You are wrong. ~97% of climatologist publishing climatology papers said yes to increasing temperatures and yes to humans being the significant factor.
77 out of 79 (97.4%) of people who self-identify as climate specialists, publish most of their papers on the climate, and deigned to respond to an internet survey said yes to humans being a significant factor in changes to the mean global temperature. That doesn't equate to 97% of climatologist.
I also find it interesting that while 76 of these self-identified experts claim humans are a significant factor in mean global temperature change, only 75 think the mean has risen, so one of these scientists might actually think humans are causing global cooling.
If I wanted to find the best curveball pitchers in baseball, I wouldn't ask pitchers to self-identify as curveball specialists, nor would I look at who throws the most curveballs, I'd ask the hitters who has the best curveball. Similarly, rather than trusting the opinions of 79 self-identified specialists, I'd rather ask a bunch of scientist who they think are the experts on climate science and then poll those scientists.
Here's an article that attempts to
http://www.garnautreview.org.au/upd...-'scientigic-consensus-on-climate-change'.pdf refute some of the popular criticisms of the consensus linked earlier. I find the information on page 5 interesting.
Ultimately, I think most well-written and honest attempts to identify a consensus among some group of scientists is probably going to land in the70% or 80% range. Honestly, though, what is important isn't really the number of scientist declaring something to be true, it is the quality of the opinions.
There are credentialed scientists with legitimate scientific explanations that disagree with the consensus, and we shouldn't discount their opinions just because those scientists are in the minority. That's my real problem with the consensus argument. It is trying to ramrod passed dissenting opinions to persuade the public to enact drastic measures without honestly addressing the differences in scientific opinion and testing the differing hypotheses.
"We have to act now because most scientist agree on a partially-tested hypothesis, even though there are legitimate alternative explanations" is not a very scientific way of behaving.