Sci/Tech ‘Doomsday’ seed vault meant to survive global disasters breached by climate change

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Freeloading Rusty

Here comes Rover, sniffin’ at your ass
Jan 11, 2016
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‘Doomsday’ seed vault meant to survive global disasters breached by climate change


The seed bank designed to preserve the world’s crops and plants in the event of global disaster isn’t prepared to withstand the greatest global disaster facing our planet: global warming. Melting permafrost on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, where the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is located, has seeped into the seed bank, raising questions of how the structure will be able to survive in the future as the Earth keeps warming.

The seed vault is built in an abandoned Arctic coal mine, deep inside a mountain. It contains about a million packets of seeds from almost every country in the world, representing “the most diverse collection of food crop seeds.” In 2015, the ongoing civil war in Syria prompted researchers in the Middle East to withdraw some seeds to replace those previously stored in a gene bank in war-torn Aleppo.

The structure was built underneath the permafrost so it could be “a fail-safe seed storage facility, built to stand the test of time — and the challenge of natural or man-made disasters,” as the seed bank’s website says. But oh, the irony. Unusually warm temperatures in the winter have caused rain, and the permafrost has been melting. “It was not in our plans to think that the permafrost would not be there and that it would experience extreme weather like that,” Hege Njaa Aschim, from the Norwegian government, which owns the vault, told The Guardian.

Fortunately, the water hasn’t flooded the vault itself. It only got to the entrance of the tunnel, where it froze. (The seeds are stored at minus 0.4 degrees Fahrenheit.) But the incident has raised questions over the durability of a seed bank that was supposed to operate without people’s intervention.

The vault managers are now waterproofing the facility and digging trenches to channel melt and rainwater away, according to The Guardian. They’ve also installed pumps in case the vault floods again. “We have to find solutions. It is a big responsibility and we take it very seriously. We are doing this for the world,” Åsmund Asdal at the Nordic Genetic Resource Centre, which operates the seed vault, told The Guardian. “This is supposed to last for eternity.”
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
45,576
57,922
In 2015, the ongoing civil war in Syria prompted researchers in the Middle East to withdraw some seeds to replace those previously stored in a gene bank in war-torn Aleppo.
Why would they choose Aleppo as a place to store seeds in the permafrost? Aleppo is relatively close to the equator compared to say - Norway. And it's pretty close to the Mediterranean Sea, which one would assume would have an effect on the permafrost depth as well. Feels like an odd selection.
 

Wintermute

Putin is gay
Apr 24, 2015
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Why would they choose Aleppo as a place to store seeds in the permafrost? Aleppo is relatively close to the equator compared to say - Norway. And it's pretty close to the Mediterranean Sea, which one would assume would have an effect on the permafrost depth as well. Feels like an odd selection.
I think you need to re-read the article, bro
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
45,576
57,922
Still makes no sense. I know it's up in Spitsbergen (Norway), but in the 2nd paragraph it mentions that they had to replace some seed previously stored in Aleppo. That's what I'm questioning - why were they there to begin with?

Not that I really care.
 

HEATH VON DOOM

Remember the 5th of November
Oct 21, 2015
17,281
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Still makes no sense. I know it's up in Spitsbergen (Norway), but in the 2nd paragraph it mentions that they had to replace some seed previously stored in Aleppo. That's what I'm questioning - why were they there to begin with?

Not that I really care.
There is more than one seed bank.
 

BeardOfKnowledge

The Most Consistent Motherfucker You Know
Jul 22, 2015
60,549
56,270
Climate change and global warming are not the same concepts. Of course they also apparently don't understand the concept of a vault very well either.
 

b00ts

pews&vrooms
Amateur Fighter
Oct 21, 2015
5,599
8,635
The structure was built underneath the permafrost so it could be “a fail-safe seed storage facility, built to stand the test of time — and the challenge of natural or man-made disasters,” as the seed bank’s website says
Yes because the earth hasn't heated and cooled for billions of years.