No there is no difference.
Metric ton is often spelled as tonne.
One million tonnes (metric tons) is equivalent to 1.023 million short tons or 0.984 million long tons.
1 million tonnes = 1 million tonnes
10.004206
25,000 = 0.025 million25,000 cows = 0.025 million cows25,000 dollars = 0.025 million dollars25,000 cars = 0.025 million cars25,000 chickens = 0.025 million chickens25,000 metric tons = 0.025 million metric tons
2.4 million pounds.
A megaton is one million tons. A metric ton (or tonne) is about 2200 lbs. A ton is 2000 lbs. Multiply 1,000,000 times 2000, ten divide by 2200, and you will get about 907,184.74 metric tons in a megaton.
1 metric ton (tonne) is equal to 1,000 kilograms. So 7 metric tons would be 7,000 kilograms.
U.S. salt production between 2000 and 2003 declined from 45.6 million metric tons to 41.2 million metric tons, while consumption declined from 51.6 million metric tons to 50.1 million metric tons
Although consumption over this time period grew from 33.7 million metric tons to 58.9 million metric tons, production declined from 60.7 million metric tons to 38.7 million metric tons
19.47 million metric tonnes
19,500,000 tons is 17,690,000 metric tons.
10.004206
129,000,000 metric tons is 284,400,000,000 pounds.
U.S. production grew steadily, rising from 10.2 million metric tons in 2000 to 10.6 million metric tons in 2003. U.S. soda ash exports also increased from 3.9 million metric tons to 4.4 million metric tons
Egypt 6300 thousand metric tonnes Japan 5800 thousand metric tonnes Brazil 5600 thousand metric tonnes Indonesia 4100 thousand metric tonnes mexico 3400 thousand metric tonnes Algeria 3300 thousand metric tonnes
25,000 = 0.025 million25,000 cows = 0.025 million cows25,000 dollars = 0.025 million dollars25,000 cars = 0.025 million cars25,000 chickens = 0.025 million chickens25,000 metric tons = 0.025 million metric tons
2.4 million pounds.
It is: 5.8*10^9 metric tons in scientific notation
The answer is 126,537 million metric tons for 2007/2008. See http://www.pecad.fas.usda.gov/ and click "Corn" for details.