Gigajoule to Tons of TNT

GJ

1 GJ

tTNT

0.23900573613766730402 tTNT

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Quick Reference Table (Gigajoule to Tons of TNT)

Gigajoule (GJ)Tons of TNT (tTNT)
10.23900573613766730402
3.60.86042065009560229446
276.45315487571701720841
409.56022944550669216061
10023.90057361376673040153
27866.44359464627151051625
1,000239.0057361376673040153

About Gigajoule (GJ)

A gigajoule (GJ) equals one billion joules and is the standard unit for household and industrial energy billing in several countries, particularly for natural gas. A typical Australian home consumes about 30–60 GJ of gas per year for heating and cooking. Large industrial processes, district heating systems, and bulk fuel deliveries are quoted in gigajoules. One gigajoule equals approximately 278 kWh of electrical energy, or about 27 liters of petrol.

An average Australian household uses about 40 GJ of natural gas annually. A commercial jet burns roughly 15 GJ of aviation fuel per flight-hour.

About Tons of TNT (tTNT)

A ton of TNT equals 4,184,000,000 joules (4.184 GJ) and is the standard unit for large conventional bombs, non-nuclear explosives, and the lower end of nuclear weapon yields. The Massive Ordnance Air Blast (MOAB), the largest non-nuclear bomb in the US arsenal, has a yield of about 11 tons of TNT. The Hiroshima atomic bomb released the equivalent of approximately 15,000 tons (15 kilotons) of TNT.

The largest conventional bomb (MOAB) yields about 11 tons of TNT. A V2 rocket warhead carried about 1 ton of TNT.


Gigajoule – Frequently Asked Questions

In cold-climate countries, 30–60 GJ per year is common for heating and hot water. A well-insulated modern home in Germany might use 20 GJ; a drafty older home in Canada might use 100+ GJ. Australians use about 40 GJ/year on average. Each gigajoule costs roughly $8–$15 depending on local gas prices.

One tonne of coal holds roughly 24–30 GJ depending on grade. One tonne of crude oil contains about 42–44 GJ. One tonne of LNG holds roughly 54 GJ. One tonne of dry firewood stores about 16 GJ. These figures explain why oil and gas are preferred for transport — they pack more gigajoules per kilogram than solid fuels.

One gigajoule equals 277.78 kWh. At an average electricity price of $0.15/kWh, one gigajoule of electrical energy costs about $42. The same gigajoule from natural gas costs $8–15. This price gap is the main reason gas boilers remain popular for heating in countries with cheap pipeline gas.

A single-aisle jet like the Boeing 737-800 burns about 10–12 GJ per flight hour. A six-hour transatlantic flight on a wide-body aircraft can consume 300–400 GJ of jet fuel. The entire global aviation industry uses roughly 12 billion gigajoules of fuel per year — about 3% of total world energy consumption.

At 2,000 kcal/day (8.4 MJ/day), a person consumes about 3.07 GJ of food energy per year. Over 80 years, that is roughly 245 GJ — equivalent to about 6,000 liters of petrol. Your entire lifetime food energy would fit in a medium-sized fuel tanker, which is a humbling thought.

Tons of TNT – Frequently Asked Questions

One ton of TNT releases 4.184 GJ — roughly the energy of 120 liters of petrol or the electricity an average US home uses in 1.2 days. In blast terms, one ton of TNT in open air produces lethal overpressure within about 15–20 meters and can shatter windows at 100+ meters. The MOAB bomb (11 tons TNT) flattened structures across a 150-meter radius.

They differ by factors of 1,000: 1 kiloton = 1,000 tons, 1 megaton = 1,000,000 tons. Conventional bombs are rated in tons (the MOAB is 11 tons). Tactical nuclear weapons are rated in kilotons (Hiroshima was ~15 kt). Strategic thermonuclear warheads are rated in megatons (modern US warheads are 0.3–0.475 Mt). The scale spans nine orders of magnitude.

The 2020 Beirut explosion was caused by 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate and was estimated at roughly 500–1,100 tons of TNT equivalent. For comparison, the Oklahoma City bombing (1995) was about 2 tons TNT equivalent, and the Halifax explosion (1917) was roughly 2,900 tons. Beirut ranked among the largest non-nuclear explosions in history.

Small meteor airbursts are rated in tons or kilotons of TNT. The 2013 Chelyabinsk meteor released about 440,000 tons (440 kt) — roughly 30 times the Hiroshima bomb. The Tunguska event (1908) is estimated at 3–15 megatons. The Chicxulub asteroid that ended the dinosaurs released roughly 100 trillion tons (100 million megatons) of TNT equivalent energy.

The largest planned non-nuclear explosion was the British demolition of Heligoland fortifications in 1947, using 6,700 tons of TNT equivalent. The largest accidental explosion was the Halifax harbour disaster (1917) at roughly 2,900 tons. The largest conventional bomb, the US GBU-43/B MOAB, yields about 11 tons — tiny compared to accidental industrial blasts.

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