You mention that notorious 2005 national science academies of the G8 nations statement? This from junkscience.com,
July 3 entry:
The "Joint Academies Statement" engineered by Lord Robert May appears to be more "misstatement"
Then US-National Academy of Sciences president Bruce Albert (his term just expired on June 30) states in an e-mail:
"... we definitely did not approve the Royal Society press release, and I have sent a letter to Bob May expressing my dismay at his
misleading and political statements there."
The situation now appears that we have a joint academies statement, including the US and Russian Academies of Sciences
that does not, in fact, include either the US or Russian Academies. At this time, immediately prior to the G8 Summit, the only definitely
known endorser of Lord May's statement is, well, Lord Robert May.
The international scientific community was plunged into disarray as news emerged yesterday how Britain's Royal Society has been orchestrating
a political campaign behind the back of the Russian Academy of Science. In a calculated attempt to overthrow the well-known sceptical position of the Russian Academy of Science (RAS) on climate change, the Royal Society appears to have pressured its president, Yuri Osipov, into signing a politically motivated document against the expressed stance of its own organisation.
The RAS had never seen or discussed the text of the Academies' statement. After having done so, the RAS climate scientists have come to the
conclusion that the statement of the Academies is "lacking scientific proof and having contradictions in logic in its many assertions."
The shenanigans of Lord May and his cronies appears to have backfired: Instead of providing evidence of an international "scientific consensus" on climate change, the public retraction by the Russian Academy of Science from the Royal Society's unduly political G8 statement has
exposed the whole exercise as a complete farce. As a result, the reputation and integrity of the world's leading scientific academies have been severely damaged
...........
You want more dissenting opinions from NAS scientists?
Here's a
strong one by a past president of the National Academy of Sciences.
Richard Lindzen, MIT meteorology professor, member of the National Academy of Sciences, served on an 11-member panel organized by the National Academy of Sciences to
write a report on climate change and it contains this advice for policymakers:
"Greenhouse gases are accumulating in Earth's atmosphere as a result of human activities, causing surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean
temperatures to rise. Temperatures are, in fact, rising. The changes observed over the last several decades are likely mostly due to human activities,
but we cannot rule out that some significant part of these changes is also a reflection of natural variability."
The bits below
from a recent paper by Lindzen:
"First, I would emphasize that the basic agreement
frequently described as representing scientific unanimity concerning global warming is
entirely consistent with there being virtually no problem at all..... what is known points to the
conclusion that a doubling of CO2 would lead to about 0.5C warming or less, and aquadrupling (should it ever occur) to no more than about 1C. Neither would constitute aparticular societal challenge. Nor would such (or even greater) warming likely be associated with discernibly more storminess, a greater range of extremes, etc.
Second, a significant part of the scientific community appears committed to the
maintenance of the notion that alarm may be warranted. Alarm is felt to be essential to the
maintenance of funding. {oops! he's channeling Dr. Freeze!} The argument is no longer over whether the models are correct(they are not), but rather whether their results are at all possible. Alas, it is impossible to prove something is impossible...."
Here is
his opinion piece "Climate of Fear: Global-warming alarmists intimidate dissenting scientists into silence"