The one problem I have with it is the claim that there is no scientific debate:
Likewise, a competent high school physics student understands how the so-called greenhouse effect works and that conservation of energy is also settled science. It has been known for over a hundred years that adding CO2 to the atmosphere increases its infrared opacity, and when this happens, more energy from sunlight enters Earth’s atmosphere than escapes. The atmosphere must heat up on average. There is no scientific debate about this fact, and nobody has ever published a “zero-warming” theory to explain how it could be otherwise.
Richard Lindzen may be the chief of the climate change deniers; but he is highly qualified. I believe he also receives large sums of money from the oil industry. But he has published in scientific journals, and while he may not have published a "zero-warming" paper, I believe he has published peer-reviewed "cooling" papers on this. For instance (
source):
The iris hypothesis is a hypothesis proposed by Prof. Richard Lindzen in 2001 that suggested increased sea surface temperature in the tropics would result in reduced cirrus clouds and thus more infrared radiation leakage from Earth's atmosphere.<1> This suggested infrared radiation leakage was hypothesized to be a negative feedback which would have an overall cooling effect. The consensus view is that increased sea surface temperature would result in increased cirrus clouds which would have the effect of warming the sea surface further and thus there would be positive feedback.
Other scientists have since tested the hypothesis. Some concluded that that there was simply no evidence supporting the hypothesis.<2> Others found evidence suggesting that increased sea surface temperature in the tropics did indeed reduce cirrus clouds but found that the effect was nonetheless a positive feedback rather than the negative feedback that Lindzen had hypothesized.<3><4> However, there has been some relatively recent evidence potentially supporting the hypothesis.<5> <6>
Reference 6 is to a paper published in 2009.
By far and away, most climatologists disagree with Lindzen; and he has incentives to deny climate change. I'm not sure that his opinion hasn't been bought. However, the danger in using words like
no scientific debate and
nobody has ever published is that it gives the deniers a toe-hold from which to attack the article.