Canola poised for expanded role in Australia's biofuel future
Rabobank
As Australians grapple with current fuel price hikes and supply challenges, a new report highlights the key role the nation’s canola could play as a biofuel in future energy transition and fuel security.
The report, Fuelling the future: How the new biofuel demand wave could reshape Australia’s canola sector, by agribusiness banking specialist Rabobank, says – with the uptake of electric vehicles largely confined to passenger transport and having limited impact on diesel and jet fuel usage – biofuels are increasingly being turned to globally to help reduce emissions in these “harder to abate” sectors.
And with canola oil a key feedstock used in the production of biodiesel, this means the role of Australian canola in energy markets could grow.
The report, by the bank’s RaboResearch division, says the rising demand for renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) – particularly across the Asia Pacific region – is opening a “rare strategic window” for Australia to capture greater value from its canola crop.
Report lead author, RaboResearch senior grains and oilseeds analyst Vitor Pistoia said diesel and jet fuel remain central to freight, mining and aviation, and these are key sectors where biofuels are gaining traction as a lower emissions alternative.
“For Australia, this creates a genuine opportunity to rethink how canola fits into both our agricultural system and our energy system,” he said.
Value-add imbalance
The report says Australia currently exports around six million tonnes of canola seed each year, most of it unprocessed. “Converted into renewable diesel, that volume would equate to more than two billion litres of fuel,” it said.
“By comparison, Australia imports more than 30 billion litres of diesel annually”, Mr Pistoia said, highlighting what RaboResearch describes as a significant “value‑add imbalance.
“At the moment, we export the raw material and import the finished fuel. That means a large share of the processing margin, jobs and strategic control sits offshore. As biofuel demand rises, that imbalance becomes harder to ignore,” Mr Pistoia said.
The report notes that global vegetable oil markets are currently being reshaped by tightening regulations in Europe – aimed at limiting the use of food crops for biofuels –as well as rapidly-expanding biofuel capacity across the Asia‑Pacific, where new SAF and renewable diesel plants are under development.
This shift is expected to increase demand for processed vegetable oils, rather than raw oilseed exports, placing greater emphasis on crushing capacity, traceability and consistent supply, Mr Pistoia said.
Two pathways
The report said there are two broad pathways for Australia’s canola industry – expanding domestic crushing and either refining domestically or increasing exports of canola oil to overseas biofuel refineries.
“Local processing could allow Australia to capture more value across the supply chain, while improving utilisation of co-products such as canola meal,” it said.
However, the report cautions that outcomes will depend heavily on policy settings, energy prices, logistics and capital costs.
RaboResearch says canola oil is a strong potential fit for renewable diesel and SAF production, particularly in Asia-Pacific markets close to Australia, such as Japan, Indonesia and India.
“From a technical perspective, canola oil aligns well with the refining pathways being built across Asia-Pacific,” Mr Pistoia said.
“Australia’s geographic proximity to these markets also matters, as shorter shipping distances can reduce freight costs and emissions compared with some alternative origins.”
Diversifying demand
The report says a more diversified demand base for Australian canola – spanning food, feed and energy – could also support longer-term price resilience and influence canola’s role in crop rotations.
“For grain producers, biofuels don’t replace existing markets, but they do add another demand pillar,” Mr Pistoia said.
“That diversification can be valuable in managing price risk over the long term, particularly as global energy markets evolve.”
Middle East conflict
Mr Pistoia said the current oil supply shock created by the Middle East conflict had potential implications for biofuel markets.
“Reduced energy exports from Persian Gulf countries caused by the current conflict have sharpened attention on energy security and the reliance on imported liquid fuels,” he said.
“While impacts are still emerging, these types of conditions reinforce policy support for alternative fuels, potentially accelerating biofuel policy implementation and investment in lagging markets such as Australia,” he said. “Some countries have already announced increases in mandates of biofuel blending in fuel, including Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Argentina and the US.”
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Rabobank Australia & New Zealand Group is a part of the international Rabobank Group, the world’s leading specialist in food and agribusiness banking. Rabobank has more than 125 years’ experience providing customised banking and finance solutions to businesses involved in all aspects of food and agribusiness. Rabobank is structured as a cooperative and operates in 35 countries, servicing the needs of more than nine million clients worldwide through a network of more than 1000 offices and branches. Rabobank Australia & New Zealand Group is one of Australasia’s leading agricultural lenders and a significant provider of business and corporate banking and financial services to the region’s food and agribusiness sector. The bank has 87 branches throughout Australia and New Zealand.