Biodiesel plays a modest but important role in the UK’s transport energy system. Here’s a clear overview of how it’s used, how much is used, and the key trends.
Biodiesel use in the UK
1) How biodiesel is actually used
- In the UK, biodiesel is not usually sold as pure fuel.
- Instead, it is blended into regular diesel—most commonly as B7 fuel (up to 7% biodiesel) available at standard fuel pumps.
- This means almost every diesel vehicle in the UK already uses a small amount of biodiesel without drivers noticing.
2) Share in the fuel mix
- Renewable fuels made up about 7.5% of UK transport fuel in 2023.
- Biodiesel accounted for roughly 39% of those renewable fuels.
So biodiesel is one of the main renewable fuels, but still a relatively small part of total fuel use overall.
3) Volumes and production
- Around 1.45 billion litres of biodiesel were supplied in 2023.
- UK production in 2024 was about 1.4 million tonnes.
- However:
- A significant share is imported
- Much UK-produced biodiesel is exported (over 60%), with only about 25–30% used domestically
4) Feedstocks (what it’s made from)
- The UK heavily relies on waste-based biodiesel, especially:
- Used cooking oil (UCO)
- Animal fats (tallow)
- In some years, ~70% comes from waste oils, which gives better environmental benefits than crop-based fuels.
5) Government policy (key driver)
- Biodiesel use is mainly driven by the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO):
- Fuel suppliers must include a certain % of renewable fuels
- Biodiesel helps meet these targets
6) Trends and challenges
Declining relative importance
- Biodiesel’s share is falling as alternatives grow:
- Hydrotreated vegetable oil (HVO)
- Bioethanol
Industry pressure
- UK biodiesel producers face:
- Cheaper imports
- Policy uncertainty
- Some plants have closed or are at risk, reducing domestic production capacity
7) Conclusion
- Biodiesel in the UK is:
- Widely used (blended into nearly all diesel)
- Important for reducing emissions in existing vehicles
- But limited in scale (only a small share of total fuel)
- Gradually being overtaken by newer biofuels and electrification
