Does biodiesel freeze in cold weather?

Yes — biodiesel absolutely can freeze in cold weather, and in many cases it freezes sooner than regular petroleum diesel. The reason has to do with its chemical structure and the types of fats used to make it.

Let’s break it down in detail.


1. What Happens When Biodiesel Gets Cold?

When temperatures drop, biodiesel begins to:

  1. Cloud – Small wax crystals form (fuel turns hazy)
  2. Gel – Crystals grow and thicken
  3. Solidify – Fuel becomes thick or fully solid

This can:

  • Clog fuel filters
  • Block fuel lines
  • Prevent engine starting
  • Damage injection systems

2. Why Biodiesel Freezes More Easily

Biodiesel is made from vegetable oils or animal fats. These contain fatty acid methyl esters (FAME), which behave like natural fats — and fats solidify in cold temperatures.

The more saturated the fat source, the higher the freezing temperature.

For example:

FeedstockFreezing Behavior
Soybean oil biodieselFreezes around 0°C to -5°C (32°F to 23°F)
Canola biodieselSlightly better cold flow
Animal fat biodieselCan start gelling above 10°C (50°F)
Regular dieselTypically flows to -15°C to -20°C (5°F to -4°F)

So biodiesel can start causing problems well above freezing.


3. Key Cold Weather Terms

🔹 Cloud Point

The temperature where wax crystals first appear.

🔹 Pour Point

The lowest temperature where fuel still flows.

🔹 Cold Filter Plugging Point (CFPP)

The temperature at which fuel will clog filters.

These values vary depending on the biodiesel blend and feedstock.


4. What About Biodiesel Blends?

Most commercial biodiesel is blended with petroleum diesel:

  • B5 → 5% biodiesel (minimal cold issues)
  • B20 → 20% biodiesel (moderate cold sensitivity)
  • B100 → 100% biodiesel (most prone to freezing)

The higher the biodiesel percentage, the worse cold performance becomes.


5. Visual Example: Gelling Fuel

You can see how fuel turns cloudy and eventually thickens into a waxy gel.


6. How Cold Climate Users Prevent Freezing

People in cold regions use several strategies:

Blend with regular diesel

Lower biodiesel percentage in winter.

Use cold-flow additives

Special additives reduce crystal formation.

Heated storage tanks

Keeps bulk fuel warm.

Engine block heaters

Helps fuel flow during startup.

Winter-grade biodiesel

Some producers modify formulations for cold weather.


7. Does It “Freeze Solid” Like Ice?

Not exactly.

Biodiesel usually:

  • Becomes cloudy
  • Turns into a thick gel
  • Eventually solidifies into a waxy mass

It doesn’t form hard ice crystals like water — it behaves more like refrigerated cooking oil.


8. Real-World Example

In colder regions like:

  • Canada
  • Northern United States

B100 biodiesel is rarely used in winter without heated systems. Most fleets switch to B5 or lower during cold months.


9. Summary

Yes, biodiesel freezes — and often at higher temperatures than regular diesel.

  • More biodiesel = higher freezing risk
  • Animal-fat biodiesel freezes sooner
  • Cold weather management is essential
  • Blends like B5 are usually safe in winter

Other courses:

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