Kiloliter to Cubic hectometer

kl

1 kl

hm³

0.000001 hm³

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Quick Reference Table (Kiloliter to Cubic hectometer)

Kiloliter (kl)Cubic hectometer (hm³)
0.10.0000001
0.50.0000005
10.000001
50.000005
100.00001
500.00005

About Kiloliter (kl)

A kiloliter (kL) is 1,000 liters, exactly equal to one cubic meter (m³). It is used in water utility billing, industrial liquid storage, and large-scale liquid processing. Household water consumption is measured and billed in kiloliters by water utilities in Australia and South Africa. Industrial tanks, fuel storage, and tanker truck capacities are commonly expressed in kiloliters. One kiloliter of water has a mass of one metric tonne (1,000 kg).

An average Australian household uses about 200 kL of water per year. A standard road tanker truck holds 15–30 kL.

About Cubic hectometer (hm³)

A cubic hectometer (hm³) is the volume of a cube with 100-meter sides, equal to one billion liters (10⁹ L). It is used in large-scale hydrology and reservoir engineering for dam and lake capacities, and is equivalent to one gigaliter (GL). One hm³ of water has a mass of one million tonnes. Reservoirs, aquifers, and annual river discharge volumes are commonly expressed in cubic hectometers, especially in Spanish-speaking countries and international water policy documents.

A large city's annual water supply might require 50–200 hm³. Lake Mead has a capacity of about 36,700 hm³.


Kiloliter – Frequently Asked Questions

An average Australian household uses about 0.5–0.6 kL (500–600 liters) per day, or roughly 200 kL per year. A US household averages higher at about 1.1 kL/day (300 gallons). The biggest daily consumers are showers (60–80 L each), toilet flushes (6–12 L each), and washing machines (50–100 L per load). A leaking toilet can waste 0.5 kL per day unnoticed. Water-efficient homes in drought-prone regions like Cape Town have achieved under 0.2 kL/day per household.

One kiloliter of pure water weighs approximately 1,000 kg (one metric tonne) at standard conditions.

Australia adopted kiloliters for water billing as it aligns with metric measurement. The average Australian home uses 150–250 kL per year, making the kL a practical household-scale unit.

Road tanker trucks typically carry 15–34 kL of liquid, depending on road weight limits and the liquid's density. Milk tankers commonly carry 20–30 kL; petrol tankers 25–34 kL.

One kiloliter equals approximately 264.2 US liquid gallons. A typical backyard swimming pool holds 40–80 kL (10,000–20,000 US gallons).

Cubic hectometer – Frequently Asked Questions

A cubic hectometer (hm³) is the volume of a cube 100 meters on each side, equal to one million cubic meters or one billion liters (one gigaliter). It is used in hydrology and large-scale water management.

One cubic hectometer equals 1,000,000 m³. Since 1 hm = 100 m, 1 hm³ = 100³ m³ = 1,000,000 m³ = one billion liters.

The cubic hectometer is standard for reservoir capacity in Spanish-speaking countries and international water treaties. Dam capacity tables routinely list volumes in hm³.

Yes, 1 hm³ = 1,000,000 m³ = 1,000,000,000 liters = 1 gigaliter (GL). Gigaliter is common in Australian water reporting while hm³ is preferred in European and Latin American hydrology.

Lake Mead, the largest US reservoir, has a capacity of roughly 36,700 hm³. A typical European river dam might hold 50–500 hm³. The scale makes hm³ the natural unit for expressing national water reserves.

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