Climategate is getting worse and worse by the minute for the global warming 
alarmist crowd.

The Climate Research Unit of the University of East Anglia is, according to the 
article, the world's leading centre for reconstructing past climate and 
temperatures. 

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Climate change data dumped
Jonathan Leake, Environment Editor 

SCIENTISTS at the University of East Anglia (UEA) have admitted throwing away 
much of the raw temperature data on which their predictions of global warming 
are based. 

It means that other academics are not able to check basic calculations said to 
show a long-term rise in temperature over the past 150 years. 

The UEA's Climatic Research Unit (CRU) was forced to reveal the loss following 
requests for the data under Freedom of Information legislation. 

The data were gathered from weather stations around the world and then adjusted 
to take account of variables in the way they were collected. The revised 
figures were kept, but the originals — stored on paper and magnetic tape — were 
dumped to save space when the CRU moved to a new building. 

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The admission follows the leaking of a thousand private emails sent and 
received by Professor Phil Jones, the CRU's director. In them he discusses 
thwarting climate sceptics seeking access to such data. 

In a statement on its website, the CRU said: "We do not hold the original raw 
data but only the value-added (quality controlled and homogenised) data." 

The CRU is the world's leading centre for reconstructing past climate and 
temperatures. Climate change sceptics have long been keen to examine exactly 
how its data were compiled. That is now impossible. 

Roger Pielke, professor of environmental studies at Colorado University, 
discovered data had been lost when he asked for original records. "The CRU is 
basically saying, `Trust us'. So much for settling questions and resolving 
debates with science," he said. 

Jones was not in charge of the CRU when the data were thrown away in the 1980s, 
a time when climate change was seen as a less pressing issue. The lost material 
was used to build the databases that have been his life's work, showing how the 
world has warmed by 0.8C over the past 157 years. 

He and his colleagues say this temperature rise is "unequivocally" linked to 
greenhouse gas emissions generated by humans. Their findings are one of the 
main pieces of evidence used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 
which says global warming is a threat to humanity. 


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