Maps and Data - Renewable Diesel Production and Consumption
Find maps and charts showing transportation data and trends related to alternative fuels and vehicles.
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119 results
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Vehicles: Fuel Consumption and Efficiency
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Fuel Economy and Consumption of Light-Duty Vehicles
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Fuel Economy at Various Driving Speeds
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Fuel Use by Transportation Mode in 2019
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Power and Fuel Economy of the Average Light-Duty Vehicle
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Vehicle Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) Requirements by Year
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Vehicles: Vehicle Market
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AFV and HEV Model Offerings, by Manufacturer
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Efficiency Ratios for Light-Duty All-Electric Vehicles in the United States
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Light-Duty Vehicles Produced in the United States
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TransAtlas
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Types of Vehicles by Weight Class
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U.S. Vehicles by Transportation Mode
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Vehicle Weight Classes & Categories
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Vehicles: Driving Patterns
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Annual Vehicle Miles Traveled in the United States
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Average Fuel Economy by Major Vehicle Category
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Average Monthly Fluctuation in U.S. Vehicle Miles Traveled
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Average Vehicle Trip Length by Purpose (2017)
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Means of Transportation to Work
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Share of All U.S. Vehicle Trips by Length (miles)
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Laws & Incentives
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Biodiesel Laws and Incentives by State
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Electric Vehicle Laws and Incentives by State
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Ethanol Laws and Incentives by State
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Fuel Taxes by Country
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Hydrogen Laws and Incentives by State
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Incentive Additions by Policy Type
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Law and Incentive Additions by Fuel/Technology Type
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Renewable Diesel Production and Consumption
2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | |
Domestic Production | 113 | 159 | 177 | 241 | 258 | 305 | 492 | 533 | 861 | 1499 | 2560 |
Consumption | 295 | 294 | 370 | 436 | 471 | 438 | 760 | 822 | 1209 | 1718 | 2875 |
Source: EIA Monthly Energy Review, Table 10.4b.
This graph shows U.S. renewable diesel fuel production and consumption. Note that volumes are lower than volumes reported to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as part of the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) program. Renewable diesel meets the same fuel quality specification as petroleum diesel (ASTM D975) and can be used in existing diesel engines and refueling infrastructure without the need for any retrofits or upfits. Domestic production and plants under construction are growing significantly. Renewable diesel is primarily made from used cooking oil and inedible animal fats left over from processing meat. The fuel is used primarily in California because of economic benefits provided under the Low Carbon Fuel Standard.
To view more details, notes, and acronyms, please download the Excel spreadsheet.
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