Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

DME: An Alternative Fuel that is Coming Soon

Volvo Trucks North America believes dimethyl ether, or DME, is the real fuel of the future, and the company intends to get it to market as a motor fuel by 2015 in Volvo VN models as well as Mack Pinnacle trucks from its sister company.

Tom Berg
Tom BergFormer Senior Contributing Editor
Read Tom's Posts
October 3, 2013
DME: An Alternative Fuel that is Coming Soon

This DME engine is based on a Volvo D13 diesel. This prototype has common-rail fuel injection, which the production engine might or might not use.

4 min to read


Volvo Trucks North America believes dimethyl ether, or DME, is the real fuel of the future, and the company intends to get it to market as a motor fuel by 2015 in Volvo VN models as well as Mack Pinnacle trucks from its sister company.

Ad Loading...
This DME engine is based on a Volvo D13 diesel. This prototype has common-rail fuel injection, which the production engine might or might not use.

DME can be made from methane that occurs in many forms, from decomposing cow and chicken manure to rotting grass clippings and landfill gas, as well as natural gas. It burns extremely cleanly and should not have the kind of up-front cost penalty as some other “green” alternatives.

Although there are some incentives involved from the state of California to get the project rolling, Rebecca Boudreaux, president of Oberon Fuels, says she and her colleagues have established a good business case for DME without government money. Oberon began producing DME this summer at a new plant at Brawley, Calif.

Ad Loading...

The companies have found a way to produce DME in small quantities. That way markets can be developed locally and regionally, sidestepping the infrastructure challenge faced by natural gas.

DME is a nontoxic substance used overseas as a cooking fuel and other things, but not as motor fuel, Boudreaux said. One exception is 10 Volvo trucks in Sweden that have been in extensive field-testing with fleets.

Most Americans have never heard of DME, but it’s a common, non-toxic propellant used in products such as hair spray, deodorant and lube oil.

DME burns so cleanly that it leaves no soot and emits just a fraction of other pollutants, Boudreaux says. For example, carbon dioxide emissions are 95% less than diesel.

Rebecca Boudreaux, president of Oberon Fuels, shows a 21-gallon-per-minute dispenser. The nozzle twists onto a vehicle’s filler neck.

Starting next year, Safeway, the grocery giant based in northern California, will start running test tractors. Meanwhile, Volvo test units are already being run in Texas by Martin Transportation, a hauler of bulk commodities and construction materials. Some also will be bought by California agencies that are backing the project. By 2015, they are scheduled to be available to the industry at large.

DME under the hood

Ad Loading...

Diesel engines take well to DME, and need only a special injection system and different cylinder heads to handle high fuel flow, and simple steel fuel tanks to store it aboard a truck, explains Ed Saxman, Volvo’s marketing product manager for alternative fuels.

Those tanks are the same as those used for propane, so they are far cheaper than the vessels required for compressed and liquefied natural gas. Like propane, DME stores at about 75 pounds per square inch and at ambient temperature, versus 3,600 psi for CNG and minus 260 degrees for LNG.

DME storage is simple and relatively inexpensive, with a fueling station costing in “the tens of thousands of dollars instead of in the hundreds of thousands, as with natural gas,” Boudreaux says. Fueling will be consistent, with no short fills caused by low pressure in a storage tank, as sometimes happens with CNG, Saxman said. And DME can be stored in the hot sun, like propane, with no boiling off and venting as can occur with LNG.

DME burns so cleanly that the engine needs no exhaust-gas recirculation, a diesel particulate filter or variable geometry turbocharger – all sources of reliability problems and maintenance expense, Saxman says. The fuel is injected at relatively low pressures, so the fuel system needn’t be so stout.

With no DPF, there are no regenerations to burn out ash, and with compression ignition the operating temperatures are lower than with spark ignition required for CNG and propane. The engine control software is the same as for a diesel.

Ad Loading...
A steel DME fuel tank is the same kind used for propane. The modest storage pressure of 75 psi makes the tank, built for propane’s 125 psi, overbuilt.

DME still requires a catalytic converter and might need selective catalytic reduction. One thing already known is that DME lacks lubricity. Either the fuel has to be treated with an additive to protect exhaust valves, or those valves could be hardened as they are in gasoline engines destined to burn propane or natural gas.

More importantly, DME has about half the energy content of diesel fuel, so a truck will have to carry about twice the amount of DME for a given range. Two gallons of DME weigh 11 pounds compared to diesel’s 7.5 pounds, so a DME-fueled truck or tractor might be heavier than one with a straight diesel.

That’s unless the truck’s owner can reduce that range (most vehicles today carry too much fuel anyway, Saxman believes). The typical DME-powered truck will be a daycab with a 600-mile range.

Like any alternative fuel, DME will initially be better suited to local and regional trucking than long-haul, Boudreaux says. With an output of 4,500 gallons per day, Oberon’s small-scale production plant in Brawley is meant to support hub-and-spoke operations where trucks return often to refuel.

DME’s cost per diesel-equivalent gallon will be about the same as diesel’s, according to Oberon. Its advantage is its cleanliness for low emissions; safety, so a leak will be a non-event, unlike the mess and official concern for a diesel spill; and the use of plentiful domestic natural gas or renewable biomass feedstocks.

Ad Loading...

What will a truck or tractor with a DME engine cost? It will be “competitive with diesel,” is all Saxman or Volvo’s sales and marketing president, Goran Nyberg, would say.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fuel Smarts

NACFE Run on Less 2026 findings.
Fuel Smartsby Jack RobertsMay 1, 2026

NACFE: Fleets Need to Recalibrate TCO Strategies as Electric Trucks Gain a Long-Term Edge

NACFE’s Run on Less data has found that recent setbacks aside, electric truck powertrains are trending toward market leadership by 2025.

Read More →
Gray Volvo tractor pulling trailer on open highway
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeMay 1, 2026

New High-Horsepower Natural Gas Engine Could Expand Fleet Options

Westport and Volvo are demonstrating a 500-hp truck with diesel-like efficiency — one that also offers what Westport says is a better pathway to using hydrogen fuel in trucks.

Read More →
Illustration with oil wells silhouetted against red and gold sky
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeMay 1, 2026

Why Fuel Diversification Matters for Trucking Fleets

Relying on diesel alone exposes fleets to fuel price volatility. Here’s why diversification with electric, natural gas, and renewable fuels can reduce risk.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Range Energy eTrailer.
Fuel Smartsby News/Media ReleaseApril 17, 2026

Range Energy Confirms eTrailer Performance in Winter Testing as Commercial Rollout Nears

Range Energy said its production-ready eTrailer system proved it can boost stability, safety, and efficiency in sub-zero winter conditions as the company moves toward scaled deployment.

Read More →
Circles with trucks demonstrating sustainable features and Top Green Fleets logo
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 16, 2026

Top Green Fleets of 2026: Nomination Deadline Extended

Is your company a leader in sustainability efforts among trucking fleets? If so, Heavy Duty Trucking's editors want to hear from you.

Read More →
Youtube thumbnail featuring man in Big-Lebowski-inspired sweater
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 13, 2026

New Lightweight Wheel Cover Targets Simpler Aero Gains [Watch]

Watch to learn how Deflecktor's new wheel cover design is taking a simpler approach to aerodynamics, with an eye toward making it more practical for both trucks and trailers.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dual truck tires with black aerodynamic wheel cover and a man bending down getting ready to take one off
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 10, 2026

Deflecktor: Hubbub Aerodynamic Wheel Cover Cost-Effective Even for Trailers

Aerodynamic wheel covers can deliver small but meaningful fuel-economy gains for fleets, and Deflecktor says its latest design aims to make the technology easier and more affordable to deploy.

Read More →
Podcast thumbnail saying "How to Save on Fuel Costs" with diesel pump in the background and photo of the woman guest
Fuel SmartsApril 9, 2026

Cutting Fleet Fuel Costs in a Volatile Market [Listen]

When diesel prices are as volatile as they've been in 2026, it makes it tough for trucking fleets to plan and control costs. Breakthrough Fuel's Jenny Vander Zanden has insights on near-term savings strategies.

Read More →
YouTube thumbnail saying "How to Save on Fuel Costs" with woman's photo and a photo of a diesel price pump
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 9, 2026

Diesel Price Swings Aren’t Over. What Can Your Fleet Do?

Practical steps fleets can take to manage fuel costs, from purchasing strategies to driver behavior.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration with oil wells, dollar bills, and a diesel fuel pump
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 7, 2026

Diesel Prices Surge Toward Record Highs as Oil Price Volatility Intensifies

Prices jumped another 24 cents in a week, with California topping $7.50 and new data showing fleet fuel costs may already be at record levels.

Read More →