Neste and PetroCard expand renewable diesel access in Pacific Northwest
Neste and PetroCard added Pacific Northwest fueling sites for renewable diesel, widening drop-in access for fleets in Washington and Oregon.

Neste and PetroCard on June 18 expanded renewable diesel distribution across the U.S. Pacific Northwest, adding fueling sites in Washington and Oregon for commercial fleets. The rollout widens access to Neste MY Renewable Diesel, an HVO fuel that can be used without modifications to vehicles or fueling infrastructure and can run neat or blended with fossil diesel.
The expansion is aimed at logistics, construction and municipal operators that want lower lifecycle emissions without changing engines or fuel routines. Neste says its renewable diesel can reduce fleet greenhouse gas emissions by up to 90% in some applications, depending on pathway and feedstock, a claim that has helped push the fuel from niche use into day-to-day fleet planning.

PetroCard said the added coverage builds on a network that already includes more than 100 stations throughout Washington and Oregon, the largest cardlock footprint in Portland and access to thousands of fueling locations through partner networks. That kind of distribution density matters in the Pacific Northwest, where commercial fleets face pressure from public procurement rules, corporate emissions targets and state policy that has steadily tightened demand for low-carbon diesel.

Oregon’s Clean Fuels Program requires a 10% reduction in average carbon intensity from 2015 levels by 2025, 20% by 2030 and 37% by 2035. Washington’s Clean Fuel Standard likewise cuts transportation-fuel emissions, and HB 1409 pushed the state toward a 45% carbon-intensity reduction by 2038, giving suppliers and fleets a longer policy runway for renewable diesel volumes.
The regulatory pull is already visible in Oregon’s fuel pool. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality told lawmakers in February 2026 that the Clean Fuels Program displaced 226 million gallons of fossil fuel in 2024 and reduced 3 million tons of CO2e that year. The agency also said renewable diesel and biodiesel had recently comprised up to a third of all diesel use in Oregon, underscoring how quickly low-carbon diesel has moved into mainstream fleet operations.
Neste said the partnership was designed to meet growing demand from commercial and government entities in the region. The June 18 expansion followed an earlier Neste-PetroCard announcement on May 11, 2023, when the companies expanded Neste MY Renewable Diesel at key PetroCard locations in Oregon.
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