Rapeseed Canola Biodiesel B100

B100 biodiesel derived from rapeseed/canola oil, a mono-alkyl ester of fatty acids designed as renewable diesel fuel with negligible petroleum content. Falls under HTS 3826.00.3000 for pure biodiesel fuels not exceeding 70% bituminous oil mixtures.

Import Duty Rates by Country of Origin

Origin CountryMFN RateCh.99 SurchargesTotal Effective Rate
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³China6.5%+35.0%41.5%
πŸ‡²πŸ‡½Mexico6.5%+10.0%16.5%
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦Canada6.5%+10.0%16.5%
πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺGermany6.5%+10.0%16.5%
πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅Japan6.5%+10.0%16.5%

Alternative Classifications

This product could be classified differently depending on its characteristics or intended use.

3826.00Same rate: 41.5%

If blended with 70%+ petroleum diesel for on-road use

High petroleum ratio in mixtures triggers separate subheading within biodiesel mixtures category.

1514.11.00.00Lower: 23.9% vs 41.5%

If imported as crude low-erucic rapeseed oil before esterification

Pre-processed vegetable oils remain in Chapter 15 as inedible fats, not finished biodiesel.

3824.99Lower: 15% vs 41.5%

If marketed as industrial chemical ester rather than fuel

Non-fuel end-use shifts to generic chemical preparations excluding biodiesel specification.

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Import Tips & Compliance

β€’ Confirm EN 14214 or ASTM D6751 standards with third-party lab certification for oxidation stability and cold filter plugging point

β€’ Document feedstock origin (e.g

β€’ canola crops) for USDA biofuel programs and avoid tariff pitfalls from unverified blends

β€’ Label containers clearly as 'biodiesel fuel' to prevent reclassification as inedible oils during customs exam

Related Products under HTS 3826.00.30.00

Soybean Methyl Ester Biodiesel

Pure biodiesel produced from soybean oil via transesterification, consisting of fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) with less than 70% petroleum content. Classified under HTS 3826.00.3000 as biodiesel not mixed with significant petroleum oils, suitable for blending into diesel fuel.

Palm Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME) Biodiesel

Biodiesel from palm stearin via methanol esterification, used as renewable fuel with less than 70% petroleum oils. HTS 3826.00.3000 applies to this mono-alkyl ester qualifying as biodiesel per chapter definition for fatty acid derivatives.

Used Cooking Oil (UCO) Biodiesel

Recycled biodiesel produced from waste vegetable oils collected from restaurants, processed into FAME fuel with <70% petroleum. Classified in HTS 3826.00.3000 as qualifying biodiesel from any fat/oil source per heading definition.

Animal Tallow Biodiesel B100

Biodiesel from beef tallow or pork lard via transesterification, a mono-alkyl ester used as fuel with less than 70% bituminous oils. HTS 3826.00.3000 covers animal-derived biodiesel meeting the chapter's fuel definition.

Camelina Oil Biodiesel

Premium biodiesel from camelina sativa seed oil, known for high omega-3 content and cold-flow properties, containing <70% petroleum. Fits HTS 3826.00.3000 as mono-alkyl esters derived from vegetable oils for fuel use.

Algal Biodiesel from Microalgae

Advanced biodiesel produced from microalgae lipids via extraction and transesterification, a microbial fat-derived fuel with <70% petroleum oils. HTS 3826.00.3000 includes such innovative biodiesel per chapter note on microbial sources.