The answer is yes. The EIA (Energy Information Administratoin, part of the united states government) use metric tons for measuring CO2 equivalent, therefore it should be (or is) the standard.
Metric tons can't be converted to liters. Metric tons measure mass, while liters measure volume.
Metric tons can't be converted to gallons. Metric tons measure mass, while gallons measure volume.
Four metric tons of anything is 4,000 kilograms.
Metric tons can't be converted to imperial gallons. Metric tons measure mass, while imperial gallons measure volume.
Metric tons
Mexico releases 436.15 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions annually (12th place, 2009). Those emissions represent 1.6% of the world's total and compared to China's or America's emissions (6,103.49 and 5,752.29 million metric tons, respectively), they represent 7.14% and 7.58% of such emissions.
exactly 7,000 pounds (standard tons, not metric tons; not sure what metric tons are!!)One ton equals 2,000 pounds.
Global carbon dioxide emissions in 2000 were approximately 24 billion metric tons.
5,800,000,000
14 Metric Tons - Standard Filling
Answer: 2,245 mt = 2,474.688 t(US)
Dry metric tons are metric tons without moisture. 100 metric tons at 10% moisture = 90 dry metric tons. The formula is metric tons equals dry metric tons less moisture.
To convert metric tons to net tons (or, simply, tons), multiply your metric tons by 1.1023. For example, 4 metric tons equals 4.4092 net tons.
Mexico has emissions of CO2 equivalent to 436,150,000 metric tons a year, or 1.6% of the world's total.
135,000 tons is 122,470 metric tons.
19,500,000 tons = 17,690,102.4 metric tons.