Acre-Feet (acre-foot) to US Oil Barrels (bbl) conversion

1 acre-foot = 7758.367 bblbblacre-foot
Formula
1 acre-foot = 7758.367 bbl

Understanding Acre-Feet to US Oil Barrels Conversion

An acre-foot is the volume of water covering one acre to a depth of one foot, the primary unit of US water resource and irrigation accounting. The US oil barrel is a petroleum-industry unit of exactly 42 US gallons, about 158.99 liters, used for crude oil and other liquids. This conversion is handy in water-energy and produced-water contexts where reservoir volumes are compared to barrel-based flows.

Conversion Formula

1 acre-foot=7758.37 bbl1\ \text{acre-foot} = 7758.37\ \text{bbl}

To convert Acre-Feet to US Oil Barrels, multiply by this factor:

bbl=acre-foot×7758.367\text{bbl} = \text{acre-foot} \times 7758.367

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Acre-Feet to US Oil Barrels.

bbl=25×7758.367=193959 bbl\text{bbl} = 25 \times 7758.367 = 193959\ \text{bbl}

How to Convert Acre-Feet to US Oil Barrels

Translate reservoir volumes into 42-gallon US oil barrels in a few steps.

  1. Take the acre-feet: Start with your figure, for example 25 acre-feet.
  2. Multiply by 7758.367: The number of US oil barrels in one acre-foot.
  3. Read the total: 25 × 7758.367 = 193,959 US oil barrels.
  4. Reverse-check: Multiply barrels by 0.0001288931 to return to acre-feet.

Acre-Feet to US Oil Barrels conversion table

Acre-Feet (acre-foot)US Oil Barrels (bbl)
00
17758.367
215516.73
323275.1
431033.47
538791.84
646550.2
754308.57
862066.94
969825.31
1077583.67
15116375.5
20155167.3
25193959.2
30232751
40310334.7
50387918.4
60465502
70543085.7
80620669.4
90698253.1
100775836.7
1501163755
2001551673
2501939592
3002327510
4003103347
5003879184
6004655020
7005430857
8006206694
9006982531
10007758367
200015516730
300023275100
400031033470
500038791840
1000077583670
25000193959200
50000387918400
100000775836700
2500001939592000
5000003879184000
10000007758367000

What is the Acre-Foot?

The acre-foot is a unit of volume equal to the amount of water needed to cover one acre of land to a depth of one foot. It is the standard measure used for large-scale water resources in the United States, including reservoirs, irrigation supplies, and municipal water rights.

Definition

One acre-foot is defined as the volume of a prism with a base area of one acre (43,560 square feet) and a height of one foot, giving exactly 43,560 cubic feet.

1 acre-foot=1.23348×106 l1\ \text{acre-foot} = 1.23348 \times 10⁶\ \text{l}

Because the US survey foot and the international foot differ slightly, the acre-foot is fixed by its exact defining relation of 43,560 cubic feet, which equals about 1,233.48 cubic metres or 1,233,482 litres.

Origin and History

The acre-foot arose in the American West during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as irrigation districts and water agencies needed a practical unit for measuring large volumes of stored and delivered water. It combines the acre, an old English unit of land area, with the foot of depth, making it intuitive for engineers estimating how much water a given area of reservoir or flooded field holds.

Law and Notable Facts

The acre-foot remains the legal and administrative unit for water rights, reservoir capacity, and interstate water compacts throughout the western United States. A commonly cited rule of thumb is that one acre-foot supplies roughly one to two typical American households for a year, which is why it is used to describe how many homes a reservoir can serve.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • A single acre-foot equals about 325,851 US gallons of water.
  • Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the US, has a capacity of roughly 28.9 million acre-feet when full.
  • An Olympic swimming pool holds about 2,500 cubic metres, or roughly 2 acre-feet.
  • In metric terms, 1 acre-foot is approximately 1,233 cubic metres (1.23348 million litres).

What is the US Oil Barrel?

The US oil barrel (bbl) is a unit of volume equal to 42 US gallons, used almost exclusively for crude oil and petroleum products. It is the standard trading unit of the global oil industry.

Definition

The US oil barrel is defined as exactly 42 US liquid gallons:

1 bbl=158.987 L=0.158987 m31\ \text{bbl} = 158.987\ \text{L} = 0.158987\ \text{m}^3

Precisely, 1 bbl = 158.987294928 liters. This differs from other "barrel" definitions: the US fluid barrel is 31.5 gallons, the US federal beer barrel is 31 gallons, and the UK barrel is about 163.66 liters.

Origin and History

The 42-gallon standard traces to the early Pennsylvania oil boom of the 1860s. Producers adopted the 42-gallon "tierce" wooden barrel, which was slightly larger than the common 40-gallon whiskey barrel, allowing for spillage and evaporation losses during transport. In 1872 the Petroleum Producers Association formalized 42 gallons as the standard, and it endures today even though oil is now moved by pipeline and tanker rather than in physical barrels.

Law and Notable Facts

The oil barrel is not an SI unit but is deeply embedded in commodity markets, where crude prices are quoted per barrel and production in barrels per day (bbl/d). The abbreviation "bbl" is thought to stand for "blue barrels" once used by Standard Oil. Physical 42-gallon barrels are rarely used in the modern industry.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • 1 bbl = 42 US gallons ≈ 34.97 imperial gallons ≈ 158.99 liters.
  • Global crude oil consumption is roughly 100 million barrels per day.
  • A single barrel of crude yields about 19 to 20 US gallons of gasoline after refining.
  • 1 metric ton of crude oil is roughly 7.33 barrels, depending on density.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many US oil barrels are in an acre-foot?

One acre-foot equals about 7758.37 US oil barrels, since an oil barrel is 42 US gallons (about 158.99 liters) and an acre-foot is roughly 1,233,000 liters.

How do I convert acre-feet to US oil barrels?

Multiply acre-feet by 7758.367. For example, 10 acre-feet equals 10 × 7758.367 = 77,583.67 US oil barrels.

How do I convert US oil barrels back to acre-feet?

Multiply the barrels by 0.0001288931. So 100,000 barrels is about 12.89 acre-feet.

Where is the acre-foot to oil barrel conversion used?

It appears in the water-energy nexus and oilfield operations, where produced water or injected water volumes are compared against 42-gallon barrel measures.

How big is a US oil barrel compared to a regular gallon?

A US oil barrel holds exactly 42 US liquid gallons, larger than the common drum sizes and specific to the petroleum industry.

Complete Acre-Feet conversion table

acre-foot
UnitResult
Cubic Millimeters (mm3)1233482000000 mm3
Cubic Centimeters (cm3)1233482000 cm3
Cubic Decimeters (dm3)1233482 dm3
Millilitres (ml)1233482000 ml
Centilitres (cl)123348200 cl
Decilitres (dl)12334820 dl
Litres (l)1233482 l
Kilolitres (kl)1233.482 kl
Megalitres (Ml)1.233482 Ml
Gigalitres (Gl)0.001233482 Gl
Cubic meters (m3)1233.482 m3
Cubic kilometers (km3)0.000001233482 km3
Kryddmått (krm)1233482000 krm
Teskedar (tsk)246696400 tsk
Matskedar (msk)82232120 msk
Kaffekoppar (kkp)8223212 kkp
Glas (glas)6167409 glas
Kannor (kanna)471334.3 kanna
Imperial Gallons (imp-gal)271328.1 imp-gal
Imperial Quarts (imp-qt)1085312 imp-qt
Imperial Pints (imp-pnt)2170625 imp-pnt
Imperial Fluid Ounces (imp-fl-oz)43412490 imp-fl-oz
Glasses (glass)5139508 glass
Board Feet (board-foot)522720 board-foot
Teaspoons (tsp)250253900 tsp
Tablespoons (Tbs)83417970 Tbs
Cubic inches (in3)75271680 in3
Fluid Ounces (fl-oz)41708980 fl-oz
Cups (cup)5213623 cup
Pints (pnt)2606811 pnt
Quarts (qt)1303406 qt
Gallons (gal)325851.4 gal
Cubic feet (ft3)43560 ft3
Cubic yards (yd3)1613.333 yd3
US Oil Barrels (bbl)7758.367 bbl
US Dry Gallons (gal-dry)280026 gal-dry
US Dry Quarts (qt-dry)1120104 qt-dry
US Dry Pints (pnt-dry)2240208 pnt-dry
US Bushels (bu)35003.25 bu
US Pecks (pk)140013 pk
US Fluid Drams (fl-dr)333671900 fl-dr

Volume conversions