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مشاهدة النسخة كاملة : Arctic ‘Doomsday Vault’ Filled With World’s Seeds Comes to Life



مقاوم
02-25-2008, 03:21 PM
Arctic ‘Doomsday Vault’ Filled With World’s Seeds Comes to Life


by Pierre-Henry Deshayes in Longyearbyen, Norway


AN Arctic “doomsday vault” filled with samples of the world’s most important seeds will be inaugurated in Norway today.


http://www.commondreams.org/archive/wp-content/photos/0224_03.jpg (http://www.commondreams.org/archive/wp-content/photos/0224_03.jpg)


The vault aims to provide humankind with a Noah’s Ark of food in the event of a global catastrophe.


European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Nobel Peace Prize winning environmentalist Wangari Matai will be among the personalities present at the inauguration of the vault, which has been carved into the permafrost of a remote Arctic mountain, just 1000km from the North Pole.


The vault, made up of three spacious cold chambers each measuring 27m by 10m, creates a long trident-shaped tunnel bored into the sandstone and limestone.


It has the capacity to hold up to 4.5 million batches of seeds from all known varieties of the planet’s main food crops, making it possible to re-establish plants if they disappear from their natural environment or are obliterated by major disasters.


“The facility is built to hold twice as many varieties of agricultural crops as we think exist,” explained Cary Fowler, executive director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust (http://www.croptrust.org/main/) and project mastermind.


“It will not be filled up in my lifetime, nor in my grandchildren’s lifetime,” he predicted.


Norway has assumed the €6 million ($9.6m) charge for building the vault in its Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, where ironically no crops grow.


Secured behind an airlock door, the three airtight chambers have the capacity to house duplicates of samples from all the world’s more than 1400 existing seed banks.


Many of the more vulnerable seed banks have begun contributing to the “doomsday vault” collection, but some of the world’s biodiversity has already disappeared, with gene vaults in both Iraq and Afghanistan destroyed by war and a seed bank in the Philippines annihilated by a typhoon.


By the time of the inauguration, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault should hold some 250,000 samples, which will remain the property of their countries of origin.


Pakistan and Kenya, both undergoing periods of serious unrest, have sent seed collections, while samples sent from Colombia have been closely scrutinised by police to avoid the project becoming a vehicle for drug trafficking.


“I’ve been working in this field for 30 years and I thought I knew at least all the crops,” Mr Fowler said.


After receiving a list of all the different seeds in the vault, however, “I must admit there are a number of crops I’ve never heard of before”, he said.


That’s a spectacular amount of diversity for Svalbard, where no trees can grow due to the permafrost and where the mercury plummets to an average 14C below zero in winter.


The Norwegian archipelago, which is home to some 2300 people, was selected not despite but because of its inhospitable climate, as well as its remote location far from civil strife.


The seeds of wheat, maize, oats and other crops will be stored at a constant temperature of minus 18C Celsius, and even if the freezer system fails the permafrost will ensure that temperatures never rise above 3.5C below freezing.


“Svalbard really met all the criteria,” Mr Fowler said.
Protected by high walls of fortified concrete, an armoured door, a sensor alarm and the native polar bears that roam the region, the “doomsday vault” has been built 130m above current sea level - high enough that it would not flood if the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melt entirely due to global warming.


The concrete cocoon has also been built to withstand nuclear missile attacks or a plunging plane, something that could come in handy in light of the 6.4-scale tremor - the biggest earthquake in Norway’s history - registered near the archipelago on Thursday.

© 2008 Agence France-Presse

أم ورقة
02-25-2008, 03:41 PM
yes it's there .. faraway
safe from us
as I read earlier ,


Frozen vault saves crops for mankind

The world's vital seeds have a last refuge from future disaster in a mountain near North Pole

This article appeared in the Observer (http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver) on Sunday November 11 2007 (http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver/2007/nov/11) on p44 of the World news (http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver/2007/nov/11/news/worldnews) section. It was last updated at 09:56 on November 12 2007.


http://image.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2007/11/10/crops460x276.jpg Inside a tunnel at the global seed vault in Svalbard. Photograph: Mari Tefre/Getty

Engineers last week finished work on one of the world's most ambitious conservation projects: a doomsday vault carved into a frozen mountainside in the archipelago of Svalbard, a few hundred miles from the North Pole.
Over the next few weeks, the huge cavern - backed by the Norwegian government and the Gates Foundation - will be filled with more than a million types of seed and will be officially opened in February next year.
'This will be the last refuge for the world's crops,' said Cary Fowler, of the Rome-based Global Crop Diversity Trust, which is building the vault. 'There are seed banks in various countries round the globe, but several have been destroyed or badly damaged in recent years. We need a place that is politically and environmentally safe if we are going to feed the planet as it gets hotter.'



more (http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2007/nov/11/agriculture.biodiversity)

من هناك
02-25-2008, 04:49 PM
I wonder how Gates foundation got into this :)