Crevice-derived, dated opinion emanating from less than stellar sources (and rumors thereof; all hail Kevin Bacon) is cheap. As Big All suggests, we should look to the body of expert knowledge to determine if there's a consensus.
Here are (articles about) peer-reviewed studies since 2005 that stand as evidence of AGW. I will reconsider my opinion about consensus if someone points me to peer-reviewed studies since 2005 that indicate otherwise.
__________
May 9, 2007
Brazil National Institute for Space Research
large dams annually release about 104 million metric tons of methane to the atmosphere
May 1, 2007
US National Snow and Ice Data Center
The Arctic icecap is melting much faster than expected ... no doubt that this is caused in large part by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
Feb 12, 2007
NASA
warmer future climate likely will produce droughts ... The same model showed that greenhouse-gas warming has similar effects on the atmosphere
Dec 14, 2006
Postdam
Global warming could push sea levels about 40 percent higher than current models predict ... Reducing greenhouse gas emissions can impact such sea level rise.
Dec 11, 2006
NCAR, UW, McGill
if emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases were to slow, the likelihood of rapid ice loss would decrease
Aug 25, 2006
Postdam
The findings broadly back up other Potsdam forecasts about the effects of a build-up of carbon dioxide emitted by power plants, cars and factories.
Sept 13, 2006
Heliophysics, Max Planck Institute
Sunspots alter the amount of energy Earth gets from the sun, but not enough to impact global climate change
Aug 16, 2006
Florida State
hurricane damage will continue to increase, in part, due to greenhouse warming
Aug 3, 2006
Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement
Methane is an important greenhouse gas, and its atmospheric concentration has nearly tripled since pre-industrial times
July 6, 2006
Scripps
The increase in the number of large western wildfires ... evidence also links it to the effects of human-induced climate warming
July 6, 2006
NOAA
Human activities, chiefly the burning of fossil fuels, have upset a natural balance in ocean acidity ... We have very clear evidence, and there is no doubt this is occurring
June 26, 2006
NCAR
Global warming provided much of the ocean heat that fueled last year's record-setting hurricane season ... Natural climate cycles were only a minor factor
June 22, 2006
Natl Academy of Science
multiple lines of evidence supporting the conclusion that current warming is occurring in response to human activities
May 31, 2006
MIT, Penn St.
Human-induced climate change, rather than naturally occurring ocean cycles, may be responsible for the recent increases in the frequency and strength of North Atlantic hurricanes
May 26, 2006
Wageningen, Potsdam
warming due to human fossil fuel emissions may be 15-to-78 percent higher than estimates
May 22, 2006
Berkeley Lab, UC Berkeley
able to quantify the feedback implied by past increases in natural carbon dioxide and methane gas levels
Mey 3, 2006
NOAA
Global warming caused by human activity has begun to dampen an important wind circulation pattern over the Pacific Ocean, and that could alter climate and the marine food chain
May 2, 2006
U.S. Climate Change Science Program
The evidence continues to support a substantial human impact on global temperature increases.
Mar 31, 2006
British Antarctic Survey
Greenhouse gases could be having a bigger impact in Antarctica than across the rest of the world
Mar 13, 2006
NASA
a major form of global air pollution involved in summertime "smog" has also played a significant role in warming the Arctic.
Feb 28, 2006
UC Santa Cruz
Human activities are releasing greenhouse gases more than 30 times faster than the rate of emissions that triggered a period of extreme global warming in the Earth's past.
Feb 17, 2006
Woods Hole
an indication that greenhouse gases could heat the oceans in the future much more than currently anticipated
Jan 24, 2006
Scripps, Brookhaven
The Arctic is showing the first unmistakable signs of climate warming caused by human activities, in the form of rapidly retreating and thinning sea ice
Dec 21, 2005
Hadley Centre
New observations show that man-made aerosols may be having a greater direct effect on our climate than previously thought
Nov 30, 2005
Rutgers
Ocean levels are rising twice as fast today as they were 150 years ago, and human-induced warming appears to be the culprit
Nov 16, 2005
Scripps, UW
human-produced greenhouse gases, and the resulting warmer climates they produce, will have a significant influence on ... water supply
Feb 17, 2005
Scripps
results clearly indicate that the warming is produced anthropogenically ... The statistical significance of these results is far too strong to be merely dismissed and should wipe out much of the uncertainty about the reality of global warming