Thanks. Makes sense...'No biodiesel' actually means, 'No diesel fuel with a biodiesel content above 7%'.
The European fuel standard for automotive diesel fuel (EN 590) allows up to 7% biodiesel (up from 5%) content with no labelling requirements. Biodiesel blends higher than what is stated in EN 590 must be labelled as such.
The Australian fuel standard for automotive diesel fuel allows up to 5% biodiesel content with no labelling requirements. Biodiesel blends higher than 5% must be labelled as such.
It essentially means that diesel with up to 5% or 7% biodiesel, is still classified as diesel - not a biodiesel blend.
By extension, it also means that European vehicle manufacturers allow B7 blends. The European Committee for Standardization (CEN) collaborates widely and extensively with the transport industry when developing these standards, so these limits are by no means set arbitrarily.
E10 blends are different. EN 228 is the European standard for automotive petrol fuel and allows up to 5% ethanol content with no labelling requirements. Ethanol blends higher than what is stated in EN 228 must be labelled as such - including E10 blends. The situation is identical in Australia in terms of the labelling requirement.
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