I should think that driving in cities would use less petrol per year because one mostly drives such shorter distances. Still, the speedier motorway driving has the engine turning over very much closer to its peak power rpm's - the autocar will see much better petrol efficiency near the peak power point, so one would use less petrol per mile on the motorway.
It depends upon the fuel economy of the vehicle you are driving.
Depends on the mpg that the vehicle you are driving gets.
At 20 mi/gal, it will take 22 gallons.
There are many ways: - use solar panels - use economic-friendly cars - give rides to your friends and family, so less petrol is used - ride a bicycle - that sounds tiring, but you exercise and use less petrol at the same time! - use less heating in houses (which runs on oil)
The answer depends on the petrol consumption of the vehicle in miles/gallon km/metre etc.
12 hours at 90mph
They each have their pros and cons. The Diesel will last longer, use less fuel, and has more pulling power or torque. The petrol is cheaper to build, fuel cost less, and is cheaper to repair.
First, it is Use less petrol. Second, it is cheap. And the last one is use small parking space.
Some collective nouns to use for petrol are a tank of petrol, a can of petrol, a container of petrol.
You can cycle and walk to places instead of actually going in a car van loryy bus which uses petrol
i think that we use petrol for vehicles lawn mowers etc. but we use on a daily basis too much petrol we should really cut our oil use
The number of liters you'll use is (358 miles) divided by (number of miles your car can go on 1 liter)