07 August 2023
By U.S. Energy Information
Administration
Nearly All U.S. Renewable Diesel Is
Consumed In California … But Isn’t Made There
California
accounts for nearly all renewable diesel consumption in the United
States, but most of it isn’t made in the state. California’s
consumption of renewable diesel was more than eight times the amount
produced there in 2021. Instead, most of California’s renewable diesel
was produced in other states or was imported, mostly from Singapore.
Renewable diesel is a liquid
biofuel that is chemically equivalent to petroleum diesel and can be
used as an additive or substitute for diesel fuel in vehicles.
Although renewable diesel is similar to the more common biodiesel, the
fuels differ chemically and in how they are made, transported, and
used. Unlike biodiesel, renewable diesel can be transported in
petroleum pipelines and sold at retail stations without blending with
petroleum diesel. It is often produced at existing petroleum
refineries that are retrofitted to make biofuels instead of petroleum
products.
California’s renewable diesel
consumption grew substantially after its Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS)
went into effect in 2011. Between 2011 and 2021, consumption grew from
1 million barrels to 28 million barrels per year, over 18 times its
original volume.
The California LCFS requires
transportation fuels used in the state to be mixed with biofuels to
lower their carbon intensities. California is the only state that
offers a rebate to customers who purchase renewable diesel
specifically, increasing renewable diesel use in the state as it
becomes more economically competitive with biodiesel. Other states
have various biodiesel laws and incentives.
Oregon was the only other state
where renewable diesel was consumed in 2021, but it accounted for less
than 1% of the U.S. total. Oregon requires petroleum diesel fuel sold
in the state to be blended with either biodiesel or renewable diesel.
Beginning in 2023, Washington also began requiring petroleum diesel to
be blended with biodiesel or renewable diesel, but it did not report
any renewable diesel consumption in 2021.
Six states—Louisiana, North
Dakota, California, Wyoming, Washington, and Kansas—accounted for all
renewable diesel production in the United States in 2021. Many of the
plants in the other states have exclusive agreements to send all of
the renewable diesel they produce to distributors in California.
Louisiana, with its substantial
petroleum infrastructure, has been the state with the most renewable
diesel production since 2011. More than 9 million barrels of renewable
diesel was produced in Louisiana in 2021, about 46% of the U.S. total.
A plant located in Norco, Louisiana, has the most renewable diesel
production capacity in the United States, about 64,000 barrels per
day.
U.S. renewable diesel
production capacity could more than double by 2025, boosting domestic
production. We expect that both renewable diesel production and
consumption will continue to grow in the United States over the next
few years.
You can find more information
on renewable diesel as well as other biofuels in our State Energy Data
System (SEDS). We recently published new renewable diesel statistics
in SEDS, including annual renewable diesel production and consumption
estimates by state for 2011 through 2021. Previously, we only
published U.S.-level renewable diesel production and consumption data.
Principal contributors: Mickey
Francis, Sheila Hayati
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
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Cell, Pacific Time Zone.
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