power generation plant.[14] This methodology is used by carmakers to estimate credits into their overall Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) for manufacturing electric drive vehicles.[13]

The petroleum equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles is determined by the following equations:[14]

 
where:
  = Petroleum-equivalent fuel economy
  = Gasoline-equivalent energy content of electricity factor
  = "Fuel content" factor or incentive factor. DoE selected a value of 10.15 to retain consistency with existing regulatory and statutory procedures, and to provide a similar treatment to manufacturers of all types of alternative fuel vehicles[123]
  = Petroleum-fueled accessory factor; this is equal to 1 if the electric drive vehicle does not have petroleum-powered accessories installed, and 0.90 if it does.
  = Driving pattern factor; this is equal to 1, as DoE considered that electric vehicles eligible for inclusion in CAFE will offer capabilities, perhaps excepting driving range, similar to those of conventional vehicles.

The gasoline-equivalent energy content of electricity factor, abbreviated as  , is defined as:

 
where:
  = U.S. average fossil-fuel electricity generation efficiency = 0.328[124]
  = U.S. average electricity transmission efficiency = 0.924[124]
  = Petroleum refining and distribution efficiency = 0.830[124]
  = Watt hours of energy per gallon of gasoline conversion factor = 33,705 Wh/US gal (115,006 BTU/US gal)[124]

  is computed as:

 
 

This computation accounts for the well-to-wall losses resulting from the extraction of crude oil and refinement into gasoline (Tp), conversion to electricity (Tg), and the transmission grid (Tt); in summary, the total amount of useful electrical energy that can be extracted from gasoline is just 36.5% of its total theoretical stored energy.[124] Substituting the numerical values into the first equation,

 
 
 

As noted above, when   and   are 1, as they would be for a pure-electric vehicle,  .

Examples

In the example provided by the US DoE in its final rule, an electric car with an energy consumption of 265 Watt hour per mile in urban driving, and 220 Watt hour per mile in highway driving, results in a petroleum-equivalent fuel economy of 335.24 miles per gallon, based on a driving schedule factor of 55 percent urban, and 45 percent highway, and using a petroleum equivalency factor of 82,049 Watt hours per gallon.[14]

 

 

In 2009, the Monroney sticker for the Mini E rated the wall-to-wheel energy consumption at 33 / 36 kWh/100 mi (102.1 / 93.6 mpg‑e) for the city and highway driving cycles, respectively.[124] The petroleum-equivalent fuel economy is 239 MPGPE, assuming a 55%/45% urban/highway split.

For comparison, the 2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV has a rated (wall-to-wheel) consumption of 128 / 110 mpg‑e (263 / 306 Wh/mi) listed on the Monroney sticker for the urban/highway driving cycles, respectively.[63] The petroleum-equivalent fuel economy for the Bolt, using the DoE rule to consider well-to-wall energy losses, is 284 MPGPE, computed using the same 55%/45% urban/highway split.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Note that MPGe is calculated using earlier standards and is not directly comparable.

References edit

  1. ^ EPA, OAR, OTAQ, US (13 October 2016). "Electric Vehicles – Learn More About the New Label | U.S. EPA". U.S. EPA. Retrieved 2018-01-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b Paul Seredynski (2010-12-21). "Decoding Electric Car MPG: With Kilowatt-Hours, Small Is Beautiful". Edmunds.com. Retrieved 2011-02-17.
  3. ^ a b c d "Fuel Economy Label". U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 2011-02-14. Retrieved 2011-02-17.
  4. ^ a b "EIA – Electricity Data". www.eia.gov. Retrieved 2018-01-30.
  5. ^ a b "Natural Gas Residential Price". www.eia.gov. Retrieved 2018-01-30.
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External links edit

miles, gallon, gasoline, equivalent, mpge, mpgge, measure, average, distance, traveled, unit, energy, consumed, mpge, used, united, states, environmental, protection, agency, compare, energy, consumption, alternative, fuel, vehicles, plug, electric, vehicles, . Miles per gallon gasoline equivalent MPGe or MPGge is a measure of the average distance traveled per unit of energy consumed MPGe is used by the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA to compare energy consumption of alternative fuel vehicles plug in electric vehicles and other advanced technology vehicles with the energy consumption 1 of conventional internal combustion vehicles rated in miles per U S gallon 2 3 Monroney label showing the EPA s fuel economy equivalent ratings for the 2011 Chevrolet Volt The rating for all electric mode left is expressed in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent mpg The unit of energy consumed is deemed to be 33 7 kilowatt hours without regard to the efficiency of conversion of heat energy into electrical energy also measured in kilowatt hours kWh The equivalence of this unit to energy in a gallon of gasoline is true if and only if the heat engine generating equipment and power delivery to the car battery are 100 efficient Actual heat engines differ vastly from this assumption MPGe does not necessarily represent an equivalency in the operating costs between alternative fuel vehicles and the MPG rating of internal combustion engine vehicles due to the wide variation in costs for the fuel sources regionally 4 5 since the EPA assumes prices that represents the national averages 6 7 Miles per gallon equivalent cost for alternate fuel can be calculated with a simple conversion to the conventional mpg miles per gallon miles gal See conversion to MPG by cost below The MPGe metric was introduced in November 2010 by EPA in the Monroney sticker of the Nissan Leaf electric car and the Chevrolet Volt plug in hybrid The ratings are based on EPA s formula in which 33 7 kWh 121 MJ of electricity is equivalent to one U S gallon of gasoline 8 and the energy consumption of each vehicle during EPA s five standard drive cycle tests simulating varying driving conditions 9 10 All new cars and light duty trucks sold in the U S are required to have this label showing the EPA s estimate of fuel economy of the vehicle 3 In a joint ruling issued in May 2011 the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA and EPA established the new requirements for a fuel economy and environment label that is mandatory for all new passenger cars and trucks starting with model year 2013 This ruling uses miles per gallon gasoline equivalent for all fuel and advanced technology vehicles available in the U S market including plug in hybrids electric vehicles flexible fuel vehicles hydrogen fuel cell vehicle natural gas vehicles diesel powered vehicles and gasoline powered vehicles 11 12 In addition to being displayed on new vehicles fuel economy ratings are used by the U S Department of Energy DOE to publish the annual Fuel Economy Guide the U S Department of Transportation DOT to administer the Corporate Average Fuel Economy CAFE program and the Internal Revenue Service IRS to collect gas guzzler taxes 3 Fuel economy estimates for window stickers and CAFE standard compliance are different The EPA MPGe rating shown in the Monroney label is based on the consumption of the on board energy content stored in the fuel tank or in the vehicle s battery or any other energy source and only represents the tank to wheel energy consumption CAFE estimates are based on a well to wheel basis and in the case of liquid fuels and electric drive vehicles also account for the energy consumed upstream to produce the fuel or electricity and deliver it to the vehicle Fuel economy for CAFE purposes include an incentive adjustment for alternative fuel vehicles and plug in electric vehicles which results in higher MPGe than those estimated for window stickers 13 14 Contents 1 Background 1 1 1988 Alternative Motor Fuels Act 1 2 1994 Gasoline gallon equivalent 1 3 2000 Petroleum equivalent fuel economy 1 4 2007 X Prize 1 5 2010 2011 Miles per gallon equivalent 2 Description 3 Conversion to MPGe 3 1 Conversion to MPG by cost 3 1 1 Examples 3 2 Electric and plug in hybrid electric vehicles 3 2 1 Examples 3 2 1 1 All electric cars 3 2 1 2 Plug in hybrids 3 3 Fuel cell vehicles 3 4 Conversion using GGE 3 5 Hydrogen example with GGE 4 Life cycle assessment 4 1 Pump Well to wheel 4 2 Petroleum equivalency factor PEF a CAFE metric 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground edit1988 Alternative Motor Fuels Act edit The Alternative Motor Fuels Act AMFA enacted in 1988 15 provides Corporate Average Fuel Economy CAFE incentives for manufacturing alternative fuel vehicles AFVs that are powered by ethanol methanol or natural gas fuels either exclusively or in conjunction with gasoline or diesel fuel These dual fuel vehicles also are known as flexible fuel vehicles FFVs To provide incentives for the widespread use of these fuels and to promote the production of AFVs and FFVs AMFA grants AFV FFV manufacturers CAFE credits which allows them to raise their overall fleet fuel economy levels to comply with the CAFE standards 16 17 Beginning in 1993 manufacturers of qualified AFVs can improve their CAFE estimation by computing the weighted average of the fuel economy when operating on conventional fuel gasoline and diesel and when operating on alternative fuel s 16 9 10 AMFA provides the following energy content based equivalency factors 15 513 1 gal alcohol 0 15 gal gasoline 100 ft3 natural gas 0 823 gal equivalent natural gas 1 gal equivalent natural gas 0 15 gal gasoline A dedicated AFV which operates solely on alcohol would divide the alcohol fuel economy by the energy equivalency factor of 0 15 As an example a dedicated AFV that achieves 15 mpg fuel economy while operating on alcohol would have a CAFE calculated as follows 16 10 F E a l c o h o l 1 0 15 15 m p g a l c 100 m p g e q u i v displaystyle FE alcohol frac 1 0 15 cdot 15 mpg alc 100 mpg equiv nbsp For FFVs an assumption is made that the vehicles would operate 50 of the time on the alternative fuel and 50 of the time on conventional fuel resulting in a fuel economy that is based on a harmonic average of alternative fuel and conventional fuel For example for an alternative dual fuel model that achieves 15 miles per gallon operating on an alcohol fuel and 25 mpg on the conventional fuel the resulting CAFE would be 16 10 F E d u a l f u e l 0 5 25 m p g c o n v e n t i o n a l 0 5 100 m p g a l c e q u i v 1 40 m p g c o m b i n e d e q u i v displaystyle FE dual fuel left frac 0 5 25 mpg conventional frac 0 5 100 mpg alc equiv right 1 40 mpg combined equiv nbsp Calculation of fuel economy for natural gas vehicles is similar For the purposes of this calculation the fuel economy is equal to the weighted average of the fuel economy while operating on natural gas and while operating on either gasoline or diesel fuel AMFA specifies the energy content of 100 cubic feet of natural gas to be equal to 0 823 gallons equivalent of natural gas and the gallon equivalency of natural gas is considered to have a fuel content similar to that for alcohol fuels equal to 0 15 gallons of fuel For example under this conversion and gallon equivalency a dedicated natural gas vehicle that achieves 25 miles per 100 cubic feet of natural gas would have a CAFE value as follows 16 10 F E n a t g a s 1 0 15 g a l n a t g a s g a l g a s o l i n e 25 m i 100 f t n a t g a s 3 100 f t n a t g a s 3 0 823 g a l n a t g a s 203 m p g e q u i v displaystyle FE nat gas frac 1 0 15 frac gal nat gas gal gasoline cdot left left frac 25 mi 100 ft nat gas 3 right cdot left frac 100 ft nat gas 3 0 823 gal nat gas right right 203 mpg equiv nbsp The Energy Policy Act of 1992 expanded the definition of alternative fuel to include liquefied petroleum gas hydrogen liquid fuels derived from coal and biological materials electricity and any other fuel that the Secretary of Transportation determines to be substantially non petroleum based and has environmental and energy security benefits Beginning in 1993 manufacturers of these other alternative fuel automobiles that meet the qualifying requirements can also benefit for special treatment in the calculation of their CAFE 17 1994 Gasoline gallon equivalent edit In 1994 the U S National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST introduced gasoline gallon equivalent GGE as a metric for fuel economy for natural gas vehicles NIST defined a gasoline gallon equivalent GGE as 5 660 pounds of natural gas and gasoline liter equivalent GLE as 0 678 kilograms of natural gas 18 2000 Petroleum equivalent fuel economy edit Energy efficiency for selected electric cars leased in California between 1996 and 2003 Vehicle Model year Type of battery Energy use kWh mile Energy efficiency miles kWh Energy efficiency MPGe miles 33 7 kWh GM EV1 19 1997 Lead acid 0 164 6 10 205 note 1 GM EV1 20 1999 NiMH 0 179 5 59 188 note 1 Toyota RAV4 EV 21 1996 Lead acid 0 235 4 28 143 Toyota RAV4 EV 22 2000 NiMH 0 400 2 50 84 Ford Ranger EV 23 1998 Lead acid 0 337 2 98 100 Chevrolet S 10 EV 24 1997 Lead acid 0 292 3 42 115 During the late 1990s and early 2000s several electric cars were produced in limited quantities as a result of the California Air Resources Board CARB mandate for more fuel efficient zero emissions vehicles Popular models available in California included the General Motors EV1 and the Toyota RAV4 EV 25 26 The U S DoE and EPA rating for on board energy efficiency for these electric vehicles was expressed as kilowatt hour mile KWh mi the most commonly known metric in science and engineering for measuring energy consumption and used as the billing unit for energy delivered to consumers by electric utilities 27 In order to address the Corporate Average Fuel Economy CAFE regulations mandated by the U S Congress in 1975 the U S Department of Energy established in July 2000 a methodology for calculating the petroleum equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles on a well to wheel basis The methodology considers the upstream efficiency of the processes involved in the two fuel cycles The energy content of gasoline is reduced from 33 705 Wh gal to 83 of that or about 27 975 Wh gal well to tank to account for the energy used in refinement and distribution Similarly the energy value for electricity produced from fossil fuel is reduced to 30 3 due to energy lost in generation and transmission according to the national average This is normalized to the previous gasoline value resulting in a well to vehicle gasoline equivalent energy content of electricity of only 12 307 Wh gal 14 The formula also includes a fuel content factor of 1 0 15 about 6 667 to benefit electric vehicles raising the value from 12 307 to 82 049 Wh gal This reward factor is intended provide an incentive for vehicle manufactures to produce and sell electric vehicles as a higher equivalent fuel economy for EVs improves the carmaker overall fleet fuel economy levels in complying with the CAFE standards and Congress anticipated that such an incentive would help accelerate the commercialization of electric vehicles The incentive factor chosen by DoE for EVs is the same 1 0 15 factor already applied in the regulatory treatment of other types of alternative fuel vehicles 14 When all factors are considered in DoE s formula the energy efficiency or equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles increases being calculated in miles per the petroleum equivalency factor of 82 049 Wh gal rather than miles per the usual gasoline gallon equivalent of 33 705 Wh gallon for the purposes of CAFE credits to manufacturers 27 2007 X Prize edit The Automotive X Prize competition was intended to encourage development of automobiles that would be capable of operating 100 miles on a gallon of gasoline mpg Comparison of electric vehicles to vehicles that carried their own engine was debated since the notion of a miles per gallon equivalent as a metric for electric vehicles made the competition trivial for electric vehicles and a corresponding miles per gallon as a metric for the others extremely difficult for the others Miastrada Company made the case that this defeated the purpose of the competition to no avail In April 2007 as part of Draft Competition Guidelines released at the New York Auto Show MPGe was announced as the main merit metric for the Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize a competition developed by the X Prize Foundation for super efficient vehicles that can achieve at least 100 MPGe 28 In February 2009 Consumer Reports announced that as part of a partnership with the X Prize Foundation they planned to report MPGe as one of several measures that will help consumers understand and compare vehicle efficiency for alternative fuel vehicles 29 2010 2011 Miles per gallon equivalent edit nbsp Old Monroney label for electric cars showing in prominent larger font the fuel economy rating in kWh 100 miles for the 2009 Mini E nbsp New Monroney label for electric cars showing in prominent larger font the fuel economy rating in miles per USgallon gasoline equivalent for the 2011 Nissan Leaf The rating in kWh 100 miles is shown below MPG e in smaller font As required by the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act EISA with the introduction of advanced technology vehicles in the U S new information should be incorporated in the Monroney label of new cars and light duty trucks sold in the country such as ratings on fuel economy greenhouse gas emissions and other air pollutants The U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA have conducted a series of studies to determine the best way to redesign this label to provide consumers with simple energy and environmental comparisons across all vehicles types including battery electric vehicles BEV plug in hybrid electric vehicles PHEV and conventional internal combustion engine vehicles powered by gasoline and diesel in order to help consumers choose more efficient and environmentally friendly vehicles These changes were proposed to be introduced in new vehicles beginning with model year 2012 3 30 The EPA rating for on board energy efficiency for electric vehicles before 2010 was expressed as kilowatt hour per 100 miles kWh 100 mi 27 31 For example the window sticker of the 2009 Mini E showed an energy consumption of 33 kWh 100 mi for city driving and 36 kWh 100 mi on the highway technically equivalent to 100 mpg e city and 94 mpg e highway 31 Similarly the 2009 Tesla Roadster was rated 32 kWh 100 mi 110 mpg e in city and 33 kWh 100 mi 100 mpg e on the highway 32 33 As part of the research and redesign process EPA conducted focus groups where participants were presented with several options to express the consumption of electricity for plug in electric vehicles The research showed that participants did not understand the concept of a kilowatt hour as a measure of electric energy use despite the use of this unit in their monthly electric bills Instead participants favored a miles per gallon equivalent MPGe as the metric to compare with the familiar miles per gallon used for gasoline vehicles The research also concluded that the kWh per 100 miles metric was more confusing to focus group participants compared to a miles per kWh Based on these results EPA decided to use the following fuel economy and fuel consumption metrics on the redesigned labels MPG city and highway and combined MPGe city and highway and combined Gallons per 100 miles kWh per 100 miles 30 The proposed design and final content for two options of the new sticker label that would be introduced in 2013 model year cars and trucks were consulted for 60 days with the public in 2010 and both include miles per gallon equivalent and kWh per 100 miles as the fuel economy metrics for plug in cars but in one option MPGe and annual electricity cost are the two most prominent metrics 34 35 In November 2010 EPA introduced MPGe as comparison metric on its new sticker for fuel economy for the Nissan Leaf and the Chevrolet Volt 9 10 nbsp Typical label for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles expressed in MPGe mandatory starting with 2013 model year In May 2011 the NHTSA and EPA issued a joint final rule establishing new requirements for a fuel economy and environment label that is mandatory for all new passenger cars and trucks starting with model year 2013 The ruling includes new labels for alternative fuel and alternative propulsion vehicles available in the US market such as plug in hybrids electric vehicles flexible fuel vehicles hydrogen fuel cell vehicle and natural gas vehicles 11 12 The common fuel economy metric adopted to allow the comparison of alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles with conventional internal combustion engine vehicles is miles per gallon of gasoline equivalent MPGe A gallon of gasoline equivalent means the number of kilowatt hours of electricity cubic feet of compressed natural gas CNG or kilograms of hydrogen that is equal to the energy in a gallon of gasoline 11 The new labels also show for the first time an estimate of how much fuel or electricity it takes to drive 100 miles 160 km introducing to U S consumers with fuel consumption per distance traveled a metric commonly used in other countries EPA explained that the objective is to avoid the traditional miles per gallon metric that can be potentially misleading when consumers compare fuel economy improvements and known as the MPG illusion 11 As mentioned above confusion and misinterpretation is common in the public between the two types of fuel efficiency Fuel economy measures how far a vehicle will go per amount of fuel units of MPGe Fuel consumption is the reciprocal of fuel economy and measures the fuel used to drive a fixed distance units of gal 100 miles or kWh 100 miles 36 The unit of Gal 100 miles is accurately described as fuel consumption in some EPA brochures but this unit appears in the fuel economy section of the Monroney label which does not use the term fuel consumption 37 38 Description editThe miles per gallon gasoline equivalent is based on the energy content of gasoline The energy obtainable from burning one US gallon of gasoline is 115 000 BTU 33 70 kWh or 121 3 MJ 8 To convert the mile per gallon rating into other units of distance per unit energy used the mile per gallon value can be multiplied by one of the following factors to obtain other units 1 MPGe 1 mi 33 70 kW h 8 696 mi million BTU 0 02967 mi kW h 0 04775 km kW h 0 013 km MJConversion to MPGe editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message MPGe is determined by converting the vehicle consumption per unit distance as determined through computer modeling or completion of an actual driving cycle from its native units into a gasoline energy equivalent Examples of native units include W h for electric vehicles kg H2 for hydrogen vehicles gallons for biodiesel or liquefied natural gas vehicles cubic feet for compressed natural gas vehicles and pounds for propane or Liquefied petroleum gas vehicles Special cases for specific alternative fuels are discussed below but a general formula for MPGe is MPGe total miles driven total energy of all fuels consumed energy of one gallon of gasoline total miles driven energy of one gallon of gasoline total energy of all fuels consumed displaystyle text MPGe frac text total miles driven left frac text total energy of all fuels consumed text energy of one gallon of gasoline right frac text total miles driven times text energy of one gallon of gasoline text total energy of all fuels consumed nbsp For EPA this considers the tank to wheel for liquids and wall to wheel energy consumption for electricity i e it measures the energy for which the owner usually pays For EVs the energy cost includes the conversions from AC to charge the battery 39 The EPA MPGe ratings displayed in window stickers do not account for the energy consumption upstream which includes the energy or fuel required to generate the electricity or to extract and produce the liquid fuel the energy losses due to power transmission or the energy consumed for the transportation of the fuel from the well to the station 14 40 Basic values for the energy content of various fuels are given by the defaults used in the Department of Energy GREET Greenhouse gases Regulated Emissions and Energy used in Transportation model 41 as follows Note 1 kWh is equivalent to 3 412 BTU Fuel Unit Energy unit GGE gasoline gallon 116 090 BTU 34 02 kWh 1 0000 diesel gallon 129 488 BTU 37 95 kWh 0 8965 biodiesel gallon 119 550 BTU 35 04 kWh 0 9711 ethanol gallon 76 330 BTU 22 37 kWh 1 5209 E85 gallon 82 000 BTU 24 03 kWh 1 4157 CNG 100 SCF 98 300 BTU 28 81 kWh 1 181 H2 KG 114 000 BTU 33 41 kWh 1 0183 LPG gallon 84 950 BTU 24 90 kWh 1 3666 methanol gallon 57 250 BTU 16 78 kWh 2 0278 The energy content of a particular fuel can vary somewhat given its specific chemistry and production method For example in the new efficiency ratings that have been developed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA for battery electric vehicles BEVs and plug in hybrid electric vehicles PHEVs see below the energy content of a gallon of gasoline is assumed to be 114 989 12 BTU or 33 7 kWh 8 Conversion to MPG by cost edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message The miles per gallon equivalent cost of an alternative fuel vehicle can be calculated by a simple formula to directly compare the MPG operating costs rather than the energy consumption of MPGe 7 with traditional vehicles since the cost of resources varies substantially from region to region 5 4 For reference the complete equation is MPG mi gal gal unit capacity unit capacity unit EnergyQuotient 100 MPGe 100 displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal over text gal div over text unit over text capacity unit times text capacity unit over text EnergyQuotient times 100 div text MPGe div 100 nbsp Also for those that prefer kWh 100 mi an equivalent is simply MPG mi gal gal kWh kWh 100 mi 100 mi displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal Bigl over text gal div over text kWh Bigr div text kWh 100 text mi over 100 text mi nbsp This equation reduces down to a simple formula that works with only the capacity of the fuel source and its possible range to compare vehicles With your local rates for gasoline and your fuel source you can easily compare your alternative fuel vehicle operating cost directly with a gasoline engine model with the following MPG mi gal gal u n i t capacity unit mi displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal over text gal div over unit over text capacity unit times text mi nbsp The formula includes the inherent efficiency of the vehicle as the range capability of a specific fuel source capacity directly represents the EPA testing it then becomes universal regardless of weight vehicle size co efficient of drag rolling resistance as these directly influence the range possible and are accounted for Driving style and weather conditions can be accounted for by using the achieved range instead of the advertised range for the calculation The formula works by deriving how much alternative fuel can be purchased for the cost of a gallon of gasoline creating a ratio of this quantity to the storage capacity of the vehicle and then multiplies this ratio by the vehicle s possible range The result is number of miles the vehicle travels on alternative fuel for the same cost of a single gallon of gasoline The end computation results in MPG unit and is directly comparable to a standard internal combustion engine vehicle s fuel costs for its rated MPG Examples edit The formula with the correct units for a BEV or PHEV in all electric mode is like this MPG mi gal gal kWh charge kWh mi displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal over text gal div over text kWh over text charge kWh times text mi nbsp Using EPA 2018 Fuel Economy Guides assumptions for national average pricing of 2 56 gal regular gasoline and 0 13 kWh 42 we can calculate a vehicle that is rated at 84 MPGe or 40 kW 100 Mi efficiency and has a 16 5 kW EV battery of which 13 5 kWh is usable for electric driving with an advertised range of 33 miles per charge Note Using the battery size instead of the usable charge will provide a conservative value Using actual charge and actual range driven will provide actual economy MPG mi gal 2 56 gal 0 13 kWh 13 5 kWh 33 75 mi displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal 2 56 over text gal div 0 13 over text kWh over 13 5 text kWh times 33 75 text mi nbsp Calculate how many kWh per gallonMPG mi gal 19 69 kWh gal 13 5 kWh 1 46 charges 33 75 mi 49 2 MPG displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal 19 69 text kWh text gal over 13 5 text kWh 1 46 text charges times 33 75 text mi 49 2 text MPG nbsp Now the same vehicle where gasoline with worth 3 20 gal and electricity is 0 085 kWh MPG mi gal 3 20 gal 0 085 kWh 13 5 kWh 33 75 mi displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal 3 20 over text gal div 0 085 over text kWh over 13 5 text kWh times 33 75 text mi nbsp Calculate how many kWh per gallonMPG mi gal 37 65 kWh gal 13 5 kWh 2 78 charges 33 75 mi 94 1 MPG displaystyle text MPG text mi text gal 37 65 text kWh text gal over 13 5 text kWh 2 78 text charges times 33 75 text mi 94 1 text MPG nbsp Electric and plug in hybrid electric vehicles edit nbsp Monroney label showing the EPA s fuel economy equivalent ratings for the 2011 Smart ED electric car Between 2008 and 2010 several major automakers began commercializing battery electric vehicles BEVs which are powered exclusively on electricity and plug in hybrid electric vehicles PHEVs which use electricity together with a liquid fuel stored in an on board fuel tank usually gasoline but it might be also powered by diesel ethanol or flex fuel engines For battery electric vehicles the U S Environmental Protection Agency s formula to calculate the well to wheel MPGe is based on energy standards established by the U S Department of Energy in 2000 2 13 14 The well to wheel conversion is used in calculation of corporate average fuel economy CAFE but not for window sticker Monroney fuel economy For Monroney fuel economy the equation is M P G e E G E M E E 33 705 Wh gallon US E M displaystyle MPGe frac E G E M cdot E E frac 33 705 text Wh gallon text US E M nbsp where M P G e displaystyle MPGe nbsp is expressed as miles per gallon gasoline equivalent as shown in the Monroney label E G displaystyle E G nbsp energy content per gallon of gasoline 115 000 Btu gallon as set by U S DoE and reported by the Alternative Fuel Data Center 14 E M displaystyle E M nbsp wall to wheel electrical energy consumed per mile Wh mi as measured through EPA s five standard drive cycle tests for electric cars and SAE test procedures 13 39 E E displaystyle E E nbsp energy unit conversion factor rounded 3 412 Btu Wh 14 The formula employed by the EPA for calculating their rated MPGe does not account for any fuel or energy consumed upstream such as the generation and transmission of electrical power or well to wheel life cycle as EPA s comparison with internal combustion vehicles is made on a tank to wheel versus battery to wheel basis The California Air Resources Board uses a different dynamometer testing than EPA and considers reformulated gasoline sold in that state For CARB estimates the formula becomes 13 M P G e E G E M E E 32 600 Wh gallon US E M displaystyle MPGe frac E G E M cdot E E frac 32 600 text Wh gallon text US E M nbsp The new SAE J1711 standard for measuring the exhaust emissions and fuel economy of hybrid electric vehicles and plug in hybrids was approved in July 2010 The recommended procedures for PHEVs were revised at Argonne National Laboratory and EPA s new regulation to define PHEV fuel economy reporting protocol is expected to be based on SAE J1711 43 44 In November 2010 EPA decided to rate electric mode and gasoline only mode separately and these are the two figures prominently displayed in the window sticker of the 2011 Chevrolet Volt In electric mode the Volt s rating is estimated with the same formula as an electric car 10 13 The overall or composite fuel economy rating combining electricity and gasoline powered are displayed in the Monroney label in a much smaller type and as part of the comparison of the Volt s fuel economy among all vehicles and within compact cars 45 EPA has considered several methodologies for rating the overall fuel economy of PHEVs but as of February 2011 EPA has not announced the final methodology that will be applied for the purposes of estimating the new manufacture s 2012 2016 Corporate Average Fuel Economy CAFE credits for plug in hybrids 13 46 Examples edit In November 2010 the EPA began including MPGe in its new sticker for fuel economy and environmental comparisons The EPA rated the Nissan Leaf electric car with a combined fuel economy of 99 MPGe 9 and rated the Chevrolet Volt plug in hybrid with a combined fuel economy of 93 MPGe in all electric mode 37 MPG when operating with gasoline only and an overall fuel economy rating of 60 mpg US 3 9 L 100 km combining power from electricity and gasoline 10 45 47 For both vehicles EPA calculated the MPGe rating under its five cycle tests using the formula displayed earlier with a conversion factor of 33 7 kWh of electricity being the energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline 10 All electric cars edit The following table compares official EPA ratings for fuel economy in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent mpg e or MPGe for plug in electric vehicles for series production all electric passenger vehicles rated by the EPA for model years 2015 48 2016 49 2017 50 and 2023 51 versus the model year 2016 vehicles that were rated the most efficient by the EPA with plug in hybrid drivetrains Chevrolet Volt second generation gasoline electric hybrid drivetrains Toyota Prius Eco fourth generation 52 53 54 and the average new vehicle for that model year which has a fuel economy of 25 mpg US 9 4 L 100 km 30 mpg imp 49 52 EPA rating data are taken from manufacturer testing of their own vehicles usually conducted using pre production prototypes Manufacturers report the results to EPA which reviews the results and confirms about 15 20 of them through their own tests at the National Vehicles and Fuel Emissions Laboratory 55 Comparison of top fuel efficient battery electric vehicles versus most efficient fossil fuel vehicles including hybrid electric vehicles Fuel economy as displayed in the Monroney label 48 49 50 Vehicle Modelyear EPA rated fuel economy Notes Combined City Highway Toyota Prius HEV 51 2023 57 mpg 57 mpg 56 mpg 9 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Long Range AWD w 18 inch wheels 51 2023 140 mpg e24 1 kWh 100 mi 15 0 kWh 100 km 153 mpg e22 0 kWh 100 mi 13 7 kWh 100 km 127 mpg e26 5 kWh 100 mi 16 5 kWh 100 km 1 Lucid Air Pure AWD w 19 inch wheels 51 2023 140 mpg e24 1 kWh 100 mi 15 0 kWh 100 km 141 mpg e23 9 kWh 100 mi 14 9 kWh 100 km 140 mpg e24 1 kWh 100 mi 15 0 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model Y AWD 51 2023 123 mpg e27 4 kWh 100 mi 17 0 kWh 100 km 129 mpg e26 1 kWh 100 mi 16 2 kWh 100 km 116 mpg e29 1 kWh 100 mi 18 1 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model 3 56 Standard Range 57 2020 141 mpg e23 9 kWh 100 mi 14 9 kWh 100 km 148 mpg e22 8 kWh 100 mi 14 2 kWh 100 km 132 mpg e25 5 kWh 100 mi 15 9 kWh 100 km 1 Hyundai Ioniq Electric 50 58 2017 136 mpg e24 8 kWh 100 mi 15 4 kWh 100 km 150 mpg e22 5 kWh 100 mi 14 0 kWh 100 km 122 mpg e27 6 kWh 100 mi 17 2 kWh 100 km 1 4 BMW i3 60 A h 59 60 2014 15 16 124 mpg e27 2 kWh 100 mi 16 9 kWh 100 km 137 mpg e24 6 kWh 100 mi 15 3 kWh 100 km 111 mpg e30 4 kWh 100 mi 18 9 kWh 100 km 1 3 4 5 Scion iQ EV 61 2013 121 mpg e27 9 kWh 100 mi 17 3 kWh 100 km 138 mpg e24 4 kWh 100 mi 15 2 kWh 100 km 105 mpg e32 1 kWh 100 mi 19 9 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model 3 Long Range AWD 62 2020 121 mpg e27 9 kWh 100 mi 17 3 kWh 100 km 124 mpg e27 2 kWh 100 mi 16 9 kWh 100 km 116 mpg e29 1 kWh 100 mi 18 1 kWh 100 km 1 Chevrolet Bolt EV 63 2017 119 mpg e28 3 kWh 100 mi 17 6 kWh 100 km 121 mpg e27 9 kWh 100 mi 17 3 kWh 100 km 110 mpg e30 6 kWh 100 mi 19 0 kWh 100 km Chevrolet Spark EV 64 2014 15 16 119 mpg e28 3 kWh 100 mi 17 6 kWh 100 km 128 mpg e26 3 kWh 100 mi 16 4 kWh 100 km 109 mpg e30 9 kWh 100 mi 19 2 kWh 100 km 1 BMW i3 94 A h 59 2017 118 mpg e28 6 kWh 100 mi 17 7 kWh 100 km 129 mpg e26 1 kWh 100 mi 16 2 kWh 100 km 106 mpg e31 8 kWh 100 mi 19 8 kWh 100 km 1 Honda Fit EV 65 2013 14 118 mpg e28 6 kWh 100 mi 17 7 kWh 100 km 132 mpg e25 5 kWh 100 mi 15 9 kWh 100 km 105 mpg e32 1 kWh 100 mi 19 9 kWh 100 km 1 Fiat 500e 66 2013 14 15 116 mpg e29 1 kWh 100 mi 18 1 kWh 100 km 122 mpg e27 6 kWh 100 mi 17 2 kWh 100 km 108 mpg e31 2 kWh 100 mi 19 4 kWh 100 km 1 Volkswagen e Golf 67 2015 16 116 mpg e29 1 kWh 100 mi 18 1 kWh 100 km 126 mpg e26 8 kWh 100 mi 16 6 kWh 100 km 105 mpg e32 1 kWh 100 mi 19 9 kWh 100 km 1 Nissan Leaf 24 kW h 68 2013 14 15 16 114 mpg e29 6 kWh 100 mi 18 4 kWh 100 km 126 mpg e26 8 kWh 100 mi 16 6 kWh 100 km 101 mpg e33 4 kWh 100 mi 20 7 kWh 100 km 1 6 Mitsubishi i 69 2012 13 14 16 112 mpg e30 1 kWh 100 mi 18 7 kWh 100 km 126 mpg e26 8 kWh 100 mi 16 6 kWh 100 km 99 mpg e34 0 kWh 100 mi 21 2 kWh 100 km 1 Nissan Leaf 30 kW h 68 2016 112 mpg e30 1 kWh 100 mi 18 7 kWh 100 km 124 mpg e27 2 kWh 100 mi 16 9 kWh 100 km 101 mpg e33 4 kWh 100 mi 20 7 kWh 100 km 1 Fiat 500e 70 2016 112 mpg e30 1 kWh 100 mi 18 7 kWh 100 km 121 mpg e27 9 kWh 100 mi 17 3 kWh 100 km 103 mpg e32 7 kWh 100 mi 20 3 kWh 100 km 1 Smart electric drive 71 2013 14 15 16 107 mpg e31 5 kWh 100 mi 19 6 kWh 100 km 122 mpg e27 6 kWh 100 mi 17 2 kWh 100 km 93 mpg e36 2 kWh 100 mi 22 5 kWh 100 km 1 7 Kia Soul EV 72 2015 16 105 mpg e32 1 kWh 100 mi 19 9 kWh 100 km 120 mpg e28 1 kWh 100 mi 17 5 kWh 100 km 92 mpg e36 6 kWh 100 mi 22 8 kWh 100 km 1 Ford Focus Electric 73 2012 13 14 15 16 105 mpg e32 1 kWh 100 mi 19 9 kWh 100 km 110 mpg e30 6 kWh 100 mi 19 0 kWh 100 km 99 mpg e34 0 kWh 100 mi 21 2 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model S AWD 70D 49 74 2015 16 101 mpg e33 4 kWh 100 mi 20 7 kWh 100 km 101 mpg e33 4 kWh 100 mi 20 7 kWh 100 km 102 mpg e33 0 kWh 100 mi 20 5 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model S AWD 85D 49 75 amp 90D 49 74 2015 16 100 mpg e33 7 kWh 100 mi 20 9 kWh 100 km 95 mpg e35 5 kWh 100 mi 22 0 kWh 100 km 106 mpg e31 8 kWh 100 mi 19 8 kWh 100 km 1 8 Tesla Model S 60 kW h 49 74 2014 15 16 95 mpg e35 5 kWh 100 mi 22 0 kWh 100 km 94 mpg e35 9 kWh 100 mi 22 3 kWh 100 km 97 mpg e34 7 kWh 100 mi 21 6 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model S AWD P85D 49 75 amp P90D 49 74 2015 16 93 mpg e36 2 kWh 100 mi 22 5 kWh 100 km 89 mpg e37 9 kWh 100 mi 23 5 kWh 100 km 98 mpg e34 4 kWh 100 mi 21 4 kWh 100 km 1 8 Tesla Model X AWD 90D 76 2016 92 mpg e36 6 kWh 100 mi 22 8 kWh 100 km 90 mpg e37 5 kWh 100 mi 23 3 kWh 100 km 94 mpg e35 9 kWh 100 mi 22 3 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model X AWD P90D 76 2016 89 mpg e37 9 kWh 100 mi 23 5 kWh 100 km 89 mpg e37 9 kWh 100 mi 23 5 kWh 100 km 90 mpg e37 5 kWh 100 mi 23 3 kWh 100 km 1 Tesla Model S 85 kW h 77 2012 13 14 15 89 mpg e37 9 kWh 100 mi 23 5 kWh 100 km 88 mpg e38 3 kWh 100 mi 23 8 kWh 100 km 90 mpg e37 5 kWh 100 mi 23 3 kWh 100 km 1 Mercedes Benz B Class Electric Drive 78 2014 15 16 84 mpg e40 1 kWh 100 mi 24 9 kWh 100 km 85 mpg e39 7 kWh 100 mi 24 6 kWh 100 km 83 mpg e40 6 kWh 100 mi 25 2 kWh 100 km 1 Toyota RAV4 EV 79 2012 13 14 76 mpg e44 3 kWh 100 mi 27 6 kWh 100 km 78 mpg e43 2 kWh 100 mi 26 9 kWh 100 km 74 mpg e45 5 kWh 100 mi 28 3 kWh 100 km 1 BYD e6 49 80 2012 13 14 15 16 63 mpg e53 5 kWh 100 mi 33 2 kWh 100 km 61 mpg e55 3 kWh 100 mi 34 3 kWh 100 km 65 mpg e51 9 kWh 100 mi 32 2 kWh 100 km 1 Second gen Chevrolet Volt 49 81 82 Plug in hybrid PHEV Electricity only 2016 106 mpg e31 8 kWh 100 mi 19 8 kWh 100 km 113 mpg e29 8 kWh 100 mi 18 5 kWh 100 km 99 mpg e34 0 kWh 100 mi 21 2 kWh 100 km 1 2 9 Volt Gasoline only 42 mpg 43 mpg 42 mpg Toyota Prius Eco 4th gen 53 Hybrid electric vehicle HEV Gasoline electric hybrid 2016 56 mpg 58 mpg 53 mpg 2 10 Ford Fusion AWD A S6 2 0L 49 83 Gasoline powered Average new vehicle 2016 25 mpg 22 mpg 31 mpg 2 11 Notes All estimated fuel economy based on 15 000 miles 24 000 km annual driving 45 highway and 55 city 1 Conversion 1 gallon of gasoline 33 7 kW h 2 The 2014 i3 REx is classified by EPA as a series plug in hybrid while for CARB is a range extended battery electric vehicle BEVx The i3 REx is the most fuel economic EPA certified current year vehicle with a gasoline engine with a combined gasoline electricity rating of 88 mpg e but its total range is limited to 150 mi 240 km 52 84 3 The 2014 16 BMW i3 60 A h ranked as the most fuel economic EPA certified vehicle of all fuel types considered in all years until MY 2016 It was surpassed by the 2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric in November 2016 84 4 The i3 REx has a combined fuel economy in all electric mode of 117 mpg e 29 kW h 100 mi 18 kW h 100 km 85 5 The 2016 model year Leaf correspond to the variant with the 24 kW h battery pack 6 Ratings correspond to both convertible and coupe models 7 Model with 85 kW h battery pack 8 Most fuel economic plug in hybrid capable of long distance travel The 2016 Volt has a rating of 77 mpg e for combined gasoline electricity operation 52 9 Most fuel economic hybrid electric car 49 52 10 Other 2016 MY cars achieving 25 mpg US 9 4 L 100 km 30 mpg imp combined city hwy include the Honda Accord A S6 3 5L Toyota Camry A S6 3 5L and Toyota RAV4 A S6 2 5L 49 83 Plug in hybrids edit The following table compares EPA s estimated out of pocket fuel costs and fuel economy ratings of serial production plug in hybrid electric vehicles rated by EPA as of January 2017 update expressed in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent mpg e 6 86 versus the most fuel efficient gasoline electric hybrid car the 2016 Toyota Prius Eco fourth generation rated 56 mpg US 4 2 L 100 km 67 mpg imp and EPA s average new 2016 vehicle which has a fuel economy of 25 mpg US 9 4 L 100 km 30 mpg imp 86 87 88 The table also shows the fuel efficiency for plug in hybrids in all electric mode expressed as KWh 100 mile the metric used by EPA to rate electric cars before November 2010 27 Comparison of out of pocket fuel costs and fuel economy for plug in hybrid electric carsrated by EPA as of January 2017 update with MPGe and conventional MPG 1 as displayed in the Monroney label and the US DoE fueleconomy gov website Vehicle Yearmodel Operatingmode EV range EPA rated Combined fuel economy EPA rated city highway fuel economy Fuel cost to drive25 miles Annual fuel cost 1 15 000 mi Notes Toyota Prius Prime 6 89 2017 Electricity 25 mi 133 mpg e 25 kWh 100 mi 0 82 550 The Prius Prime is the most energy efficient vehicle with a gasoline engine in EV mode 90 During the first 25 mi might use some gasoline 89 The 2017 Prime has a combined gasoline electricity rating of 78 mpg e city 83 mpg e hwy 73 mpg e 91 Gasoline only 54 mpg 55 mpg 53 mpg 1 08 BMW i3 REx 60 A h 92 93 201420152016 Electricity only 72 mi 117 mpg e 29 kWh 100 mi 97 mpg e 35 kW h 100 mi 79 mpg e 43 kW h 100 mi 0 94 650 The EPA classifies the i3 REx as aseries plug in hybrid while CARB as arange extended battery electric vehicle BEVx The 2014 16 i3 REx is the most fuel efficient EPA certified current year vehicle with a gasoline engine with a combinedgasoline electricity rating of 88 mpg e city 97 mpg e hwy 79 mpg e 94 91 Gasoline only 78 mi 39 mpg 41 mpg 37 mpg 1 79 Honda Accord Plug in Hybrid 95 2014 Electricityand gasoline 13 mi 115 mpg e 29 kWh 100 mi 1 03 650 The 2014 Accord is the most fuel efficient plug in hybrid in blended EV mode with a rating of 115 mpg e The Accord has a rating for combined EV hybrid operation of 57 mpg e 96 Gasoline only 46 mpg 47 mpg 46 mpg 1 11 BMW i3 REx 94 A h 6 59 2017 Electricity only 97 mi 111 mpg e 30 kWh 100 mi 0 98 650 The EPA classifies the i3 REx as aseries plug in hybrid while CARB as arange extended battery electric vehicle BEVx The 2017 i3 REx 94 A h has a combined gasoline electricity rating of 88 mpg e city 95 mpg e hwy 81 mpg e the highest rating among 2017 MY plug in hybrids 91 Gasoline only 83 mi 35 mpg 36 mpg 33 mpg 1 99 Chevrolet Volt 2nd gen 97 98 20162017 Electricity only 53 mi 106 mpg e 31 kWh 100 mi 113 mpg e 29 kWh 100 mi 99 mpg e 34 kWh 100 mi 1 01 650 The 2016 17 Volt has a combined gasoline electricity rating of 77 mpg e city 82 mpg e hwy 72 mpg e 91 Regular gasoline Gasoline only 42 mpg 43 mpg 42 mpg 1 39 Hyundai Sonata PHEV 99 2016 Electricityand gasoline 27 mi 99mpg e 34 kWh 100 mi 1 19 700 During the first 27 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 27 mi 99 Gasoline only 40 mpg 1 28 Chevrolet Volt 1st gen 100 101 201320142015 Electricity only 38 mi 98 mpg e 35 kWh 100 mi 1 01 650 The 2013 15 Volt has a combined gasoline electricity rating of 62 mpg e city 63 mpg e hwy 61 mpg e 94 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 37 mpg 35 mpg 40 mpg 1 21 Ford Fusion Energi 102 2017 Electricity and gasoline 22 mi 97 mpg e 35 kW h 100 mi 1 14 700 The actual all electric range is between 0 to 21 mi 102 Gasoline only 42 mpg 1 21 Toyota Prius PHV 103 2012201320142015 Electricity and gasoline 11 mi 95 mpg e 29 kWh 100 mi plus 0 2 gallons 100 mi 1 03 600 After the first 11 miles the carfunctions like a regular Prius hybridThe 2012 15 Prius has a combined gasoline electricity rating of 58 mpg e city 59 mpg e hwy 56 mpg e 94 Gasoline only 50 mpg 51 mpg 49 mpg 1 02 Chevrolet Volt 104 20112012 Electricity only 94 mpg e 36 kWh 100 mi 95 mpg e 36 kWh 100 mi 93 mpg e 37 kWh 100 mi 1 17 800 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 37 mpg 35 mpg 40 mpg 1 70 Ford C Max Energi 105 Ford Fusion Energi 105 2013201420152016 Electricity and gasoline 20 mi 88 mpg e 37 kWh 100 mi 95 mpg e 35 kW h 100 mi 81 mpg e 42 kW h 100 mi 1 25 750 The Energi did not use any gasoline for the first 20 miles in EPA tests but depending on the driving style the car may use both gasoline and electricity during EV mode The Energi models have a combined EV hybrid operation rating of 51 mpg e city 55 mpg e hwy 46 mpg e 94 Gasoline only 38 mpg 40 mpg 36 mpg 1 34 Audi A3 e tron ultra 106 2016 Electricity only 17 mi 86 mpg e 38 kWh 100 mi 1 37 900 During the first 17 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 17 mi 106 Gasoline only 39 mpg 1 61 Cadillac ELR 107 20142015 Electricity only 37 mi 82 mpg e 41 kWh 100 mi 1 33 900 The 2014 15 ELR has a combined gasoline electricity rating of 54 mpg e city 54 mpg e hwy 55 mpg e 94 Gasoline only 33 mpg 31 mpg 35 mpg 1 90 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid 108 2017 Electricity only 33 mi 84 mpg e 40 kWh 100 mi 1 73 900 During the first 33 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 33 mi 108 Gasoline only 32 mpg 1 83 Audi A3 e tron 106 2016 Electricity only 16 mi 83 mpg e 40 kWh 100 mi 1 49 950 During the first 16 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 16 mi 106 Gasoline only 35 mpg 1 79 BMW i8 92 109 201420152016 Electricityand gasoline 15 mi 76 mpg e 43 kWh 100 mi 1 77 1 150 The i8 does not run on 100 electricityas it consumes 0 1 gallons per 100 mi in EV mode all electric range 0 mi The i8 has a rating for combined EV hybrid operation of 37 mpg e 96 Gasoline only 28 mpg 28 mpg 29 mpg 2 24 BMW 330e 110 2016 Electricity and gasoline 14 mi 72 mpg e 47 kWh 100 mi 1 74 1 050 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 14 mi 110 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 31 mpg 2 02 Porsche 918 Spyder 92 111 2015 Electricity only 12 mi 67 mpg e 50 kWh 100 mi 1 62 1 500 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 22 mpg 20 mpg 24 mpg 2 85 BMW 740e iPerformance 112 2017 Electricity only 14 mi 64 mpg e 52 kWh 100 mi 2 03 1 350 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 14 mi 112 Gasoline only 27 mpg 2 48 BMW X5 xDrive40e 113 2016 Electricity only 14 mi 56 mpg e 59 kWh 100 mi 2 23 1 450 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 14 mi 113 Gasoline only 24 mpg 2 61 Mercedes Benz S 500 e 114 2015 Electricity and gasoline 14 mi 58 mpg e 59 kWh 100 mi 2 13 1 350 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 12 mi 114 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 26 mpg 2 41 Fisker Karma 115 2012 Electricity only 33 mi 54 mpg e 62 kWh 100 mi 2 02 1 450 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 20 mpg 20 mpg 21 mpg 3 14 Volvo XC90 T8 116 2016 Electricity and gasoline 14 mi 53 mpg e 58 kWh 100 mi 2 19 1 400 During the first 14 mi uses some gasoline The actual all electric range is between 0 to 13 mi 116 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 25 mpg 2 51 Porsche Panamera S E Hybrid 117 2016 Electricity and gasoline 16 mi 51 mpg e 51 kWh 100 mi 2 15 1 350 The all electric range is between 0 to 15 miPremium gasoline Gasoline only 25 mpg 23 mpg 29 mpg 2 51 Porsche Panamera S E Hybrid 117 20142015 Electricity and gasoline 16 mi 50 mpg e 52 kWh 100 mi 2 18 1 400 The all electric range is between 0 to 15 miThe S E Hybrid has a rating for combined EV hybrid operation of 31 mpg e 96 Gasoline only 25 mpg 23 mpg 29 mpg 2 51 Porsche Cayenne S E Hybrid 92 118 20152016 Electricity and gasoline 14 mi 47 mpg e 69 kWh 100 mi 2 24 1 550 Premium gasoline Gasoline only 22 mpg 21 mpg 24 mpg 2 85 McLaren P1 92 119 20142015 Electricity and gasoline 19 mi 18 mpg e 25 kWh 100 mi 3 79 2 200 The P1 does not run on 100 electricityas it consumes 4 8 gallons per 100 mi in EV mode all electric range 0 mi 119 The P1 has a rating for combined EV hybrid operation of 17 mpg e 96 Gasoline only 17 mpg 16 mpg 20 mpg 3 69 2016 Toyota Prius Eco 4th gen 88 2016 Gasoline electrichybrid 56 mpg 58 mpg 53 mpg 0 91 550 Most fuel efficient hybrid electric car 86 Ford Fusion AWD 2 0L 86 83 Average new vehicle 2016 Gasoline only 25 mpg 22 mpg 31 mpg 2 04 1 200 Other 2016 MY cars achieving 25 mpg combined city hwy include the Honda Accord 3 5L Toyota Camry 3 5L and Toyota RAV4 2 5L 86 83 Notes 1 Based on 45 highway and 55 city driving Electricity cost of US 0 13 kWh premium gasoline price of US 2 51 per gallon used by the 2015 Volt i3 REx ELR i8 Mercedes S500e Karma and all Porsche models and regular gasoline price of US 2 04 per gallon as of 18 December 2015 update Conversion 1 gallon of gasoline 33 7 kWh Fuel cell vehicles edit The following table compares EPA s fuel economy expressed in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent MPGe for the two models of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles rated by the EPA as of September 2021 update and available in California 120 Comparison of fuel economy expressed in MPGe for hydrogen fuel cell vehicles available for sale or lease in California and rated by the U S Environmental Protection Agency as of September 2021 update 120 Vehicle Model year Combined fuel economy City fuel economy Highway fuel economy Range Annual fuel cost Hyundai Nexo 2019 2021 61 mpg e 65 mpg e 58 mpg e 380 mi 610 km Toyota Mirai 2016 20 66 mpg e 66 mpg e 66 mpg e 312 mi 502 km Toyota Mirai 2021 74 mpg e 76 mpg e 71 mpg e 402 mi 647 km Notes One kg of hydrogen is roughly equivalent to one U S gallon of gasoline Conversion using GGE edit Main article Gasoline gallon equivalent The same method can be applied to any other alternative fuel vehicle when that vehicle s energy consumption is known Generally the energy consumption of the vehicle is expressed in units other than W h mile or Btu mile so additional arithmetic is required to convert to a gasoline gallon equivalent GGE using 33 7 kWh gallon 114989 17 btu gallon 8 Hydrogen example with GGE edit The 2008 Honda FCX Clarity is advertised to have a vehicle consumption of 72 mi kg H2 121 Hydrogen at atmospheric pressure has an energy density of 120 MJ kg 113 738 BTU kg 122 by converting this energy density to a GGE it is found that 1 011 kg of hydrogen is needed to meet the equivalent energy of one gallon of gasoline This conversion factor can now be used to calculate the MPGe for this vehicle M P G e M P k g H 2 G G E displaystyle MPGe MPkg H 2 times GGE nbsp M P G e 72 m i k g H 2 1 011 k g H 2 g a l l o n g a s o l i n e 72 8 M P G e displaystyle MPGe 72 frac mi kg H 2 times 1 011 frac kg H 2 gallon gasoline 72 8MPGe nbsp Life cycle assessment editPump Well to wheel edit EPA s miles per gallon equivalent metric shown in the window sticker does not measure a vehicle s full cycle energy efficiency or well to wheel life cycle Rather the EPA presents MPGe in the same manner as MPG for conventional internal combustion engine vehicles as displayed in the Monroney sticker and in both cases the rating only considers the pump to wheel or wall to wheel energy consumption i e it measures the energy for which the owner usually pays For EVs the energy cost includes the conversions from AC from the wall used to charge the battery 39 The EPA ratings displayed in window stickers do not account for the energy consumption upstream which includes the energy or fuel required to generate the electricity or to extract and produce the liquid fuel the energy losses due to power transmission or the energy consumed for the transportation of the fuel from the well to the station 14 40 Petroleum equivalency factor PEF a CAFE metric edit In 2000 the United States Department of Energy DOE established the methodology for calculating the petroleum equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles based on the well to wheel WTW gasoline equivalent energy content of electricity E g displaystyle E g nbsp The methodology considers the upstream efficiency of the processes involved in the two fuel cycles and considers the national average electricity generation and transmission efficiencies because a battery electric vehicle burns its fuel mainly fossil fuels off board at the power generation plant 14 This methodology is used by carmakers to estimate credits into their overall Corporate Average Fuel Economy CAFE for manufacturing electric drive vehicles 13 The petroleum equivalent fuel economy of electric vehicles is determined by the following equations 14 P E F E g F C F A F D P F displaystyle PEF E g times FCF times AF times DPF nbsp where P E F displaystyle PEF nbsp Petroleum equivalent fuel economy E g displaystyle E g nbsp Gasoline equivalent energy content of electricity factor F C F displaystyle FCF nbsp Fuel content factor or incentive factor DoE selected a value of 1 0 15 to retain consistency with existing regulatory and statutory procedures and to provide a similar treatment to manufacturers of all types of alternative fuel vehicles 123 A F displaystyle AF nbsp Petroleum fueled accessory factor this is equal to 1 if the electric drive vehicle does not have petroleum powered accessories installed and 0 90 if it does D P F displaystyle DPF nbsp Driving pattern factor this is equal to 1 as DoE considered that electric vehicles eligible for inclusion in CAFE will offer capabilities perhaps excepting driving range similar to those of conventional vehicles dd dd The gasoline equivalent energy content of electricity factor abbreviated as E g displaystyle E g nbsp is defined as E g T g T t C T p displaystyle E g frac left T g times T t times C right T p nbsp where T g displaystyle T g nbsp U S average fossil fuel electricity generation efficiency 0 328 124 T t displaystyle T t nbsp U S average electricity transmission efficiency 0 924 124 T p displaystyle T p nbsp Petroleum refining and distribution efficiency 0 830 124 C displaystyle C nbsp Watt hours of energy per gallon of gasoline conversion factor 33 705 Wh US gal 115 006 BTU US gal 124 dd dd E g displaystyle E g nbsp is computed as E g 0 328 0 924 33705 W h g a l 0 830 displaystyle E g frac 0 328 times 0 924 times 33705 frac Wh gal 0 830 nbsp 12307 W h g a l displaystyle 12307 frac Wh gal nbsp dd This computation accounts for the well to wall losses resulting from the extraction of crude oil and refinement into gasoline Tp conversion to electricity Tg and the transmission grid Tt in summary the total amount of useful electrical energy that can be extracted from gasoline is just 36 5 of its total theoretical stored energy 124 Substituting the numerical values into the first equation P E F E g 1 0 15 A F D P F displaystyle PEF E g times frac 1 0 15 times AF times DPF nbsp 12307 W h g a l 0 15 A F D P F displaystyle frac 12307 frac Wh gal 0 15 times AF times DPF nbsp 82049 W h g a l A F D P F displaystyle 82049 frac Wh gal times AF times DPF nbsp dd dd As noted above when A F displaystyle AF nbsp and D P F displaystyle DPF nbsp are 1 as they would be for a pure electric vehicle P E F 82049 W h g a l displaystyle PEF 82049 frac Wh gal nbsp Examples In the example provided by the US DoE in its final rule an electric car with an energy consumption of 265 Watt hour per mile in urban driving and 220 Watt hour per mile in highway driving results in a petroleum equivalent fuel economy of 335 24 miles per gallon based on a driving schedule factor of 55 percent urban and 45 percent highway and using a petroleum equivalency factor of 82 049 Watt hours per gallon 14 M P G P E P E F E C c i t y f c i t y E C h w y f h w y displaystyle MPG PE frac PEF left EC city times f city right left EC hwy times f hwy right nbsp 82049 W h g a l 265 W h m i 0 55 220 W h m i 0 45 335 24 m i g a l P E displaystyle frac 82049 frac Wh gal left 265 frac Wh mi times 0 55 right left 220 frac Wh mi times 0 45 right 335 24 frac mi gal PE nbsp dd In 2009 the Monroney sticker for the Mini E rated the wall to wheel energy consumption at 33 36 kWh 100 mi 102 1 93 6 mpg e for the city and highway driving cycles respectively 124 The petroleum equivalent fuel economy is 239 MPGPE assuming a 55 45 urban highway split For comparison the 2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV has a rated wall to wheel consumption of 128 110 mpg e 263 306 Wh mi listed on the Monroney sticker for the urban highway driving cycles respectively 63 The petroleum equivalent fuel economy for the Bolt using the DoE rule to consider well to wall energy losses is 284 MPGPE computed using the same 55 45 urban highway split See also editAlternative propulsion Corporate Average Fuel Economy CAFE Energy conversion efficiency Energy density Fuel efficiency in transportation Gasoline gallon equivalent GGE List of unusual units of measurementNotes edit a b Note that MPGe is calculated using earlier standards and is not directly comparable References edit EPA OAR OTAQ US 13 October 2016 Electric Vehicles Learn More About the New Label U S EPA U S EPA Retrieved 2018 01 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Paul Seredynski 2010 12 21 Decoding Electric Car MPG With Kilowatt Hours Small Is Beautiful Edmunds com Retrieved 2011 02 17 a b c d Fuel Economy Label U S Environmental Protection Agency 2011 02 14 Retrieved 2011 02 17 a b EIA Electricity Data www eia gov Retrieved 2018 01 30 a b Natural Gas Residential Price www eia gov Retrieved 2018 01 30 a b c d United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2017 01 11 Model Year 2017 Fuel Economy Guide Electric vehicles amp Plug in Hybrid Electric Vehicles PDF fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2017 01 16 See pp 34 38 for all electric vehicles and plug in hybrid electric vehicles a b The True Cost of Powering an Electric Car Edmunds Retrieved 2018 01 30 a b c d U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA May 2011 New Fuel Economy and Environment Labels for a New Generation of Vehicles EPA Retrieved 2016 12 12 a b c Nick Bunkley 2010 11 22 Nissan Says Its Electric Leaf Gets Equivalent of 99 mpg miles gal miles per galon The New York Times Retrieved 2011 02 17 a b c d e Fred Meier 2010 11 24 Volt is rated 93 mpg on electricity alone 37 mpg on gas generator USA Today Retrieved 2011 02 17 a b c d EPA May 2011 Fact Sheet New Fuel Economy and Environment Labels for a New Generation of Vehicles PDF U S Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2011 05 25 EPA 420 F 11 017 a b EPA DOT unveil the next generation of fuel economy labels Green Car Congress 2011 05 25 Retrieved 2011 05 25 a b c d e f g Paul Weissler 2009 07 06 Many factors figure in fuel economy calculation for electric vehicles Automotive Engineering International Online SAE International Magazine Retrieved 2011 02 23 a b c d e f g h i j k Electric and Hybrid Vehicle Research Development and Demonstration Program Petroleum Equivalent Fuel Economy Calculation Final Rule PDF 2000 06 12 Retrieved 2011 02 20 a b Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 100 494 Alternative Motor Fuels Act of 1988 a b c d e Report to Congress on Effects of the Alternative Motor Fuels Act CAFE Incentives Policy PDF Report National Highway Traffic Safety Administration March 2002 Retrieved 2011 02 22 a b The Corporate Average Fuel Economy Program CAFE Background AMFA CAFE Credits National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Archived from the original on June 12 2002 Handbook 44 Appendix D Definitions PDF National Institute of Standards and Technology 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 01 09 Retrieved 2009 01 02 Electric Transportation Applications 1996 Test Reports for Vehicles by Manufacturer and Model General Motors EV1 PDF Idaho National Laboratory U S DoE Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Electric Transportation Applications 1999 Test Reports for Vehicles by Manufacturer and Model 1999 General Motors EV1 w NiMH PDF Idaho National Laboratory U S DoE Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Electric Transportation Applications 1996 Test Reports for Vehicles by Manufacturer and Model Toyota RAV4 EV PDF Idaho National Laboratory U S DoE Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Energy use averaged 2 5 miles per AC kWh 0 4 AC kWh per mile Electric Transportation Applications March 2000 Field Operations Program Toyota RAV4 NiMH Accelerated Reliability Testing Final Report PDF Idaho National Laboratory US DoE Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Energy use averaged 2 5 miles per AC kWh 0 4 AC kWh per mile Electric Transportation Applications 1997 Test Reports for Vehicles by Manufacturer and Model 1998 Ford Ranger EV PDF Idaho National Laboratory U S DoE Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Electric Transportation Applications 1997 Test Reports for Vehicles by Manufacturer and Model 1997 Chevrolet S 10 Electric PDF Idaho National Laboratory US DoE Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Sperling Daniel and Deborah Gordon 2009 Two billion cars driving toward sustainability Oxford University Press New York pp 22 26 ISBN 978 0 19 537664 7 Sherry Boschert 2006 Plug in Hybrids The Cars that will Recharge America New Society Publishers Gabriola Island Canada pp 15 28 ISBN 978 0 86571 571 4 a b c d Why are the VOLT and LEAF EVs measured in Miles Per Gallon Electric Vehicle News 2009 08 15 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Press Release Automotive X Prize Announces Draft Guidelines for Competition to Inspire Super Efficient Vehicles X Prize Foundation Retrieved 2010 12 01 Press Release Consumer Reports to Adopt MPGe Measure for Fuel Economy X Prize Foundation Retrieved 2010 12 07 a b Office of Transportation and Air Quality EPA and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Us DoT September 2010 Environmental Protection Agency Fuel Economy Label Final Report PDF U S Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2011 02 20 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Brad Berman 2009 07 29 Confusion Over MPG Ratings for Electric Cars HybridCars com Retrieved 2014 03 15 Don Sherman 2008 11 13 Cranking the Volt to 100 M P G The New York Times Retrieved 2014 03 15 2009 Tesla Roadster window sticker The New York Times 2008 11 13 Retrieved 2014 03 15 EPA and NHTSA Propose Changes to the Motor Vehicle Fuel Economy Label PDF U S Environmental Protection Agency August 2010 Retrieved 2011 02 20 Jim Motavalli 2010 08 30 E P A Develops Grading System for New Car Stickers The New York Times Retrieved 2011 02 20 Assessment of Fuel Economy Technologies for Light duty Vehicles The National Academies Press 2011 p 12 doi 10 17226 12924 ISBN 978 0 309 15607 3 Retrieved 2016 09 18 Understanding the New Fuel Economy and Environment Labels PDF U S Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2016 09 18 FE and Environment Label Brochure PDF U S Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2016 09 18 a b c Michael Duoba R Carlson J Wu TEST PROCEDURES AND BENCHMARKING Blended Type and EV Capable Plug In Hybrid Electric Vehicles PDF Argonne National Laboratory Retrieved 2012 11 22 a b MIT Electric Vehicle Team March 2008 Fuel Economy Numbers for Electric Vehicles PDF Massachusetts Institute of Technology Retrieved 2011 02 24 GREET model retrieved 2011 01 20 U S Department of Energy Fuel Economy Guide Model Year 2018 PDF SAE Approves Method for Rating Plug In Hybrid MPG and Emissions EV World 2010 07 01 Retrieved 2011 02 26 Recommended Practice for Measuring the Exhaust Emissions and Fuel Economy of Hybrid Electric Vehicles Including Plug in Hybrid Vehicles SAE International 2010 06 08 Retrieved 2011 02 26 a b Nick Bunkley 2010 11 24 3 Numbers to Rate Volt s Fuel Economy The New York Times Retrieved 2011 02 24 Nick Bunkley amp Bill Vlasic 2010 10 14 Plug In Cars Pose Riddle for E P A The New York Times Retrieved 2011 02 24 Volt receives EPA ratings and label 93 mpg e all electric 37 mpg gas only 60 mpg e combined Green Car Congress 2010 11 24 Retrieved 2010 11 24 a b Fuel Economy Guide Model Year 2015 PDF Report United States Environmental Protection Agency 2014 pp 31 34 Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Fuel Economy Guide Model Year 2016 PDF Report United States Environmental Protection Agency 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2024 See pp 27 28 for all electric vehicles and pp 30 31 for plug in hybrid electric vehicles The average 2016 vehicle gets 25 mpg a b c Fuel Economy Guide Model Year 2017 PDF Report United States Environmental Protection Agency 2016 pp 32 36 Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b c d e Fuel Economy Guide Model Year 2023 PDF United States Department of Energy EPA 2023 p 11 a b c d e U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Fueleconomy gov s Top Fuel Sippers EPA Ratings All Years fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 Excludes all electric vehicles Click on the tab Top Fuel Sippers EPA Ratings All Years The 2016 Volt has a combined fuel economy of 77 mpg e The BMW i3 REx has a combined fuel economy of 88 mpg e and ranks as the most efficient EPA certified current year vehicle with a gasoline engine a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2015 Toyota Prius 2016 Toyota Prius and 2016 Toyota Prius Eco Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 The average 2016 vehicle gets 25 mpg U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 08 14 2016 Best and Worst Fuel Economy Vehicles excluding electric vehicles Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 08 17 See the tab Cars excl EVs The Prius c is the most fuel efficient in the compact class and the conventional Prius is the most fuel efficient in the midsize class and both rank ahead of the most fuel efficient in any other clars United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy How Vehicles Are Tested www fueleconomy gov 2020 Tesla Model 3 Standard Range Plus www fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2020 12 05 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2020 05 10 2020 Model 3 SR Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2020 05 10 United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 11 18 Compare Side by Side 2017 Hyundai Ioniq Electric fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 11 19 a b c United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 09 29 Compare Side by Side 2015 BMW i3 REX 2016 BMW i3 REX 2017 BMW i3 REX 94 Amp hour battery and 2017 BMW i3 BEV 94 Amp hour battery fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 09 30 United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Compare Side by Side 2014 BMW i3 BEV fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2013 Scion iQ EV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2020 05 10 2020 Model 3 LR AWD Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2020 05 10 a b Energy Efficiency amp Renewable Energy U S Department of Energy and U S Environmental Protection Agency and 2016 09 20 Compare Side by Syde 2017 Chevrolet Bolt fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 09 20 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2014 Chvevrolet Spark EV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2013 Honda Fit EV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2013 Fiat 500e Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2015 Volkswagen e Golf Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Compare side by side 2013 Nissan Leaf 2014 Nissan Leaf 2015 Nissan Leaf 2016 Nissan Leaf 24 kW hr battery pack 2016 Nissan Leaf 30 kW hr battery pack Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2011 12 Electric Vehicles 2012 Mitsubishi i MiEV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2016 Fiat 500e Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2013 smart fortwo electric drive coupe Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2015 Kia Soul Electric Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2012 Ford Focus BEV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 a b c d U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Compare Side by Side 2015 Tesla Model S 60 kW hr AWD 70D AWD 90D AWD P90D Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2015 Tesla Model S 85 kW hr battery pack 2014 Tesla Model S AWD 85 kW hr battery pack 2015 Tesla Model S AWD 85D and 2015 Tesla Model S AWD P85D Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2016 Tesla Model X AWD 90D and P90D Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2012 Tesla Model S Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2014 2015 2016 Mercedes Benz B Class Electric Drive Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 2012 2013 2014 Toyota RAV4 EV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Compare Side by Side 2012 13 14 15 BYD e6 Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Compare Side by Side 2016 2015 Chevrolet Volt Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 Eric Loveday 2015 09 01 Detailed Look At 2016 Chevrolet Volt EPA Ratings InsideEVs com Retrieved 2015 09 02 a b c d United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Compare Side by Side 2016 Ford Fusion AWD 2016 Honda Accord 2016 Toyota Camry and 2016 Toyota RAV4 AWD fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 06 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 11 18 Most Efficient EPA Certified Vehicles fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 11 19 Current Model Year excludes all electric vehicles United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2014 07 04 Compare Side by Side 2014 BMW i3 BEV amp 2014 BMW i3 REx fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2014 07 26 a b c d e United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Model Year 2016 Fuel Economy Guide Electric vehicles amp Plug in Hybrid Electric Vehicles PDF fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 See pp 27 28 for all electric vehicles and pp 30 31 for plug in hybrid electric vehicles The average 2016 vehicle gets 25 mpg U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 08 14 2015 Best and Worst Fuel Economy Vehicles excluding electric vehicles Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 08 17 See the tab Cars excl EVs The Prius c is the most fuel efficient in the compact class and the conventional Prius is the most fuel efficient in the midsize class and both rank ahead of the most fuel efficient in any other clars a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2015 Toyota Prius 2016 Toyota Prius and 2016 Toyota Prius Eco Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 The average 2016 vehicle gets 25 mpg a b United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2017 01 16 Compare Side by Side 2017 Prius Prime fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2017 01 16 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2017 01 16 Compare Side by Side 2017 Toyota Prius Prime 2016 BMW i3 REX 2017 BMW i3 REX 94 Amp hour battery 2017 Chevrolet Volt fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2017 01 16 The Prius Prime is the most energy efficient vehicle with a gasoline engine in EV mode 133 MPG e a b c d U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2017 01 16 Top Fuel Sippers EPA Ratings 2017 Model Year Excludes EVs fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2017 01 16 Current Model Year excludes all electric vehicles The 2017 BMW i3 REX 94 Amp hour battery has a combined gas electricity fuel economy rating of 88 mpg e 95 81 city hwy the 2017 Prius Prime has a combined gas electricity rating of 78 mpg e 83 73 city hwy and the 2017 Chevrolet Volt has a combined gas electricity rating of 77 mpg e 82 72 city hwy a b c d e United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 08 12 Model Year 2015 Fuel Economy Guide Electric vehicles amp Plug in Hybrid Electric Vehicles PDF fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 08 17 pp 31 34 United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 09 16 Compare Side by Side 2014 2015 2016 BMW i3 REx fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 09 19 a b c d e U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 04 Fueleconomy gov s Top Fuel Sippers EPA Ratings All Years fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 05 Excludes all electric vehicles Click on the tab Top Fuel Sippers EPA Ratings All Years The 2013 2014 Chevrolet Volt has a combined fuel economy of 62 mpg e while 2016 Volt has a combined fuel economy of 77 mpg e The BMW i3 REx has a combined fuel economy of 88 mpg e U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2014 Honda Accord Plug in Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 a b c d U S Environmental Protection Agency October 2014 Light Duty Automotive Technology Carbon Dioxide Emissions and Fuel Economy Trends 1975 Through 2014 PDF EPA Retrieved 2014 10 12 See table 7 3 Overall fuel economy mpg e pp 100 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 03 18 Compare Side by Side 2017 2016 Chevrolet Volt Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 03 20 Eric Loveday 2015 09 01 Detailed Look At 2016 Chevrolet Volt EPA Ratings InsideEVs com Retrieved 2015 09 02 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2016 Hyundai Sonata Plug in Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2015 2016 Chevrolet Volt Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2013 2014 2015 Chevrolet Volt Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 05 27 Compare Side by Side 2016 2017 Ford Fusion Energi Plug in Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 05 27 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2012 2013 2014 2015 Toyota Prius Plug in Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 18 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2011 2012 Chevrolet Volt Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2014 12 18 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 08 14 Compare Side by Side 2013 2015 Ford C Max Plug in Hybrid and 2013 2015 Ford Fusion Plug in Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 08 16 a b c d U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 11 27 Compare side by side 2016 Audi A3 e tron ultra and 2016 Audi A3 e tron Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 11 30 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 08 14 Compare Side by Side 2014 2015 Cadillac ELR Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 08 16 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 12 06 Compare Side by Side 2017 Chrysler Pacifica Plug in Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 12 07 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 03 18 Compare Side by Side 2014 2015 2016 BMW i8 Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 03 20 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 03 18 2016 BMW 330e Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 03 20 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2015 Porsche 918 Spyder Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 a b Energy Efficiency amp Renewable Energy U S Department of Energy and U S Environmental Protection Agency and 2016 09 19 Compare Side by Syde 2017 BMW 740e xDrive fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 09 19 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 2016 BMW X5 xDrive40e Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 2015 Mercedes Benz S550e Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2012 Fisker Karma Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2016 03 18 2016 Volvo XC90 AWD PHEV Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2016 03 18 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2016 2015 2014 Porsche Panamera S E Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2016 2015 Porsche Cayenne S E Hybrid Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 a b U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy 2015 12 18 Compare Side by Side 2015 2014 McLaren Automotive P1 Fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2015 12 19 a b United States Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy September 2021 Compare Fuel Cell Vehicles fueleconomy gov Retrieved 2021 09 13 One kg of hydrogen is roughly equivalent to one U S gallon of gasoline Honda FCX Clarity Fuel Cell Vehicle Lease Program Begins with First Customer Delivery Honda 2008 Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2008 12 02 HFCIT Hydrogen Storage Basics United States Department of Energy 2007 Archived from the original on 2008 12 28 Retrieved 2008 12 02 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 100 494 Alternative Motor Fuels Act of 1988 a b c d e f Fleming Bill December 2009 Electric Vehicle EPA Fuel Economy Calculations IEEE Vehicular Technology IEEE pp 4 8 doi 10 1109 MVT 2009 934662 ISSN 1556 6072 alternative URLExternal links editModel Year 2014 Fuel Economy Guide U S Environmental Protection Agency and U S Department of Energy April 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miles per gallon gasoline equivalent amp oldid 1219765727, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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