Maps and Data - U.S. Vehicles by Transportation Mode
Find maps and charts showing transportation data and trends related to alternative fuels and vehicles.
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119 results
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Fuel Trends
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Average Annual Retail Fuel Price of Gasoline
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Average Renewable Diesel and Diesel Fuel Prices in California
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Average Retail Fuel Prices in the United States
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Change in U.S. Light-Duty Vehicle Registration Counts
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Consumption of Natural Gas in the United States
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Energy Use by Transportation Mode and Fuel Type
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Fuel Taxes by Country
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Fuel Use by Transportation Mode in 2019
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Global Ethanol Production by Country or Region
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Renewable Diesel Production and Consumption
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Sustainable Aviation Fuel Estimated Consumption
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U.S. Biodiesel Production, Exports, and Consumption
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U.S. Crude Oil Imports by Country of Origin
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U.S. Production, Consumption, and Trade of Ethanol
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U.S. Production, Consumption, and Trade of Petroleum Products
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U.S. Renewable Diesel Imports
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Emissions
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Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Economic Sector
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Fuels & Infrastructure: Alternative Fueling Stations
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Biodiesel Fueling Station Locations by State
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Compressed Natural Gas Fueling Stations by State
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E85 Fueling Station Locations by State
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Electric Vehicle Charging Ports by State
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Hydrogen Fueling Station Locations by State
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Liquefied Natural Gas Fueling Stations by State
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Propane Fueling Station Locations by State
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Renewable Diesel Fueling Station Locations by State
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U.S. Vehicles by Transportation Mode
Source: U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics: National Transportation Statistics, Table 1-11: Number of U.S. Aircraft, Vehicles, Vessels, and Other Conveyances.
Notes: Source data reported for 2021. "Medium and heavy trucks and buses" include combination trucks, trucks with two axles and more than six tires, buses, trolley buses, demand response vehicles, and other transit vehicles. "Rail" includes light rail locomotives, Amtrak locomotives, Class I freight cars, and Class I locomotives.
The vast majority (91%) of self-propelled vehicles in the United States are light-duty vehicles. Heavy-duty vehicles and boats account for less than 10%. Trains and planes represent only a tiny fraction of the total, at less than 1% combined.To view more details, notes, and acronyms, please download the Excel spreadsheet.
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