Clean fuels in Canada

Clean fuels are already part of Canada’s energy future

They help cut emissions in the parts of daily life that are harder to electrify, such as heavy trucking, aviation, industry and parts of the gas system. This page explains the basics in plain language.

Clean fuels produce much lower greenhouse gas emissions than traditional fuels on a life-cycle basis. (NRCan)
158 PJ of liquid biofuels were used in Canada in 2023. (CER)
Canada’s Clean Fuel Regulations aim for about a 15% reduction in the carbon intensity of gasoline and diesel by 2030. (ECCC)
15%
Target reduction in carbon intensity by 2030
158 PJ
Liquid biofuels used in Canada (2023)
80
Low-carbon hydrogen projects announced
13
Hydrogen facilities in operation

Figures are estimates and reflect available data as of April 2026. Programs and project counts may change over time.

Which of these sounds like you?

Select your situation to see the most relevant information first.

You may already be using clean fuels without noticing. Ethanol is blended into most gasoline in Canada, and lower-carbon diesel alternatives are growing too. This page explains what is already in the fuel system and what changes are coming next.
Clean fuels matter most in sectors where long range, fast refuelling and heavy payloads still matter. Depending on the route and fleet setup, renewable diesel, renewable natural gas, hydrogen and battery-electric trucks can all play a role.
Hydrogen is an energy carrier, not a primary energy source. Canada is investing in it because it may help decarbonize heavy transport, industry and export markets where batteries alone are not always the best fit.
Renewable natural gas, or RNG, is upgraded biogas made from sources like food waste, manure, wastewater and landfill gas. It can be injected into existing gas systems and is often used first by utilities, businesses and large buildings.
Aircraft, some marine uses and parts of heavy industry are harder to electrify. That is why sustainable aviation fuel, hydrogen, renewable diesel and other lower-carbon fuels are getting attention in Canada.
No single clean fuel wins everywhere. EVs are often the clearest path for many passenger vehicles. Clean fuels matter most where batteries are harder to use, where existing engines stay in service, or where large energy demand makes fuel-based options practical.

What are clean fuels?

A simple definition and how to think about emissions across the full fuel lifecycle.

Simple definition

Clean fuels are fuels that produce much lower greenhouse gas emissions than traditional fuels on a life-cycle basis. In simple terms, that means we look at emissions from the full chain, from how the fuel is made and moved to how it is used.

Why life-cycle emissions matter

This matters because not all lower-carbon options work the same way. Some clean fuels fit into today’s vehicles and fuel systems with minor changes. Others need new equipment, new supply chains or new infrastructure.

Clean fuel categories

4 clean fuels Canadians hear about most

A quick overview of the main fuel types and where they are used.

Hydrogen

Hydrogen is an energy carrier. It can be made using electricity or from natural gas with carbon capture to lower emissions. It is most discussed for heavy transport, industry, ports, rail, fertilizer and future export markets.

Biofuels

Biofuels come from biomass such as crops, waste oils and other organic materials. In daily life, Canadians are most likely to encounter ethanol in gasoline and biodiesel or renewable diesel in diesel fuel.

Renewable Natural Gas (RNG)

RNG starts as biogas from landfill gas, manure, wastewater or food waste. After upgrading, it can be injected into gas systems and used where natural gas is used today. It is often adopted first by utilities, fleets and large buildings.

Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF)

SAF is a lower-carbon aviation fuel designed for aircraft, where batteries are still difficult for many long-haul flights. It is one of the main ways Canada and the global aviation sector plan to reduce flight emissions over time.

Where clean fuels fit best

No single clean fuel does everything

Different fuels fit different sectors. The right choice depends on distance, energy demand, infrastructure and refuelling needs.

Sector
Best-fit explanation
Passenger cars
EVs are often the clearest fit for many daily drivers. Biofuel blends are already part of regular gasoline and diesel. Hydrogen is not a mainstream personal vehicle fuel in Canada today.
Heavy trucking
Renewable diesel, RNG, hydrogen and battery-electric trucks may all fit depending on route length, payload, depot access and refuelling needs.
Aviation
Sustainable aviation fuel is one of the most important lower-carbon options because many flights cannot easily switch to batteries.
Buildings and gas systems
RNG can lower emissions in parts of the gas system, especially for utilities, campuses, large buildings and municipal systems.
Industry
Hydrogen, biofuels, biogas and electrification can all play a role depending on heat demand, feedstocks and equipment already in use.

Biofuels in everyday life

Many Canadians already use clean fuels without noticing

Biofuels are often the easiest way people connect with clean fuels because they are already part of the fuel system.

What biofuels are

Biofuels are made from biological material such as crops, waste oils and other organic feedstocks. They are often blended into existing fuel systems, which is why many Canadians already use them without making a major change in how they drive.

What Canadians are most likely to encounter

  • Ethanol in gasoline
  • Biodiesel in diesel
  • Renewable diesel in diesel
  • Future growth in sustainable aviation fuel for aircraft

Current Canadian context

The Canada Energy Regulator says 158 PJ of liquid biofuels were used in Canada in 2023. That included 91 PJ of ethanol, 24 PJ of biodiesel and 43 PJ of renewable diesel. About 84% of those liquid biofuels were used as transportation fuels.

Why biofuels matter

Biofuels matter because they can lower emissions in parts of the transportation system while using much of the equipment, vehicles and distribution systems people already have. They are often a bridge solution, especially in sectors where replacing every engine quickly is unrealistic.

Important

Biofuels are lower-carbon, not automatically zero-emission. Their role is to reduce life-cycle emissions while working within existing systems.

Renewable natural gas and biogas

How renewable gas fits into today’s systems

How RNG starts

Biogas comes from decomposing organic material such as landfill gas, wastewater, manure and food waste. When biogas is cleaned and upgraded to pipeline quality, it becomes renewable natural gas, or RNG.

Where it fits

RNG can be blended into existing gas systems and used in buildings, fleets and industry. Because it works with parts of today’s gas infrastructure, it is often discussed as a lower-carbon option where electrification is still incomplete or more difficult.

Current North American context

The Canada Energy Regulator says gaseous biofuels have grown rapidly and that more than 500 renewable natural gas facilities now supply North America’s gas system. NRCan also notes that, in 2020, biogas in Canada was used to produce RNG, electricity and pipeline gas.

What regular Canadians should know

Most households will not “switch to RNG” the way they switch a phone or an appliance. The change usually happens through utilities, municipal systems, large property owners or voluntary utility programs that increase the share of renewable gas in supply.

Sustainable aviation fuel

One of the key solutions for a hard-to-electrify sector

Aviation requires high energy density and long range — making lower-carbon fuels like SAF an important part of the transition.

Why SAF matters

Aviation is one of the hardest sectors to decarbonize because aircraft need high energy density and long range. Sustainable aviation fuel is one of the main lower-carbon options being explored and scaled for this sector.

Current Canadian context

Transport Canada’s Aviation Climate Action Plan sets a net-zero by 2050 vision for aviation and includes an aspirational target for sustainable aviation fuel by 2030.

Early progress

Canada produced its first batch of SAF in 2024 — about 101,000 litres at the Burnaby Refinery in British Columbia (CER).

What this means for the public

SAF is not a household fuel. Most people will encounter it through airline and airport climate discussions, future airline supply agreements and broader national efforts to reduce aviation emissions.

What this means for Canadians

How clean fuels show up in everyday life

A practical view of where people may notice changes — and where they may not.

Fuel is already changing

Some of the fuel already used in Canada is cleaner than it used to be because of blending rules and lower-carbon fuel policies.

Changes often start with fleets

Freight fleets, transit systems and airports will often adopt clean fuels before households notice a major change at home.

Utilities move first

Utilities and large buildings may use RNG or other lower-carbon fuel options before individual homeowners do.

EVs remain the main consumer path

For many personal vehicles, EV charging is still the simpler and more direct consumer story. Clean fuels become more important where batteries are harder to use.

Important

This page is about understanding how clean fuels fit into Canada’s energy system. It does not mean every household needs to adopt hydrogen or renewable natural gas directly. In most cases, these changes happen through fuel suppliers, utilities, fleets and large systems.

Canada’s approach

How clean fuels fit into the national transition

Clean fuels are part of a broader set of policies and investments shaping how Canada reduces emissions across different sectors.

Clean Fuel Regulations

Environment and Climate Change Canada says the Clean Fuel Regulations require gasoline and diesel suppliers to gradually reduce the carbon intensity of the fuels they produce and sell in Canada. The goal is a decrease of about 15% below 2016 levels by 2030, delivering up to 26 Mt of GHG reductions in 2030.

Clean Fuels Fund

NRCan says the Clean Fuels Fund is a $1.5 billion federal fund designed to de-risk capital investment for new or expanded clean fuel production facilities and related supply chains in Canada.

Hydrogen and aviation strategies

Canada’s Hydrogen Strategy and Aviation Climate Action Plan show where hydrogen and sustainable aviation fuel fit into the broader transition, especially in the sectors that are harder to electrify quickly.

Common concerns

Five common concerns — answered

Reality: Not always. Many Canadians already use ethanol-blended gasoline or lower-carbon diesel blends without changing vehicles. Some clean fuels work through existing systems while larger vehicle transitions happen gradually.

Reality: Different tools fit different jobs. EVs are often a stronger fit for many passenger vehicles. Hydrogen is usually discussed more for heavy transport, industry and export markets.

Reality: It is used in similar systems, but the source is different. RNG is made from organic waste streams and is valued for its lower life-cycle emissions. Supply is also limited, so it is usually targeted where it helps most.

Reality: Ethanol, biodiesel, renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel are different products with different feedstocks, uses and emissions profiles. This is why the page should name them clearly instead of using one broad label.

Reality: Consumers encounter clean fuels through blended fuels, public transit, flights, utility programs and freight systems that support the goods they buy every day.

Want the next step?

Explore the EV Charging page for home charging, charger levels, charging costs and public charger basics. Then join a free Drive Clean Canada workshop in your city to learn about clean transportation and fuel options in Punjabi, Hindi or English.