With Australian households reeling from the impact of higher fuel prices – compounded by cost-of-living pressures and another interest-rate rise – some are calling for biodiesel to be made available at the pump.

Conflicts in the Middle East have caused fuel prices to spike, resulting in panic-buying and shortages across Australia, and now alternatives like biodiesel are being spruiked as a possible solution according to ABC News.

Unfortunately, most modern vehicles sold in Australia can’t run on anything more than negligible blends of biodiesel.

Two decades ago, many believed biodiesel – which can be created from used oil, vegetable oil, algae, and organic waste products – would form a significant part of the transition away from traditional fossil fuels, given the ease of manufacturing and the infrastructure currently in place.

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However, taxation and a lack of meaningful support from the Australian Government – as well as relatively cheap imported diesel – meant the local industry largely disappeared.

Overseas, some developing countries are embracing biodiesel as a way to reduce crude oil dependence, with the Philippines considering a move to a seven per cent biodiesel blend, known as B7 (mixed with 93 per cent traditional diesel, derived from crude).

Indonesia is at the forefront, with the country expected to move from a 40 per cent blend to 50 per cent later this year.

In Australia, government fuel standards allow up to a five per cent blend of biodiesel.