Americans are spending more on gasoline because they are getting fatter, according to a new study.
Cars in the United States are using about a billion gallons (1 gallon equals to 4.546 liters) more fuel annually than they would be if drivers weighed the same as they did in 1960, U.S. medias reported on Friday.
Adults are now an average of at least 24 pounds (1 pound equals to 0.454 kg) heavier than they were then. At recent gasoline prices in the United States, that means 2.2 billion dollars are spent at the pump each year because of America's weight problem.
"What we have here is a relationship that exists between the obesity epidemic and fuel consumption," said study co-author Sheldon Jacobson, a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The average man in the United States weighs 191 pounds, 25 pounds more than in 1960, while the average woman weighs 164 pounds, up 24.
Professor Jacobson, an industrial engineer, calculates that Americans could save enough fuel to run 1.7 million vehicles for an entire year simply by trimming down to the size of the 1960 counterparts.
"What we have here is a socio-economic implication of obesity," he said.
"If people decide as a nation to get healthier and lose weight and be fitter, not only will we have a healthier country but we're actually going to reduce our dependence on foreign oil very covertly, simply because we're going to be using less."
The study is due to be published in the journal Engineering Economist.
Source: Xinhua