$4.38
any1 can find out the answer just look on a different site some people lie on these things and you end up failing.
This is much in the news and seems to increase every week. At present about $135 per barrel
In a simple illustration, let's assume an oil company is paying $100 for a barrel (42 gallons) of basic crude oil. Their cost for a gallon will be about $2.38. At a gasoline-pump price of $4.00 per gallon. so, result comes as cost of converting one gallon crude oil is $1.62 (4.00-2.38=1.62).
That was the month and year that a barrel of crude oil reached its highest level: $128.08 per barrel.
$17.75 per barrel (about $33.85 in 2010 dollars).
Inflation-adjusted for 2010, about $34.45 per barrelIn 2000 dollars, about $27.39 per barrel
$128.08 per barrel in July 2008.
This is much in the news and seems to increase every week. At present about $135 per barrel
A barrel of crude oil at 3.349 per gallon is 140.66 per barrel.
$7.67 per barrel.
The answer will depend on what kind of oil: crude oil, cooking oil, essential oil. My guess is that the prices will differ by at least three orders of magnitude (a factor of a thousand).
About 19.6 gallons per barrel of crude oil. Each barrel holds 42 gallons of oil.
There are 42 gallons of crude oil per barrel.
In a simple illustration, let's assume an oil company is paying $100 for a barrel (42 gallons) of basic crude oil. Their cost for a gallon will be about $2.38. At a gasoline-pump price of $4.00 per gallon. so, result comes as cost of converting one gallon crude oil is $1.62 (4.00-2.38=1.62).
i 5
That was the month and year that a barrel of crude oil reached its highest level: $128.08 per barrel.
$17.75 per barrel (about $33.85 in 2010 dollars).
In 1979, a barrel of oil cost the 2010 equivalent of $74.23 dollars per barrel (in 1979 it was $25.10)