Yahoo – AFP,
May 21, 2017
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Norway plans to better protect a seed storage vault designed to protect the world's crops from disaster, after soaring temperatures caused water to leak (AFP Photo/Larsen, Hakon Mosvold) |
Stockholm
(AFP) - Norway on Saturday said it would boost protection of a seed storage
vault designed to protect the world's crops from disaster, after soaring
temperatures caused water to leak into its entrance.
Situated
deep inside a mountain on a remote Arctic island in a Norwegian archipelago,
the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, dubbed the "doomsday" vault, is the
largest of its kind and can store up to 2.5 billion seeds.
Freezing
temperatures inside the vault keep the seeds, sealed in packages and stored on
shelves, usable for a long period of time. Permafrost and thick rock should
guarantee the seeds are frozen and secured for centuries.
But in
October 2016, the warmest year on record, melting permafrost caused water to
leak about 15 metres (49 feet) into the entrance of a 100-metre tunnel inside
the vault.
No damage
was caused to the seeds and they remain safe inside the vault at the required
storage temperature of -18 degrees Celsius (-4 degrees Fahrenheit).
But the
vault's managers are now constructing a waterproof wall inside for additional
protection, a Norwegian government spokeswoman told AFP, adding all heat
sources would also be removed from inside the vault.
"It's
not good to have unnecessary heat inside" if water is coming in and
permafrost is melting, Hege Njaa Aschim said.
"We
have to listen to climate experts (and) we are prepared to do anything to
protect the seed vault," she added.
The vault
currently stores more than 880,000 seed samples from nearly every country in
the world, including food staples such as maize, rice, wheat, cowpea and
sorghum from Africa and Asia.
It also
protects European and South American varieties of aubergine, lettuce, barley and
potatoes.
"The
water that leaked in had turned into ice... we had it removed," Aschim
said. Norwegian authorities are "taking this very seriously" and
"following it continuously," she added.
There are
1,700 gene banks around the world that safeguard collections of food crops and
many of these are exposed to natural disasters and wars, according to the
independent Global Crop Diversity Trust.
The
Svalbard vault was opened in 2008 with the aim to provide a "fail-safe
seed storage facility, built to stand the test of time and the challenge of
natural or man-made disasters," the organisation says on its website.
"It is
the final back up," it adds.
Each
country that deposits the seeds into the vault have control and access to their
own material.
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