Question 47 TK01 - Tank Vessel Assistant - Dangerous Liquids
What is the standard unit of liquid volume used in the petroleum industry?
The Correct Answer is B **Explanation for B (barrel):** The standard unit of liquid volume used almost universally in the global petroleum industry for measuring crude oil and petroleum products is the **barrel** (specifically, the U.S. standard 42-gallon oil barrel). This unit is used for pricing, trading, and reporting oil production and reserves worldwide. **Why the other options are incorrect:** * **A) drum:** A drum is a physical container (usually 55 gallons), not a standard unit of measure used for official volume reporting, trading, or pricing in the industry. * **C) gallon:** The gallon is a unit of volume (U.S. or Imperial), and while individual consumers buy fuel by the gallon, the industry's large-scale transactions and reporting are standardized to the barrel (which is equivalent to 42 gallons). * **D) liter:** The liter is the standard metric unit of volume (used in some countries for consumer sales), but the primary international benchmark for oil volume reporting and trading remains the non-metric barrel.
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