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Council vehicles are now running on vegetable oil

Councillor Tony Gurney and Phil Diffin, Assistant Manager for Waste Resources.

North Ayrshire Council has switched 36 refuse collection vehicles from diesel fuel to Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil (HVO).

HVO, otherwise known as ‘renewable diesel’, is produced from waste cooking oil, animal fat and forestry materials that are saturated with hydrogen at a high temperature and pressure in a process known as hydrotreatment.

It can be used in vehicles or equipment designed for standard diesel, without any changes to the engine or infrastructure, and can reduce CO2 emissions by up to 90 per cent.

Over a 12-month period, there is potential for the council to save around 2,529 tonnes of carbon emissions from being created.

The initiative aligns with the Scottish Government’s sustainability ambitions, including phasing out the need for any new petrol or diesel vehicles in public sector fleets by 2030 and ending the sale of diesel HGVs for vehicles between 3.5 and 26 tonnes by 2035.

Quote: As a local authority, we are continually striving to reduce our carbon footprint and ensure that climate change and sustainability are at the heart of the decisions we make. Using HVO will help to make a significant impact, cutting the overall reduction of fleet-produced emissions by more than 20 per cent.

Quote from: Councillor Tony Gurney, Cabinet Member for Green Environment and Economy

The Council's vision is to achieve net-zero emissions by 2030 and to halt biodiversity loss - and be Nature Positive - by 2030.

Darren Holloway, Commercial Director for Energy Solutions at Certas Energy, which supplies the HVO to the Council, said: “We are thrilled to be fuelling the transition to net zero for North Ayrshire Council, who are one of a growing number of public sector organisations switching to HVO.

“Demand for HVO is growing year-on-year across the UK as more organisations are understanding the sustainability benefits of switching to this fuel.

“We anticipate this trend to continue for the next decade, and the public sector will be a key driver for this.”

Please note: You can read more about the Council’s biodiversity and conservation ambitions on the council's website.

Published: 12 March 2025


Climate