In France it is used also as a substitute for fine oil in restaurants, as the oil part in a carpaccio, or as the high temperature boiling oil in beef bourguignon. Its taste is different from olive oil. Colza oil, with added color and flavor, has also been fraudulently labeled and sold as olive oil by unscrupulous Italian companies.
Colza oil was also used in Gombault's Caustic Balsam; a popular horse and human liniment at the turn of the 20th century. [Note that the ingredients listed in this link are similar but not the same as the list on the actual bottle.]
Among the more unusual applications of colza oil is the calming of choppy seas, where the oil modifies the surface tension of the water and rapidly smooths the surface. Rescue and recovery operations have been made far less risky in this way. 
More recently, colza has been cultivated in France as an ingredient for biodiesel fuels.