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Home / Lifestyle

Which cooking oil should I use?

By Selena Ross
New York Times·
6 Jun, 2025 06:00 AM5 mins to read

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You might not give your cooking oil much thought, but its environmental impact is bigger than you think. Photo / 123RF

You might not give your cooking oil much thought, but its environmental impact is bigger than you think. Photo / 123RF

When it comes to climate and the environment, some oils are a cut above. Here’s what to know.

A splash here, a splash there. You might not think your cooking oil matters much for the climate and the environment. But it does.

Farming accounts for about one-third of global carbon emissions. And, according to a major study published in 2022, nearly 20% of the planet’s total farmed land goes toward oil crops.

But that doesn’t mean that all oils are bad. Some are much better than others. And, in some cases, they might even provide a net benefit in terms of planet-warming carbon.

Here, in a nutshell, is what you should know.

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The global rankings

Just four crops make up more than 85% of the world’s edible oil: palm, soy, canola and sunflower.

Peanut, coconut and olive oils are the next biggest. All the others, including corn, grapeseed and avocado, make up just a sliver of the global market.

According to that 2022 study, canola and sunflower oil are the two best bets for the climate, on average, around the world.

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After those, the top tier looks something like this, from best to worst: olive, coconut, soy and peanut.

Soy loses points because so much is grown on deforested parts of the Brazilian Amazon. Peanut and coconut oils also have high land costs.

Palm oil is rarely used for cooking in the United States and Europe, but it’s found in countless consumer products. Its environmental effects depend hugely on where the oil was produced. The problem is, it’s often difficult or impossible to know where the palm oil in your chocolate bar, lipstick or soap came from.

The six major oils fall in a slightly different order when biodiversity is the main consideration. In order from best to worst by that measure, omitting palm, the top ranking goes to sunflower, with olive and canola in a near tie for second place, followed by soy and coconut in another near tie, and, bringing up the rear, peanut.

Four oils—palm, soy, canola and sunflower—account for over 85% of global edible oil production. Photo / 123RF
Four oils—palm, soy, canola and sunflower—account for over 85% of global edible oil production. Photo / 123RF

But there’s more: location matters

Global averages are a good guide, but oils can have a very different environmental footprint depending on where they came from and where you live.

A case in point: those ubiquitous bottles in US shops labelled “vegetable oil”.

What does that mean? It’s “usually soybean oil,” said Eric Decker, a professor in the department of food science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Check the label and it might show a blend, commonly of soy and corn.

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Crucially, nearly all of this oil is grown in the United States, according to the American Soybean Association, a nonprofit group that advocates on behalf of farmers.

And the 2022 study found that US-grown soy is associated with relatively low carbon emissions. That makes vegetable oil one of the top environmental options in the United States, as long as it’s pure American-produced soy.

Canola can also be a good choice, but its origins matter, too

The prairie ecozone where almost all North American canola is farmed has “a relatively low storage potential of the soil,” said Stephen Ramsden, an agricultural economist at the University of Nottingham in England who was an author of the 2022 study. That means using the land for agriculture doesn’t represent a big loss of carbon-storage capacity. “You’re not really giving up that much,” Ramsden said.

That gives canola its edge. In fact, according to the study, canola from these native grasslands is the only oil that can have net negative emissions, meaning it absorbs more planet-warming carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than its production generates.

An important note: Canola only earns a top-tier rating when the soil isn’t tilled. When farmers till, turning the soil over and releasing carbon, the oil’s related emissions more than double.

As with soy, you can probably rest easy if you’re buying North American-grown canola. Around two-thirds of the farmland in question is no-till, and 90% is at least low-till, according to the US Canola Association and Canada’s national statistics agency.

The name, by the way, is derived from “Canadian oil, low acid”. In Europe, it’s called rapeseed oil.

Canola oil is also one of the healthiest oils to cook with because, among other things, it has the lowest saturated fat content of any oil.

Understanding cooking oil in the rest of the world, where it tends to be sourced from more places, is more difficult. To be safe, stick with canola, sunflower and olive oils.

A few simple swaps in the kitchen can help you lower your carbon footprint. Photo / 123RF
A few simple swaps in the kitchen can help you lower your carbon footprint. Photo / 123RF

Reducing oil use

Ultimately, to decrease the environmental footprint of the oil in your life, you can try to eat less processed food, don’t go overboard on cosmetics, and use oil sparingly when you cook.

One of the biggest advantages of plant-based oil is simply the fact that it’s plant-based.

“We need to get the calories from somewhere,” said Robert Beyer, a researcher who helped write a major oil comparison study while at Cambridge University.

“If you reduce vegetable oils, and suddenly everybody starts cooking with butter or goose fat or something, environmental impact will definitely go through the roof.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Written by: Selena Ross

©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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