The global used cooking oil (UCO) market is not uniform — some regions lead in collection infrastructure, policy support, and adoption, while others present emerging opportunities. Based on MRFR and related data, this blog unpacks regional trends and hotspots.
North America
Market strength maturity
The region has strong infrastructure for UCO collection, processing, and biofuel integration.Growth prospects
MRFR projects robust growth in North America from 2024 to 2035.Challenges
High feedstock competition and regulatory shifts may pressure margins.
Europe
Policy-driven adoption
The EU’s renewable energy directives and strong environmental mandates make Europe a benchmark region.High collection efficiency
Many European countries have formal collection networks and regulations enforcing proper waste oil disposal.Stable demand
Europe remains a steady, mature market for biodiesel and industrial uses.
Asia-Pacific
Fastest growth potential
Driven by rapid expansion of food service, urbanization, and rising demand for sustainable solutions. MRFR sees Asia-Pacific as a promising growth region.Challenges
Underdeveloped collection systems, logistical inefficiencies, and regulatory fragmentation.Opportunities
Significant upside for early entrants, partnerships with food chains, and infrastructure investment.
Latin America South America
Biodiesel leadership
Some nations (e.g. Brazil) already push biodiesel and may incorporate UCO as a feedstock.Growing infrastructure
The region is slowly developing food waste recycling and UCO collection capacity.
Middle East Africa
Emerging base
Currently lower adoption, but possibilities in nations with high fuel import costs, or where waste management is prioritized.Greenfield opportunity
Infrastructure weakness is a barrier, but also a chance for innovative models and first-mover advantage.
Comparative Insights Strategic Implications
Regions with strong waste regulation and biofuel policy tend to lead adoption.
Food service density correlates with UCO availability — urbanized, service-rich markets offer more supply.
Regions with weak collection infrastructure may welcome external investment and logistics solutions.
Cross-border trade in UCO or intermediates may emerge between surplus and deficit regions.
Tips for Market Entry by Region
Begin pilot projects in key cities to test collection, handling, and stakeholder collaboration.
Understand region-specific regulatory regimes (waste, fuel, import/export).
Partner with large restaurant chains, aggregators, or municipal bodies.
Establish processing capacity close to feedstock to reduce transport cost.
Outlook
While North America and Europe offer stable foundation, the most dynamic growth in the UCO market is likely to come from Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and parts of Africa. Strategic entrants who combine local insight with infrastructure, logistics, and partnerships may establish lasting competitive positions.