How Gasification Beat Berkeley and Broke Big
From fighting with Berkeley city government to a $5 million green-tech company
Here at Reason you can learn about the regulation-bedeviled technologies of tomorrow, yesterday! back in 2008 I wrote a long feature story about Jim Mason's attempts to revive the old power technology of gasification. The spirit behind it was this:

Mason notes that all sorts of human endeavors, from our computing to our food to our transportation, have evolved away from bare resource economizing. They've become instead arenas for play and assertions of identity—or, as Mason likes to think of it, areas in which there is at least some opportunity to impress girls.
"We can turn power into something experiential, expressive, personal," he says. "Not a problem to be solved but an opportunity to be explored, like the cultural movement in food from a thing you eat for raw energy to food as an idiom of pleasure, creativity, and expression, an excuse for gathering friends and family.
"Computing had a similar transformation. It wasn't until the computer became an idiom of personal expression that it exploded into something ubiquitous as clothes on our body.
"So much of our energy dialogue is still about how big corporate players can do better things, or forcing carmakers to do more reasonable things by taxing the bejesus out of oil so the government can smartly fund new research.…There isn't enough faith that things can come up meaningfully from the bottom, that through a culture of hacking and play there could be broad, self-realized solutions."
Mason and his team attempted this in the face of vast and hostile regulatory hassle from the city of Berkeley, unamused with his technological experiments in personalized power generation when it involved techniques that didn't fit their tight and unimaginative regulatory grid. My 2008 feature tells the story.
Mason and his team fought on after my story was written and have so far mostly prevailed, and his energy-hacker ideas and team are now a reasonably big business called All-Power Labs, receiving long press attention from the likes of Fast Company (in a April 2014 feature that reads, to me, quite a lot like my Reason feature in storytelling and focus) and this week at Gigaom.
Excerpts from that Gigagom story:
Now after years of refining the systems, All Power Labs has shipped 500 products and employs 40 workers. The team — a combination of junkyard fabricators, university-trained engineers and solar industry execs — has been gaining momentum, transitioning from their early DIY days into what they hope is a stable and predictable product-oriented energy company.
The group reportedly generates upwards of five million dollars in revenue a year, has been awarded several recent patents around core technology….
All Power Labs also started to get an increasing amount of interest from local entrepreneurs in developing areas in Africa and Asia that needed low cost, off-grid power to run their businesses, had access to abundant biomass (many operated in agriculture regions) and wanted to replace their expensive and dirty diesel generators with something else….
All Power Labs now has Power Pallets operating in 40 countries, including in Liberia using old rubber trees, the Philippines using coconut shells, and in Haiti, gasifying corn cobs. They had to temporarily halt their on-the-ground work in Liberia when Ebola hit.
At that $1.50 per watt price point, a customer that buys a Power Pallet to replace a generator and diesel fuel can recover their costs in 15 months….That price also significantly beats the cost to install solar panels, which can cost $2.27 a watt for large rooftop solar systems for companies and organizations, and $3.60 a watt for residential systems, according to GTM Research. And unlike a solar panel, the Power Pallet can run around the clock, whenever it's got plant waste to gasify.
I went on the road with Mason and some of his cohorts on the "Escape from Berkeley" alt fuel road rally to Vegas back in 2008, and lived to tell the tale.
Mason's earlier adventures in art and tech were told in my first book, This is Burning Man.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
receiving press long press attention from the likes of Fast Company (in a April 2014 feature that reads, to me, quite a lot like my Reason feature in storytelling and focus) and this week at Gigaom.
Um, wut?
He'll press you long long time (for a fee)
I do gasification of organic material on a daily basis.
Um, professionally.
+1 Lactose Sugar
Hey! who cut the cheese?
He who smelt it.
"We can turn power into something experiential, expressive, personal,"
You mean he shoveled that new-age bullshit and it still didn't convince the Lords of Berkeley?
He was slinging it pretty well. I'd give him an A-, at the least, for that effort.
Burn the Witch!
It's green 😉
This shit doesnt work.
When something works everyone uses it. Aspirin works so everyone uses it, there is no secret plant from Borneo that cures all. If there was people would be using it. Same for sewer gas.
I've seen two different hillbilly shows where they built gasifiers. One dude built one in the bed of his pickup to run his truck. The other built one to run a generator.
involved techniques that didn't fit their tight and unimaginative regulatory grid
I have been assured by armies of young'ins that the FCCs regulation of the Intertubez as "utilities" will be neither tight, nor unimaginative, but instead shall let loose the dogs of innovation.
It's going to be so awesome. I can't wait.
This is actually one of the few alt-energy projects that really interests me.
Is this a similar process to Thermal Depolymerization?
I'm sure All Power has at least explored it, but a Stirling engine might be an upgrade to the Vortec on their Power Pallet thing. I've seen Stirlings used on landfill gas-flare setups where the gas chemical composition changes as it depletes. Such a widget running on All Power's gasifier would relax the operating constraints from the available on-site chemistry considerably I think.
Awesome, good to go by admission essay writing service
Start a new lucrative career. Our firm is looking for 10 people to represent our services?.
You will have business coming to you on a daily basis
Check Here Don't Miss Golden Chance
Open this link to get the opportunity , as like i did and i am feeling crazy.. it realy works,,,,,,,,,,
?????????????????????? http://www.netpay20.com
That's a little different. The HERC is a waste to heat generator. This process generates burnable gases to supply a traditional engine.
The HERC is a poet!
I miss HERC, sort of.
Wait for campaign season...I am going to sign on again as his manager...if his infinite wisdom will have me.