1 Therm is 100,000 BTU, and as there are 1000 BTU in 1 cubic foot of gas, 1 Therm = 100 cubic feet. Density of methane = 0.72 kg/cubic meter which is 35.3 cubic feet, so 100 cubic feet = 2.04 kg
What are the benefits of natural gas
Propane
There are a variety of natural resources in Kyrgyzstan. These include gold, coal, petroleum, natural gas, mercury, lead, and zinc.
The world supply of natural gas is not inexhaustible. It is not renewable and will eventually run out. Some estimates state that it will last less than 100 years at present usage.
For natural gas, it normally is the responsibility of the gas company to make any repairs of gas lines outside of the dwelling. If you want a new gas line to lead to your new gas stove, it will cost you but that is rather nominal: about $30.
100 cubic feet equals 1 therm
One therm equals 100,000 BTUs.
None. Gas is not measured in square metres.
A therm of natural gas sold to me for home use by Questar Gas cost 92 cents. The cost of a natural gas varies depending on what state you live in. Utah has the lowest cost of natural gas.
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.
According to U.S. EPA, Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2004, 1 therm of natural gas burnt produces 11.7 lbs. of carbon dioxide emissions. Therefore, the Carbon Coefficient for natural gas is: 117 pounds of CO2 per million BTU, or 0.12 pounds per cubic foot of gas.
Sep - Oct 2011 bill reflected BGE Natural Gas Commodity at .5675 per therm & .5605. They were switching to winter rates.
10.28
3.58
That would depend on which gas you are referring to. A therm is a non SI unit of a measure of heat energy. A deka, or deca-therm is ten times this measure. Different gasses have different energy values.
I was just researching this same question today. Here's what I found hope it helps. 1 Therm = 100,000 BTU 10 Therms = 1MMBTU ( Million BTU's ) Therefore to convert from MMBTU to Therms, multiply the MMBTU figure by 10 to get Therms. Note: Therm to BTU conversion is based on the amount of energy obtained from burning 1 Therm (100 cubic feet of natural gas). This value is not exact, but close, and could be different from one natural gas field to another.
one cubic feet = 1028 Btu