Environment & Safety Gas Processing/LNG Maintenance & Reliability Petrochemicals Process Control Process Optimization Project Management Refining

One-fifth of U.S. renewable diesel and SAF production was exported in 2H25

The United States exported nearly 50,000 barrels per day (b/d) of renewable diesel and other biofuels—a category which includes sustainable aviation fuel (SAF)—in the second half of 2025 (2H25), about 20% of the combined production for those fuels. About half of these exports went to Canada, with the rest mostly going to Europe.

A year ago, in the EIA's March 2025 Petroleum Supply Monthly (PSM), the organization introduced data on renewable diesel exports. These new data added to the existing renewable diesel data of production, imports, interregional movements, and stock changes to provide a more complete understanding of how much renewable diesel is consumed in different U.S. regions.

The EIA generally calculates renewable diesel consumption as refinery and blender net inputs plus product supplied.

  • Refinery and blender net inputs are the volumes that refiners and blenders report that they blended with petroleum distillate.
  • Product supplied is calculated as net production plus imports minus inventory withdrawals, exports, and refinery and blender net inputs.

The inclusion of renewable diesel export data allows the EIA to account for volumes that were previously categorized under product supplied. Before the EIA started tracking exports, estimates for renewable diesel product supplied and, therefore, consumption were considerably higher because they included volumes that were actually exported.

Renewable diesel export data are collected by the U.S. Census Bureau under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) code 2710.19.4550, which also includes exports of SAF. The EIA currently assume most exports are renewable diesel because of the relatively low volume of U.S. SAF production, which is captured in the Other Biofuels category. The inclusion of SAF in the code means the EIA incidentally includes exports of SAF under the renewable diesel category instead of under the Other Biofuels category, where it belongs. This also means that when there are SAF exports, the organization overstates renewable diesel exports and understate other biofuels exports.

In addition to SAF, the Other Biofuels category also includes renewable heating oil, renewable naphtha, renewable propane, renewable gasoline, and other emerging biofuels that are in various stages of development and commercialization. Other biofuels are produced as byproducts at biofuels production facilities that primarily produce renewable diesel or a combination of renewable diesel and SAF. Combining total production and exports of both renewable diesel and other biofuels provides a more accurate account of exports of total renewable fuels produced at renewable diesel and SAF plants.

In 2H25, the United States exported about 20% of its renewable diesel and other biofuels production. In comparison, the United States exported 13% of fuel ethanol production and 7% of biodiesel production in 2H25.

Canada was the most popular destination for U.S. renewable diesel exports, accounting for slightly more than half of the export volume. The Netherlands accounted for about one-third of exports, and the remainder mostly went to other destinations in Europe.

By U.S. region, most renewable diesel exports were shipped from the U.S. Gulf Coast (PADD 3) followed by the West Coast (PADD 5), with most of the shipments from both regions going to Europe and some to Canada. The remaining exports departed from the Midwest (PADD 2) and Rocky Mountains (PADD 4), with all those volumes going to Canada.

In the first two months of 2026, exports of renewable diesel and other biofuels averaged less than 35,000 b/d, compared with almost 50,000 b/d in 2H25. The lower exports mostly reflected lower production, as many renewable diesel producers idled capacity as they waited for the release of final blending targets for 2026 under the Renewable Fuel Standard, which were announced on March 27.

Related News

From the Archive

Comments

Comments

{{ error }}
{{ comment.name }} • {{ comment.dateCreated | date:'short' }}
{{ comment.text }}