Not All Diesel Is the Same
Ask most people what diesel is and they will say something like “the stuff trucks use.” That is true. But it is also like saying wine is “the stuff you drink at weddings.” Technically correct. Completely useless if you are trying to buy the right one.
In South Africa today, there are several distinct types of diesel in commercial circulation. They behave differently in engines, they carry different environmental footprints, they are priced differently, and putting the wrong one in the wrong engine can cost you serious money. This article explains what separates them — simply, honestly, and without the marketing spin.
The Thing That Separates Most Diesels: Sulphur
Before getting to the fuel types themselves, you need to understand one ingredient: sulphur. Almost everything that distinguishes mainstream diesel grades comes down to how much sulphur is left in the fuel after refining.
Sulphur occurs naturally in crude oil. Removing it costs money — the more you take out, the more the refining process costs. For decades, nobody cared much. Then the consequences became impossible to ignore.
When sulphur burns in a diesel engine, it produces sulphur dioxide (SO₂), which reacts with atmospheric moisture to form sulphuric acid — a primary component of acid rain. More immediately relevant to buyers: sulphur also poisons the catalytic converters and diesel particulate filters (DPFs) that modern engines use to clean their own exhaust. The cleaner the fuel, the longer those systems last. The dirtier the fuel, the faster they fail.
Sulphur content is measured in ppm — parts per million. A lower number means a cleaner fuel.
The Main Types — What They Are & Where They Fit
The old South African standard. Still encountered at some rural depots and in legacy supply chains. Incompatible with modern DPF-equipped vehicles — it will block and degrade the filter in short order. Increasingly difficult to source as infrastructure upgrades. If someone is offering it cheaply, ask why they still have it.
South Africa’s prevailing commercial diesel grade under SANS 342. The default product at most bulk terminals and filling stations. Suits Euro 3 and Euro 4 engines — the majority of the country’s commercial fleet. Not quite clean enough for the latest Euro 6 designs, but the practical baseline for almost all bulk buyers in the market today.
Required by Euro 5 and Euro 6 engine designs, including many newer European trucks and modern passenger bakkies increasingly common in South Africa. Available at select bulk terminals. Using 50ppm in a 10ppm-spec engine will not cause immediate failure — but it degrades after-treatment systems over time and can void manufacturer warranty.
South Africa’s most distinctive diesel story. Sasol’s gas-to-liquid process converts coal and natural gas into a synthetic liquid fuel with ultra-low sulphur content, an excellent cetane rating, and very complete combustion characteristics. It performs well across a wide range of applications and carries a price premium that reflects its cleanliness. Not universally available at bulk collection points.
Produced from vegetable oils or animal fats through a chemical process called transesterification. Sold in blends: B5 (5% biodiesel), B20 (20%), up to B100. B5 and B20 are generally compatible with unmodified diesel engines and produce meaningfully lower particulate emissions. Higher blends require engine and fuel system modifications. South Africa has limited production infrastructure — covered in the section below.
Modern Use Cases in South Africa
Theory is useful. What does the South African market actually run on day to day?
Road Freight & Logistics
The long-haul trucking sector — which carries the overwhelming majority of goods across South Africa’s road network — runs almost exclusively on 50ppm diesel. Most of the country’s heavy commercial vehicle fleet is Euro 3 or Euro 4 specification, both designed around this grade. Some newer fleet purchases have introduced Euro 5 vehicles that technically prefer 10ppm, but operators generally run them on 50ppm given supply availability, monitoring engine condition more carefully as a trade-off.
Mining
South Africa’s mining sector is one of the highest diesel consumers in the country. Surface operations typically run on 50ppm. Underground operations are a different story — ventilation and occupational health requirements in deep shafts are pushing some mines toward lower-sulphur and cleaner-burning options, including GTL diesel, where exhaust quality has direct air quality consequences for workers spending shifts underground.
Agriculture
Tractors, irrigation pumps, and harvesters typically run older engine designs with wide fuel tolerance. 50ppm is the agricultural standard. Farmers buying in bulk and storing on-farm care far more about supply reliability and price per litre than sulphur specification. Properly stored 50ppm diesel has good shelf life for seasonal agricultural applications.
Passenger Vehicles & Light Commercial
This is where specification friction is beginning to show. Modern diesel passenger vehicles and bakkies — across most major European and Japanese manufacturers — increasingly arrive in South Africa with Euro 5 or Euro 6 engines that specify 10ppm or cleaner. Running on 50ppm will not immediately damage the engine, but it shortens the service life of particulate filters and can trigger warning lights sooner than expected. This is a genuine and growing issue as newer models become more common in the local market.
Quick Reference — Grade vs Application
| Application | 500ppm | 50ppm | 10ppm | B5 Blend | GTL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Older trucks / pre-Euro 3 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Euro 4/5 trucks & bakkies | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Modern Euro 6 passenger cars | ✗ | ~ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Agricultural / generators | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Underground mining equipment | ✗ | ~ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
✓ Compatible | ~ Usable with caveats | ✗ Not recommended — risk of engine or after-treatment damage
Looking Ahead: Biodiesel & the Road Not Yet Taken
Biodiesel deserves its own honest conversation — separate from the optimism it tends to attract in global sustainability discussions, and separate from the dismissiveness it sometimes gets in return.
In simple terms, biodiesel is diesel made from biological sources — vegetable oils such as soya, canola, or sunflower, waste cooking oil, or animal fats. Through a chemical process called transesterification, these fats are converted into a fuel that burns in diesel engines and produces significantly less sulphur, unburned carbon, and particulate matter than petroleum diesel.
The chemistry is sound. Biodiesel blended at B5 or B20 is compatible with most unmodified diesel engines, reduces particulate emissions meaningfully, and in a closed-loop waste-oil supply chain, represents a genuinely lower-impact fuel option.
The South African Reality
South Africa has the agricultural base to produce biodiesel at scale — soya and sunflower crops particularly lend themselves to it. There have been policy frameworks, pilot projects, and earnest investment discussions over the past fifteen-plus years. The 2007 Biofuels Industrial Strategy set ambitious targets. Most of them were not met.
The honest reasons are structural. South Africa’s fuel price regulation under the Petroleum Products Act makes it difficult for alternative fuels to compete economically without sustained subsidy. The capital cost of building biodiesel processing infrastructure is significant. And using agricultural land or food crops for fuel has real food-price implications in a country where food security is not an abstract concern — a tension that exists in every market that has tried this seriously, not just here.
Biodiesel is not a failed technology. It is a technology that requires supply chain investment, policy consistency, and feedstock discipline to work at commercial scale. South Africa has the raw ingredients for all three. What it has lacked, so far, is the sustained conditions for them to combine.
At a niche level — waste cooking oil collection networks, fleet operators running B20 blends for ESG compliance, small-scale local production — biodiesel has found quiet, practical footholds in South Africa. It is unlikely to displace petroleum diesel at scale in the near term. But as emissions regulations evolve, as sulphur specifications tighten on new vehicle imports, and as waste-oil feedstocks become better organised, the economics may shift in its favour.
Watch the space. But watch it with your eyes open.
The Practical Takeaway
If you are buying bulk diesel in South Africa right now, 50ppm is your baseline. It suits the majority of the commercial fleet, it is the standard product at virtually every bulk terminal, and it is what your supplier will quote unless you specify otherwise.
If you are operating modern Euro 5 or Euro 6 equipment — or taking delivery of new vehicles that specify ULSD — confirm 10ppm availability with your supplier before you commit to a supply arrangement. Not every depot carries it. The cost difference is real, but so is the warranty and after-treatment risk of running the wrong grade.
If someone is offering you 500ppm diesel at a notable discount, ask why they still have it. The answer will tell you something useful.

