I would like to know if you share the concern that institutions -like the IPCC- are failing to accomplish their mission for which they were created (like making models that are credible).
Juan, it is not like this at all. Put simply, the IPCC' mission is to collect and assess all available knowledge about climate change plus its impact. Check
http://www.ipcc.ch/organization/organization.shtml for details. No failure and no models here.
Models are useful to verify knowledge and estimate impact. However, the capabilities of a model can only be tested against historical and present data. In terms of sea ice extent/area - good data - they are getting better as you posted below. In terms of volume/thickness there is unfortunately not enough data, neither in time nor spatially to verify such a model.
PIOMAS, as a regional model, on the other hand - most readers here will agree - does a fair job modelling Arctic sea ice starting with 1979. But PIOMAS knows nothing about climate change and emission scenarios, so it won't tell us a thing about the future.
And here opens the gap: On one hand we have GCM modeler saying, look, it performs good against existing data and on the other hand we have people thinking extent/area tells only half of the story referring to PIOMAS.
I see two options 1) the scientific community agrees on an 'official' ice thickness data set incorporating all available data acquired from the bottom of the ocean up to satellites capable to verify GCM models or 2) we wait until the Arctic gets actually ice free, which will tell us a lot about PIOMAS.
To summarize: nobody is to blame for missing data, but everybody has a different strategy to deal with.
PS: What you might criticize is the reported level of confidence of statements like 'the Arctic becomes ice free earliest mid century'.