BTU should be a measure of heating content, so it will vary with composition. However, in the US, 1 cubic ft of natural gas = 1,028 BTU. 1 therm = 100,000 BTU 100 cf = 0.1 Mcf approximately 1 therm (th). or more exactly 0.0972 Mcf = 1 th. See natural gas under wikipedia.
1250
MCF is a measure of volume of natural gas. One MCF equals one thousand (1,000) cubic feet of natural gas. M stands for the Roman numeral 1,000 C stands for cubic F stands for feet
Million cubic feet
One DTH equals approximately 970 cubic feet of natural gas. One MCF equals 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas. Therefore the conversion rate is 1.031. 970 X 1.031 =1,000
(mcf/day*1000)/24=scf/hr (scf/hr)/24=scf/min
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MCF is a measure of volume of natural gas. One MCF equals one thousand (1,000) cubic feet of natural gas. M stands for the Roman numeral 1,000 C stands for cubic F stands for feet
Million cubic feet
One DTH equals approximately 970 cubic feet of natural gas. One MCF equals 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas. Therefore the conversion rate is 1.031. 970 X 1.031 =1,000
(mcf/day*1000)/24=scf/hr (scf/hr)/24=scf/min
One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh by Lyon
1 CCF = 100 Cubic feet, 1 MCF = 1,000 Cubic feet, so there are 10 CCF in 1 MCF
1MCF = 1 MMBTU so 130 MCF = 130 MMBTULet me know if you have any confusionUnfortunately, this is incorrect. An MCF of natural gas is a thousand cubic feet; an MMBTU is a million BTU of energy. (The confusion stems from the use of M for thousand, probably from the french mille.) So the correct answer is 130,000 MMBTU.
One thousand cubic feet of gas (Mcf) -> 1.027 million BTU = 1.083 billion J = 301 kWh
A fourty two (42) gallon barrel of oil generates approximately 5,600,000 btus. A cubit foor of nat gas generates 1,200 btus ,there for you would need 4,666.67 cubic feet of gas or 4.6 mcf. Today, an mcf of nat gas costs $2.6 an mcf, a barrel of oil $106. The btu per dollar breakdown looks like this. 5,600,000 btus = 1 barrel of crude oil = $106 5.6m btu / $106 = 52,830 btus per dollar 5,600,000 btus = 4.66 mcf = $12.12 5.6m btus / $12.12 = 462,046 btus per dollar
As of July 2014, the market cap for Contango Oil & Gas Company (MCF) is $788,559,617.36
2500 mcf