Global Climate Change

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How to conclude a scientific debate (an observation of the end of debate on climate change)

  1. Declare skeptics of your theory wrong
  2. Declare skeptics of your theory irrelevant
  3. Declare the debate over

Non-existant debate over man-made climate change

"The skeptics don't have to win the argument, they just have to stay in the game, keep things stirred up...", a brilliant example of the utter uselessness of popular news media as a source of anything of substantial value.

Non-existant expert skeptics of man-made climate change

Open Kyoto to Debate

An April 2006 open letter to Stephen Harper, Prime Minister of Canada, from 60 Expert Scientists listed below
[Negatively biased] database of credentials on fourty (as of March 2, 2007) of the following sixty experts, individual links are unrelated to this database

Leipzig Declaration signatories

(several names from above likely repeated)

  • Dr. John Apel, oceanographer, Global Oceans Associates, formerly with Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
  • Dr. David Aubrey, Senior Scientist, Marine Policy Center, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Massachusetts
  • Dr. Duwayne M. Anderson,Professor, Texas A&M University
  • Dr. Robert Balling, Professor and Director of the Office of Climatology, Arizona State University; more than 80 research articles published in scientific journals; author of The Heated Debate: Greenhouse Predictions vs. Climate Reality (1992); coauthor, Interactions of Desertifications and Climate, a report for the UN Environmental Program and the World Meteorological Organization; contributor/reviewer, IPCC.
  • Dr. Jack Barrett, Imperial College, London, UK
  • Dr. Warren Berning, atmospheric physicist, New Mexico State University
  • Dr. Jiri Blumel, Institute Sozialokon. Forschg. Usti nad Labem, Czech Republic
  • Bruce Boe, atmospheric scientist and Director of the North Dakota Atmospheric Resources Board; member, American Meteorological Society; former chairman, AMS Committee on Planned and Inadvertent Weather Modification.
  • Dr. C.J.F. Böttcher, Chairman of the Board, The Global Institute for the Study of Natural Resources, The Hague, The Netherlands; Professor Emeritus of physical chemistry, Leiden University; past President of the Science Policy Council of The Netherlands; former member, Scientific Council for Government Policy; former head of the Netherlands Delegation to the OECD Committee for Science and Technology; author, The Science and Fiction of the Greenhouse Effect and Carbon Dioxide; founding member of The Club of Rome.
  • Dr. Arthur Bourne, Professor, University of London, UK
  • Larry H. Brace, physicist, former director of the Planetary Atmospheres Branch, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; recipient NASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement.
  • Dr. Norman M.D. Brown, FRSC, Professor, University of Ulster.
  • Dr. R.A.D. Byron-Scott, meteorologist, formerly senior lecturer in meteorology, Flinders Institute for Atmospheric and Marine Science, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia
  • Dr. Joseph Cain, Professor of planetary physics and geophysics, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Institute, Florida State University; elected Fellow, American Geophysical Union; formerly with NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (scientific satellites) and the U.S. Geological Survey.
  • Dr. Gabriel T. Csanady, meteorologist, Eminent Professor, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia.
  • Robert Cunningham, consulting meteorologist, Fellow, American Meteorological Society
  • Dr. Fred W. Decker, Professor of meteorology, Oregon State University, Corvalis, Oregon; elected Fellow, AAAS; member, RMS, NWA, AWA, AMS.
  • Lee W. Eddington, meteorologist, Naval Air Warfare Center
  • Dr. Hugh Ellsaesser, atmospheric scientist, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (1963-1986); Participating Guest Scientist, Lawrence Livermore Natl. Lab. (1986-1996), more than 40 refereed research papers and major reports in the scientific literature.
  • Dr. John Emsley, Imperial College, London, UK
  • Dr. Otto Franzle, Professor, University of Kiel, Germany
  • Dr. C.R. de Freitas, climate scientist, University of Auckland, New Zealand, Editor of the international journal Climate Research
  • Dr. John E. Gaynor, Senior Meteorologist, Environmental Technology Laboratory, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Boulder, Colorado
  • Dr. Tor Ragnar Gerholm, Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Stockholm, member of Nobel Prize selection committee for physics; member, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, author of several books on science and technology.
  • Dr. Gerhard Gerlich, Professor, Technical University of Braunschweig.
  • Dr. Thomas Gold, Professor of astrophysics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
  • Dr. H.G. Goodell, Professor, University of Virginia, Charlottesville
  • James D. Goodridge, climatologist, formerly with California Dept. of Water Resources.
  • Dr. Adrian Gordon, meteorologist, University of South Australia.
  • Prof. Dr. Eckhard Grimmel, Professor, University Hamburg, Germany.
  • Dr. Nathaniel B. Guttman, Research Physical Scientist, National Climatic Data Center, Asheville, North Carolina; former Professor of atmospheric sciences/climatology; former Chairman, AMS Committee on Applied Climatology.
  • Dr. Paul Handler, Professor of chemistry, University of Illinois.
  • Dr. Vern Harnapp, Professor, University of Akron, Ohio
  • Dr. Howard C. Hayden, Professor of physics, University of Connecticut
  • Dr. Michael J. Higatsberger, Professor and former Director, Institute for Experimental Physics, University of Vienna, Austria; former Director, Seibersdorf Research Center of the Austrian Atomic Energy Agency; former President, Austrian Physical Society.
  • Dr. Austin W. Hogan, meteorologist, co-editor of the journal Atmospheric Research.
  • Dr. William Hubbard, Professor, University of Arizona, Dept. of Planetary Sciences; elected Fellow of the American Geophysical Union.
  • Dr. Heinz Hug, lecturer, Wiesbaden, Germany
  • Dr. Zbigniew Jaworski, University of Warsaw, Poland
  • Dr. Kelvin Kemm, nuclear physicist, Director, Technology Strategy Consultants, Pretoria, South Africa; columnist, Engineering News; author, Techtrack: A Winding Path of South African Development.
  • Dr. Robert L. Kovach, Professor of geophysics, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California
  • Dr. David R. Legates, Professor of meteorology, University of Oklahoma
  • Dr. Heinz H. Lettau, geophysicist, Increase A. Lapham Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin
  • Dr. Henry R. Linden, Max McGraw Professor of Energy and Power Engineering and Management, Director, Energy and Power Center, Illinois Institute of Technology; elected Fellow, American Institute of Chemical Engineers; former member, Energy Engineering Board of the National Research Council; member, Green Technology Committee, National Academy of Engineering.
  • Dr. Richard S. Lindzen, Sloane Professor of Meteorology, Center for Meteorology and Physical Meteorology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • Dr. J. P. Lodge, atmospheric chemist, Boulder, Colorado
  • Dr. Anthony R. Lupo, atmospheric scientist, Professor, University of Missouri at Columbia, reviewer/contributing author, IPCC.
  • Dr. George E. McVehil, meteorologist, Englewood, Colorado
  • Dr. Helmut Metzner, Professor, Tubingen, Germany
  • Dr. Patrick J. Michaels, Professor and Director of the State Office of Climatology, University of Virginia; more than 50 research articles published in scientific journals; past President, American Association of State Climatologists; author, Sound and Fury: The Science and Politics of Global Warming (1992); reviewer/contributing author, IPCC.
  • Sir William Mitchell, physicist, University of Oxford, U.K.
  • Dr. Asmunn Moene, former chief of Meteorology, Oslo, Norway.
  • Laim Nagle, energy/engineering specialist, Cornfield University, UK
  • Robert A. Neff, former U.S. Air Force meteorologist: member, AMS, AAAS.
  • Dr. William A. Nierenberg, Director Emeritus, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, La Jolla, California; Professor Emeritus of oceanography, University of California at San Diego; former member, Council of the U.S. National Academy of Science; former Chairman, National Research Council's Carbon Dioxide Assessment Committee; former member, U.S. EPA Global Climate Change Committee; former Assistant Secretary General of NATO for scientific affairs; former Chairman, National Advisory Committee on Oceans and Atmospheres.
  • Dr. William Porch, atmospheric physicist, Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico.
  • Dr. Harry Priem, Professor of geology, University of Utrecht
  • Dr. William E. Reifsnyder, Professor Emeritus of biometeorology, Yale University; elected Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; former Chairman, National Academy of Science/National Research Council Committee on Climatology; AMS Award for Outstanding Achievement in Biometeorology.
  • Dr. Alexander Robertson, meteorologist, Adjunct Professor, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada; author of more than 200 scientific and technical publications in biometeorology and climatology, forestry, forest ecology, urban environmental forestry, and engineering technology.
  • Dr. Thomas Schmidlin, CCM, Professor of meteorology/climatology, Kent State University, Ohio; editor, Ohio Journal of Science, elected Fellow, Ohio Academy of Science; member, AMS.
  • Dr. Frederick Seitz, physicist, former President, Rockefeller University, former President, U.S. National Academy of Sciences; former member, President's Science Advisory Committee; recipient, U.S. National Medal of Science.
  • Dr. Gary D. Sharp, Executive Director, Center for Climate/Ocean Resources Study and the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Integrated Ocean Sciences; contributed to the initial development of the Climate Change Program of the National Oceanic And Atmospheric Administration; investigated climate-related resource variabilities, sustainable development, and basic environmental climatology for the UN, World Bank, and USAID.
  • Dr. S. Fred Singer, atmospheric physicist; President, The Science & Environmental Policy Project; former Director, U.S. Weather Satellite Service; Professor Emeritus of environmental science, University of Virginia; former Chairman, federal panel investigating effects of the SST on stratospheric ozone; author or editor of 16 books, including Global Climate Change (1989) and Hot Talk, Cold Science: Global Warming's Unfinished Debate (1997).
  • Dr. A. F. Smith, chemical engineer (ret.), Jacksonville, Florida
  • Dr. Fred J. Starheim, Professor, Kent State University
  • Dr. Chauncey Starr, President Emeritus, Electric Power Research Institute, winner 1992 National Medal of Engineering
  • Dr. Robert E. Stevenson, Secretary General Emeritus, International Association for the Physical Sciences of the Oceans, and a leading world authority on space oceanography; more than 100 research articles published in scientific journals; author of seven books; advisor to NASA, NATO, U.S. National Academy of Science, and the European Geophysical Society.
  • Dr. George Stroke, Professor, Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Munich, Germany
  • Dr. Heinz Sundermann, University of Vienna, Austria
  • Dr. George H. Sutton, Professor Emeritus, University of Hawaii
  • Dr. Arlen Super, meteorologist, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Lakewood, Colorado
  • Dr. Vladimir Svidersky, Professor, Sechenoc Institute, Moscow, Russia
  • Dr. M. Talwani, geophysicist, Rice University, Houston, Texas.
  • Dr. W. F. Tanner, Professor, Florida State University
  • Peter Arnold Toynbee, chemical engineer, F. Institute of Energy, London, England.
  • Dr. Christiaan Van Sumere, Professor, University of Gent, Belgium
  • Dr. Robin Vaugh, physicist, University of Dundee, UK
  • Dr. Robert C. Wentworth, geophysicist, Oakland, California, formerly with Lochheed Reseach Laboratory.
  • Dr. Robert C. Whitten, physicist, formerly with NASA.
  • Dr. Klaus Wyrtki, Professor Emeritus, University of Hawaii Sea Level Center