That's all well and fine, and I agree with the need for qualitative assessments. I think it's hilarious they need to glue a "95%" number on it, as it tries to capture a quantitative measure of a qualitative subjective assessment. It's also contradictory to the fact that they have reached some consensus that some particular dangers pointed out in AR4 were overblown (like extreme weather phenomena, etc.) and the empirical assessment that the models are clearly running hotter than reality. In the overall scheme of things, however, this is almost peanuts. Overall, I accept the IPCC's findings as much as I would accept any other political bodied scientific report. It has a load of ideological shenanigans but it also has a good chunk of data and analysis that is well needed if we are to make decisions over that issue.
The bringing climatology over this discussion was, I think, due to the ease of which some scientific challenges to mainstream consensus theories get bogged down and marked as the word of some heretic, an "evil-doer" that is in the payroll of some evil corporation doing evil nasty things like spreading lies and confusions and what nots. The conversation gets polarized and some nuances or other small snippets of skepticism here and there are gargantually hyped as evidence that we are in the presence of someone we should get pitchforked. This usually makes for bad conversation and that was the only thing being pointed out, as far as I see. In the wider internet, I clearly see the victims and destruction of this polarization, with journalists and bloggers fighting endlessly against the evil on the other side, all claiming scientific and moral superiority over the others, stepping and effectively destroying any sensible and rational, calm and nuanced discussion we could possibly ever have.