Data InsightsGlobal biofuel production has grown sevenfold in the last 20 years, despite the rise of electric cars

Global biofuel production has grown sevenfold in the last 20 years, despite the rise of electric cars

Line chart of global liquid biofuel production (bioethanol and biodiesel) in terawatt-hours per year where production is relatively flat through the 1990s and early 2000s then rises sharply from the mid-2000s to about 1,400 TWh in 2024, roughly a sevenfold increase over the last 20 years. Source: Energy Institute — Statistical Review of World Energy (2025). License: CC BY.

In the late 20th century, a handful of countries — led by Brazil and the United States — turned to liquid biofuels to reduce their dependence on foreign oil markets, producing transport fuels from cheap crops instead.

In the early 2000s, interest in biofuels ramped up sharply, and not just in the Americas. They came to be seen as a leading method to decarbonize road transport. This was because today’s alternative to the combustion engine, the electric car, was still far too expensive.

Over the last two decades, global liquid biofuel production has grown sevenfold, as the chart shows.

Electric vehicles are now far cheaper and, in some places, cost-competitive with petrol cars, so biofuels are no longer seen as the central answer to low-carbon transport.

Yet, the world produces more of them than ever, and this is expected to grow over the coming decade, largely due to fuel standards and national policies that have promoted them.

Read our article: “Putting solar panels on land used for biofuels would produce enough electricity for all cars and trucks to go electric”.

Our latest Data Insights

See all Data Insights