What about this very old news? I reported it two months ago and I fully agree with Crutzen. In fact, I make a living out of agreeing with Crutzen. I love Crutzen!

Read this, and you will understand why.
It was a non-peer reviewed paper about which he said that it still has to go through the review process, and he added he is only talking about dumb first generation liquid biofuels. Not about biofuels proper or bioenergy.
But that aside, lets look why Crutzen strengthens my case:
1. Crutzen says nothing new, and talks about biofuels I have always described as dumb: namely those primitive biofuels based on crops grown in temperate climates and of which only the easily extractible sugars and starches are used: corn dummy fuel and canola dummy fuel. Of which only the seeds are used and 80 percent of the biomass is wasted.
2. Why do you think I make a case for (and a living out of) biofuels made in the South and for second, third and fourth generation fuels? Precisely for the reasons Crutzen outlines: sugarcane makes a substantial reduction (up to 80% total emission reductions compared to gasoline).
All the other crops I promote, namely grass species like sweet sorghum (an even better balance than cane) or trees like Eucalyptus, all have the same strong energy and GHG balance.
Unlike biofuels from the North.
3. For those who still don't know it, I will repeat it: I make a living from promoting a North-South relationship based on bioenergy, in which the EU and the US stop all their nonsensical biofuels and start importing from the South, where their production contributes to mitigating climate change, to poverty alleviation and to rural development.
This of course requires CAP reform in the EU, a massive destruction of the filthy US subsidy policies, and trade reform (Doha). But we're getting there.
4. Last but not least, Crutzen not only merely looks at first generation biofuels, he doesn't look at carbon negative bioenergy and bio-hydrogen either. You know, the carbon of which you geosequester.
You can get -1000 grams of CO2 per kWh of carbon negative bio-electricity based on Eucalyptus or Acacia. Yes, you read that right: *minus* a thousand grams. Wind power, solar, and all other renewables have a positive balance ranging from +30 to +800 grams.
Only biomass can deliver negative emissions energy. But that is too complex to discuss in here.
In short, I am a strong supporter of everything Crutzen says: liquid biofuels made from food crops grown in photosynthetically weak places like Europe and the US must be banned and instead replaced by biofuels made in places where they lead to GHG reductions and have a strong energy balance. That is: the vast tropics and subtropics, who have an explicitly sustainable theoretical potential of 900Ej by 2050 (Africa alone more than 400Ej, after meeting all local food, fiber, fodder, fuel and forest products services of rapidly growing populations and without deforestation).
Best of all, however, would be a transition towards carbon-negative biohydrogen or bio-electricity for cars. But this is too radical and futuristic for most ordinary people.
Because it would be a strange world, in which - each time you drive a car, you would be taking historic CO2 emissions out of the atmosphere. Read that again, and think of it. You will be shocked.
So indeed, me luvs Paul. Cheers!
The organisation for which I work even celebrated Crutzens informal paper. We drank champagne over it because it entirely makes our case.
PS: Crutzen is a nice guy, but even he has made some serious mistakes in the past. He once proposed to a NASA workshop on geoengineering to seed the atmosphere with sulphur, so as to create a cooling blanket with which to stop global warming.
Luckily, his collegues did the math and showed Crutzen's idea was insane and would kill us all (because it would destroy agriculture).
Crutzen is a typical whacko, a genius: sometimes he's very right and makes brilliant observations, the next day he's acting like a loonie. Typical of some Nobels.
But on biofuels he's right: say NO to lobby-fuels made in the US/EU. Say YEA to biofuels that save mankind and all the creatures on the planet.