• Experts say motorists should be aware of the “sweet spot” of their car on longer journeys in top gear. Cars consume more fuel if the speed goes beyond 80 to 90kph because of air resistance. Photo: Unsplash/ Chuttersnap
    Experts say motorists should be aware of the “sweet spot” of their car on longer journeys in top gear. Cars consume more fuel if the speed goes beyond 80 to 90kph because of air resistance. Photo: Unsplash/ Chuttersnap
  • Using a roof box can increase fuel costs substantially as it disrupts the aerodynamics of the car it is on, making its impact on air resistance greater. Getty Images
    Using a roof box can increase fuel costs substantially as it disrupts the aerodynamics of the car it is on, making its impact on air resistance greater. Getty Images
  • Keeping your tyres properly inflated is extremely important. If your tyres are a little bit softer, that will damage your fuel efficiency a lot. Getty Images
    Keeping your tyres properly inflated is extremely important. If your tyres are a little bit softer, that will damage your fuel efficiency a lot. Getty Images
  • In heavy traffic, such as when stuck in a logjam between Sharjah and Dubai, the important thing is to try to maintain a constant speed for optimal fuel consumption. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    In heavy traffic, such as when stuck in a logjam between Sharjah and Dubai, the important thing is to try to maintain a constant speed for optimal fuel consumption. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • When in traffic, try to move forward slowly. This way, you may avoid having to use the brakes and wasting the energy used in accelerating if vehicles in front of you halt again. Antonie Robertson/The National
    When in traffic, try to move forward slowly. This way, you may avoid having to use the brakes and wasting the energy used in accelerating if vehicles in front of you halt again. Antonie Robertson/The National
  • When stuck in a traffic jam, avoid going faster because you will always be stuck behind the car in front of you. This will avoid unnecessary use of the brake and accelerator and save on fuel. Pawan Singh / The National
    When stuck in a traffic jam, avoid going faster because you will always be stuck behind the car in front of you. This will avoid unnecessary use of the brake and accelerator and save on fuel. Pawan Singh / The National
  • Petrol prices in the UAE have fallen slightly in May. Prices rose more than 10 per cent in February, a further 10 per cent in March, and then 16 per cent in April as global oil prices surged beyond $100 a barrel. Victor Besa / The National
    Petrol prices in the UAE have fallen slightly in May. Prices rose more than 10 per cent in February, a further 10 per cent in March, and then 16 per cent in April as global oil prices surged beyond $100 a barrel. Victor Besa / The National

How drivers can burn less fuel amid rising prices in UAE


Daniel Bardsley
  • English
  • Arabic

Most drivers with a long commute are keen to keep fuel consumption down – but do many know the best way to do this?

Whether crawling between Dubai and Sharjah, or eating up the kilometres between Abu Dhabi and Dubai, there are ways to cut petrol costs, some of which go against what we might expect.

Few people have looked at the subject in greater detail than Prof Turlough Downes, of the School of Mathematics at Dublin City University.

In his day job, Prof Downes is an astrophysicist who studies how dust particles come together, over long periods of time, to form planets.

Air resistance is of central importance to this, and in the past few years Prof Downes has applied his knowledge to road vehicles, because aerodynamics is key in determining fuel consumption.

Finding the best speed

He has worked out what is roughly the “sweet spot” for cars on longer journeys in top gear.

“You will find most cars are designed so they’re travelling at their best between 80 to 90kph. For some cars it will be 80, for some, 90,” he says.

Above this speed, fuel use is heavily influenced by air resistance, because the increase in resistance is not proportional to speed, but to its square. This means that if a car accelerates from 80kph to 160kph, air resistance does not double, it quadruples.

When going from 80kph to 100kph, which is 25 per cent faster, wind resistance soars by about 50 per cent.

Prof Downes has calculated that, in part because of this, fuel consumption is about 28 per cent higher at 100kph than at 80kph.

“For some cars it might be 25 per cent, for some 35 per cent, but 28 per cent is the middle number,” he says. “It might differ from car to car [based on] what the size of the wing mirror is, what kind of tyres.”

  • SUZUKI DZIRE: It may not be the prettiest vehicle but the Dzire is one of the cheapest to fill up at the pumps. You should get 24 kilometres per litre (km/l), with a new model costing only Dh36,900 ($10,045). Getty Images
    SUZUKI DZIRE: It may not be the prettiest vehicle but the Dzire is one of the cheapest to fill up at the pumps. You should get 24 kilometres per litre (km/l), with a new model costing only Dh36,900 ($10,045). Getty Images
  • SUZUKI SWIFT: A bit snazzier than the Dzire, the Swift comes with a punchy 1.4 litre turbocharged engine but can still get 23.75km/l, says Drive Ninja, a UAE comparison site. A new model starts at slightly less than Dh49,000 ($13,340). Prashanth Vishwanathan / Bloomberg
    SUZUKI SWIFT: A bit snazzier than the Dzire, the Swift comes with a punchy 1.4 litre turbocharged engine but can still get 23.75km/l, says Drive Ninja, a UAE comparison site. A new model starts at slightly less than Dh49,000 ($13,340). Prashanth Vishwanathan / Bloomberg
  • SUZUKI BALENO: The slightly larger Baleno comes with 1.2 or 1.4-litre engines and should get you 22.35km/l. You should expect to pay in the region of Dh45,900 ($10,905). AFP
    SUZUKI BALENO: The slightly larger Baleno comes with 1.2 or 1.4-litre engines and should get you 22.35km/l. You should expect to pay in the region of Dh45,900 ($10,905). AFP
  • TOYOTA YARIS: The Yaris did not become one of the world's most popular cars for nothing. With a fuel efficiency of 22km/l, a new one should set you back about Dh60,000 ($16,335). Another Dh10,000 would get you a Corolla saloon, the world's number one selling car. Reuters
    TOYOTA YARIS: The Yaris did not become one of the world's most popular cars for nothing. With a fuel efficiency of 22km/l, a new one should set you back about Dh60,000 ($16,335). Another Dh10,000 would get you a Corolla saloon, the world's number one selling car. Reuters
  • TOYOTA RAIZE: The only compact SUV on our list gets our vote for forecourt price and fuel efficiency. It should get you 19km/l and prices start at around Dh57,000 ($15,518). Its small 1-litre engine model is turbocharged, giving you about 100 horsepower. Akio Kon / Bloomberg
    TOYOTA RAIZE: The only compact SUV on our list gets our vote for forecourt price and fuel efficiency. It should get you 19km/l and prices start at around Dh57,000 ($15,518). Its small 1-litre engine model is turbocharged, giving you about 100 horsepower. Akio Kon / Bloomberg

Prof Downes tested his calculations on his previous car, a 2012 Seat Leon, and found that they tallied well with the real world.

Speed up further to 120kph, and fuel costs are 63 per cent higher than at 80kph, while at 140kph they are no less than 103 per cent higher. This means the car is burning more than twice as much fuel.

From Dubai to Abu Dhabi

What does this mean for UAE residents who have a long motorway commute, perhaps between Dubai and Abu Dhabi? Prof Downes has helpfully crunched the numbers for the UAE.

Based on a fuel price of Dh3.62 per litre, a journey length of 139km and a car of roughly average fuel consumption, he has calculated that at a constant speed of 80kph, the Dubai-Abu Dhabi journey takes 104.25 minutes and costs Dh30.19.

Press the accelerator to increase the speed to 100kph and the trip lasts 83.4 minutes but costs significantly more – Dh38.68.

Faster still, at 120kph, the journey time is 69.5 minutes and the cost is Dh49.06, or almost two-thirds higher than at 80kph.

Anyone driving at the top speed of 140kph would make the trip in 59.6 minutes, but their wallet or purse would be Dh61.33 lighter as a result. That’s more than double the cost at 80kph.

In his own driving, Prof Downes admits he is not a “hypermiler”, the name for people who try to squeeze every last mile out of a tank of fuel. He finds a reasonable compromise.

“I can only imagine what it’s like to travel at 80kph on a motorway,” he says. “But I do travel at 100kph, going at the same speed as lorries. I don’t feel I’m getting in people’s way too much.

“Time savings aren’t that great [from driving faster]. If you have a habit of going at 120kph the costs stack up month after month. I would rather spend the money on something else.”

Prof Downes now drives an electric car and he says similar figures apply when it comes to how costs increase with speed.

A roof box on top of your car will increase drag and burn even more fuel. Getty
A roof box on top of your car will increase drag and burn even more fuel. Getty

Other factors that force up fuel costs are driving in the wet and using a roof box. Prof Downes found out the effects of a roof box when he left one on his car for a trip across Ireland after returning from a holiday in France.

“I just didn’t have time to take off the roof box. I used about 50 per cent more fuel on that journey. I was just astonished, what it did. I thought it might increase it by 10 or 15 per cent, but it was more than that,” he says.

As well as creating drag itself, a roof box disrupts the aerodynamics of the car it is on, Prof Downes says, making its impact on air resistance greater.

“Keeping your tyres properly inflated is extremely important. If your tyres are a little bit softer, that will damage your fuel efficiency a lot,” he adds.

While, on longer journeys, weight tends not to have as dramatic an impact on fuel consumption as air resistance, it does have an effect, so Prof Downes advises drivers not to leave things in their car boot unless they are needed.

Keeping steady

In heavy traffic, such as when stuck in a logjam between Sharjah and Dubai, the important thing is to try to maintain a constant speed.

“You don’t gain anything by going faster, because you will always be stuck behind the car in front of you,” Prof Downes says.

So if the car ahead rushes away as the traffic begins to move, the best strategy is to move forward slowly, as this way you may avoid having to use the brakes – and wasting the energy used in accelerating – as vehicles ahead grind to a halt again.

“Try to drive as if you’re not going to use your brakes,” he says. “Always try to anticipate when you’re going to slow down, so you keep your foot off the accelerator.

“Just cruise along as slowly as you can. If everybody goes as slowly as possible, you will get home faster … It’s very counterintuitive so it’s very difficult to get everybody to do it.”

Dubai police supercars: in pictures

  • A Dubai Police Ferrari supercar on display during the Dubai Airshow. Christopher Furlong / Getty Images
    A Dubai Police Ferrari supercar on display during the Dubai Airshow. Christopher Furlong / Getty Images
  • First lieutenant Mohamed Ebrahim Al Suwaidi with the new Dubai Police car an Audi RS e-trom GT, the force's first electric sports car. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    First lieutenant Mohamed Ebrahim Al Suwaidi with the new Dubai Police car an Audi RS e-trom GT, the force's first electric sports car. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • Dubai Police took delivery of a Hongqi E-HS9 suv vehicle - the force's first electric vehicle - from Oneroad Automotive Company at the Dubai Police Officers Club. Dubai Police
    Dubai Police took delivery of a Hongqi E-HS9 suv vehicle - the force's first electric vehicle - from Oneroad Automotive Company at the Dubai Police Officers Club. Dubai Police
  • Dubai Police supercars at the start of the Dubai Run. Photo: Dubai Media Office
    Dubai Police supercars at the start of the Dubai Run. Photo: Dubai Media Office
  • The Lamborghini Aventador, left, and the Ferrari FF were the first supercars to get the Dubai Police decal treatment. Courtesy Dubai Police
    The Lamborghini Aventador, left, and the Ferrari FF were the first supercars to get the Dubai Police decal treatment. Courtesy Dubai Police
  • Dubai Police unveiled new supercars at the Dubai International Motor Show including the Mercedes G class Brabus. Pawan Singh / The National
    Dubai Police unveiled new supercars at the Dubai International Motor Show including the Mercedes G class Brabus. Pawan Singh / The National
  • Dubai Police added the Ferrari FF (pictured) to its fleet. Courtesy Dubai Police
    Dubai Police added the Ferrari FF (pictured) to its fleet. Courtesy Dubai Police
  • A selection of the Dubai Police fleet: Ferrari FF, Mercedes-Benz SLS-AMG, Bentley Continental GT, Porsche Panamera and Mercedes-Benz/Brabus G700. Photo: WSF Creative
    A selection of the Dubai Police fleet: Ferrari FF, Mercedes-Benz SLS-AMG, Bentley Continental GT, Porsche Panamera and Mercedes-Benz/Brabus G700. Photo: WSF Creative
  • Dubai Police own a Bugatti Veyron, which can reach a speed of more than 400kph. EPA
    Dubai Police own a Bugatti Veyron, which can reach a speed of more than 400kph. EPA
  • The Maserati GranTurismo allows traffic police to cruise the streets of Dubai in style, as well as comfort. Photo: Dubai Police
    The Maserati GranTurismo allows traffic police to cruise the streets of Dubai in style, as well as comfort. Photo: Dubai Police
  • The McLaren MP4-12C packs a punch on the open road with a top speed of about 200kph thanks to its twin-turbo charged V8 engine. Photo: Dubai Police
    The McLaren MP4-12C packs a punch on the open road with a top speed of about 200kph thanks to its twin-turbo charged V8 engine. Photo: Dubai Police
  • Dubai Police hinted in 2019 that the newly Tesla Cybertruck could be added to the force’s impressive fleet of patrol vehicles. Photo: @mostaqbal_ae / Dubai Future Foundation
    Dubai Police hinted in 2019 that the newly Tesla Cybertruck could be added to the force’s impressive fleet of patrol vehicles. Photo: @mostaqbal_ae / Dubai Future Foundation
  • The Mercedes-Benz SLS-AMG can hit 100kph in only 3 seconds thanks to its nine-speed automatic gearbox and AMG-tuned, all-wheel drive system. Photo: WSF Creative
    The Mercedes-Benz SLS-AMG can hit 100kph in only 3 seconds thanks to its nine-speed automatic gearbox and AMG-tuned, all-wheel drive system. Photo: WSF Creative
  • The hybrid electric BMW i8 has a top speed of 250kph. Antonie Robertson / The National
    The hybrid electric BMW i8 has a top speed of 250kph. Antonie Robertson / The National
  • Aston Martin created a special factory staffed by 27 of its finest engineers to produce the exclusive One-77. Sarah Dea / The National
    Aston Martin created a special factory staffed by 27 of its finest engineers to produce the exclusive One-77. Sarah Dea / The National
  • Named after a Spanish fighting bull, the Lamborghini Aventador was initially limited to 4,000 models, with Dubai Police snapping up one of the V12s and coating it in green and white. Photo: Dubai Police
    Named after a Spanish fighting bull, the Lamborghini Aventador was initially limited to 4,000 models, with Dubai Police snapping up one of the V12s and coating it in green and white. Photo: Dubai Police
  • Described by Toyota as delivering a 'powerful but pure' driving experience, the Supra can hit 100kph in only 4.3 seconds and has a top speed of 250kph. Photo: Dubai Police
    Described by Toyota as delivering a 'powerful but pure' driving experience, the Supra can hit 100kph in only 4.3 seconds and has a top speed of 250kph. Photo: Dubai Police
  • The 4 litre V8 Mercedes-Benz G 63 is ready for action, both on and off the road. Pawan Singh / The National
    The 4 litre V8 Mercedes-Benz G 63 is ready for action, both on and off the road. Pawan Singh / The National
  • The Bentley Continental GT, with a huge six-litre engine and top speed of 318kph, ensures police can get where they need to be in style, and on time. Photo: Dubai Police
    The Bentley Continental GT, with a huge six-litre engine and top speed of 318kph, ensures police can get where they need to be in style, and on time. Photo: Dubai Police
Essentials

The flights
Emirates flies direct from Dubai to Seattle from Dh6,755 return in economy and Dh24,775 in business class.
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COMPANY PROFILE
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Updated: May 01, 2022, 12:10 PM