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Oil (cooking)
Accepted at 9 locations
Used cooking oil is vegetable oil or animal fat that has been used for cooking or frying and can be recycled into biodiesel and other products.
Material Details
Cooking oil is considered household hazardous waste and should be recycled at FNSB Transfer Sites or landfill, or other businesses which accept cooking oil for recycling.
Parent material: Oil
Accepted Locations

Last updated on June 16, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 13, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM

Last updated on June 9, 2026 by Green Star GM
About Oil (cooking)
What it is
Cooking oil from vegetable oils, animal fats, and used cooking oils can be converted into biodiesel through a chemical process called transesterification, which converts fats and oils into biodiesel and glycerin. According to the EPA, spills of animal fats and vegetable oils have similar devastating impacts on the aquatic environment as petroleum oils. The EPA reports that fats, oils, and grease account for 47% of sewer system blockages, making proper recycling essential.
How it’s recycled
Cooking oil is recycled through transesterification, a process that converts fats and oils into biodiesel and glycerin as a co-product. Beyond biofuels, recycled cooking oil is used as an animal feed additive, an industrial lubricant, and in soaps and cosmetics.
How to prepare it
Oil should be allowed to cool thoroughly before being strained or sieved into a suitable container, and should be collected for a period of no more than four weeks before being taken to an appropriate recycling center. Designate a container such as metal coffee cans, plastic butter containers, or original oil bottles for collection.
Common mistakes
Never pour cooking oil down the sink, toilet, or storm drain. Mixing cooking oil with other substances such as chemicals, detergents, or food scraps can create hazardous materials that are harmful to the environment and pose a threat to human health. Do not pour liquid oil directly into trash bags where it can leak, and do not put oil-coated containers in standard recycling bins as this contaminates the recycling stream.
Environmental impact
Pure biodiesel made from cooking oil can reduce carbon emissions by up to 74% compared to petroleum diesel. When discarded down drains or sewers, used cooking oil can be damaging to aquatic life, and if dumped directly, can devastate the physical environment by coating animals and plants with oil, depleting oxygen and disabling their survival. When cooking oil enters drains, it solidifies and combines with other waste to form massive blockages known as fatbergs that clog sewers, and grease contributes to 10,350 to 36,000 sanitary sewer overflows annually in the U.S.
Did you know?
The conversion process yields approximately one gallon of biodiesel from 8.5 pounds of recycled cooking oil.
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