BioFuel Oasis: Eight years on, and still powered by idealism

Jon and Val, customers at BioFuel Oasis, which is celebrating its eighth anniversary in Berkeley. Photo: Melissa Hardy

By Nathan Pensky

Even in a community as amenable to progressive values as Berkeley, there are few small businesses so powered by idealism as BioFuel Oasis, which this month is celebrating its eighth birthday.

An environmentalist mainstay since 2003, the company specializes in the sale of biodiesel fuel chemically rendered from recycled vegetable oil, and shipped in from an off-site manufacturer.

Since moving to its current location at 1441 Ashby Avenue, the company has diversified its product line to include urban farming materials such as organic chicken feed and beekeeping supplies, as well as teaching classes in DIY practices like beekeeping and home fermentation. Its clientele has swelled from a few environmentally conscious Berkeley residents to a loyal, 3,000-strong customer base.

As an all female/worker-run business geared entirely towards providing local residents with clean-fuel solutions and encouraging urban farming, to say that BioFuel Oasis is a unique exercise in entrepreneurism would be an understatement.

One could rightly say that the five owner-employees who make up the company’s staff are activists first and businesswomen second. They are: Margaret Farrow, Ace Anderson, Melissa Hardy, Jennifer Radtke, and noted author Novella Carpenter.

“We started selling biodiesel out of a little warehouse in west Berkeley,” said co-founder and co-owner Jennifer Radtke. “No one in Northern California was making biodiesel when we started. And so because of us and our distribution center, there are now places around here making it.”

The company’s main supplier is Yokayo Biofuels in Ukiah, CA which collects vegetable oil for rendering from the East Bay, and then drives it to Berkeley in trucks run on biodiesel. “We kind of created this community end-market,” said Radtke. “The Ukiah station was around when we started, but they were just distributing. Their goal was always to manufacture it, but there need to be enough people to buy it.”

BioFuel Oasis is at 1441 Ashby Avenue at Sacramento

BioFuels has also helped other stations get off the ground. For instance it advised San Francisco’s Dogpatch Biofuels, and supported them when they were getting started. “Now, we have this Northern Californian network of people who are doing biodiesel,” said Radtke. “We have co-created this whole local industry of getting your fuel from a recycled product. It’s sort of like the local food movement, but local fuel.”

One of the most impressive aspects of BioFuels is that it is partially funded through community donations. Aside from a small loan from the City of Berkeley, it has never taken capital from a bank or investment firm. “Instead, we made money in different creative ways, through events and from our customers donating,and having people pre-pay for fuel,” said Radtke who adds that they have raised $30,000 in that way.

But, as with any grassroots organization, not everything has been smooth sailing. Radtke said there had been some permitting hiccups with the Berkeley when they decided to relocate from west Berkeley, due to the city’s unfamiliarity with biofuel regulations. And, even among their customers, there has been some blowback, even subtle sexism, as the community learns to accept an all-female staff in a niche market for specialized urban farming equipment.

“We answer a lot of technical questions, about cars or beekeeping or chicken feed. And that’s not something traditionally that women are expected to do, you know?” she said. “The marketplace can be kind of an antagonistic place. It’s an educational thing about gender and women having technical knowledge. What happens sometimes is customers will ask another customer who is a guy a technical question, and the guy will say, ‘They know a lot more than I do’ and point to us.”

But Radtke is quick to point out that the very existence of BioFuel Oasis is a testament to the support of the local community, and the strength of its environmentalist values. “We’re very aware of the role of Berkeley in our success. There are a lot of people here for whom this is their lifestyle, to grow their own food in their backyard, to run their vehicle on a non-petroleum fuel. We have been cheered on by them.”

Bio-diesel is non-toxic -- you can even drink it, although nobody at Biofuel Oasis is recommending it

As far as Radtke and her co-workers are concerned, bio-diesel is a transitional fuel. “People ask us what we are transitioning to, and the answer is ‘walking and riding your bike’,” she said.

Biofuel normally costs about $0.50-$1.00 more per gallon than standard gasoline, and having it at a higher price encourages driving less, Radtke said.

“But if you do have to drive, biofuel is made from a recycled product, made locally. All your money is going to businesses that aren’t in the petroleum industry. And that’s not true of all the bio-diesel sold in this country. But for us it is, because we’ve developed those community relationships.

“Bio-diesel is carbon-neutral, and also non-toxic and non-flammable. It’s a lot like vegetable oil. You can even drink it, though I wouldn’t recommend it. When we had our grand opening here, we all did a little toast of bio-diesel. It’s not toxic, but it also doesn’t taste very good.”

The toast that Radtke and her fellow co-owners celebrated at their recent eight-year anniversary party no doubt tasted much sweeter. When asked what this anniversary represents to the company, Radtke responded: “In the beginning I thought we’d be out of business within two years. And so it’s beyond my wildest dreams, number one that we’d still be in business after eight years, and number two that we’d be thriving. But eight years. I guess if you turn it sideways it’s the infinity sign, so it means we’re gonna keep going.”

Related:
Berkeleyside profile: Novella Carpenter [04.30.10]

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  • Berkeleytard

    “Bio-diesel is carbon-neutral…”
    Is it?  

    By the time you account for the natural gas used to produce the anhydrous ammonia used a nitrogen source to grow the GMO corn used to make the corn oil, then add transportation and heating during refining, I’m not sure it’s even a net-positive in terms of caloric yield.   Layer on top of that the life cycle carbon emissions, and I suspect we may be better off just burning the petro and skipping all the transformation steps.

    If somebody can cite references pro or con I’d be curious to read.  Would be nice to find out that biofuels are actually a virtuous proposition, but my sense is it’s more of a feel-good.

  • http://caviarcommunism.us West Bezerkeley

    I love the stories on businesses around town. Keep it up!

  • Bruce Love

    http://www.biofueloasis.com/faq#biodiesel

    Sustainable Biodiesel: Not all Biodiesel is created equal. BioFuel Oasis is committed to selling and sourcing biodiesel made from recycled vegetable oil. Biodiesel made from virgin agricultural oils can displace food crops, can exacerbate the social and environmental problems of industrial agriculture and can have a large carbon footprint because it is often shipped from overseas. We prioritize sourcing biodiesel made within a 200 mile radius of Berkeley.

    And see there for additional links.

    So, the subsidy to industrial and GMO farming is at most low and indirect.

    Presumably the local sources of the recycled oil are fairly concentrated.  Also the energy costs of collecting and refining it must be figured in to their prices, which aren’t much higher than regular petrol diesel.

  • Hingdai

    They use recycled oil Berkeleytard.  What you say is true for non-recycled biofuel; it isn’t very sustainable.  But places like this use veggie oil that would have just been disposed of, but instead is refined into fuel.  There may not be enough recycled oil for every car, but the less fossil fuel the better right?

  • Anonymous

    I think you are right: it is not literally true that this biofuel is carbon-neutral, given the high energy inputs in conventional agriculture.

    But it is an environmental plus, because it is made of waste oil that would be thrown away if it were not recycled.  I suspect that, if this oil were dumped in a landfill, it would form methane when it decayed, which is a much worse ghg than the co2 that we get by burning it.

  • Completely Serious

    But is this a net benefit to the community?  The Bio-Fuel Oasis evicted a business run by an ex-con, who hired ex-cons to do car washes, to help them return to society after paying their debts.  That wasn’t fair, was it?

  • Berkeley Bear

    Thanks for the piece on a great local institution!  One personal linguistic peeve, though–Novella is a fantastic nonfiction writer and memoirist, not a novelist.  

  • EBGuy

    The red velvet sofa lives!  I can’t fathom the effort it took Jennifer
    and (co-founder) Sara Hope to get this place started in a West Berkeley
    warehouse.  Kudos to them for making it a worker owned coop and then transforming the station into an urban feed store.  Only in Berkeley.   

  • EBGuy

    Even biodiesel from virgin soy feedstock is net energy positive.  Here’s a good paper that discusses and attempts to reconcile differences in various studies that have been done on this topic.
    http://ddr.nal.usda.gov/bitstream/10113/19610/1/IND44102959.pdf

  • 1BerkMom

    BioFuel Oasis did not evict anyone. The place was up for rent because the former tenant was many months behind on their rent and the landlord was looking for new leasers.  BioFuel Oasis are renters– they did not have the power to evict anyone — misconceptions and misinformation  are dissappointing, please do your research. 

  • Berkeley Resident

    This is inaccurate.  Very irresponsible to post such a comment without any research. 

  • Lindsey Jones

    It is surprising that so many people in Bay Area who are ecologically minded still have room to grow when it comes to sexism. I am a female, professional fruit tree pruner and I am amazed at how often new clients, who are clearly pretty liberal, ask me on my first visit if I need to borrow a ladder or any other tools. Would they ask their male plumber if he needed to borrow a wrench?