Climate science non-debate

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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...", wow.

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

(*name repeated from above)

  • 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