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Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault
Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault









norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault
  1. #Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault upgrade#
  2. #Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault full#

It is essentially a huge safety deposit box, holding the world’s largest collection of agricultural biodiversity. Millions of these tiny brown specks, from more than 930,000 varieties of food crops, are stored in the Global Seed Vault on Spitsbergen, part of Norway’s Svalbard archipelago. But it’s balance smaller sized, localized destruction and threats facing gene banks around the globe the vault is built to safeguard against-and it’s why the vault was opened up in Feb, when TIME visited. The Worldwide Seed Vault continues to be dubbed the “doomsday” vault, which invokes a picture of the reserve of seeds to be used in situation of the apocalyptic event or perhaps a global catastrophe. Inside the vault that holds the largest collection of agricultural biodiversity. The ‘Doomsday’ Vault Where the World’s Seeds Are Kept Safe The Global Crop Diversity Trust has named several other uses for the vault, including replacing seeds lost in damage to any of the 1,400 seed vaults around the world, safeguarding seeds for developing countries and spreading general knowledge of the threat to crop diversity (the United Nations puts the percentage of genetic diversity already lost to ecological damage at 75 percent). The vault’s purpose is safeguard agricultural biodiversity in the event that nuclear war, climate change, a meteor hit or another Earth-shattering event destroys all current plant life in the world or in a particular region.

norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault

The Svalbard International Seed Vault, dubbed the “doomsday vault,” will house samples of every variety of crop seed available in every country in the world.

norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault

The Arctic vault in Svalbard is preparing for the worst case scenario.įebruary 15, 2007While some of us are stocking up on duct tape, gas masks and enough bottled water to last through the initial weeks of the end of the world, the government of Norway has partnered up with the Global Crop Diversity Trust to prepare for the event that doomsday leaves some survivors. While some of us are stocking up on duct tape and bottled water, the government of Norway is preparing for the event that doomsday leaves some long-term survivors who need to rebuild. Well, in 2015, some 116,000 seed samples in the SGSV were transferred to a seed bank in Aleppo that had been damaged by the recent Syrian Civil War.

#Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault full#

Click to View Full InfographicPerhaps you’re wondering if this seed vault has ever been useful. It serves as a backup for the other 1,750 seed banks all over the planet, each designed for food security. This “doomsday vault” serves as a huge cold-storage unit for more than 850,000 seed samples, according to the Public Radio Institute, which are kept at about -18 ☌ (-3 ☏). On an island by the Arctic boundaries of Norway, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault (SGSV) has been keeping seeds samples from every part of the world since 2008 - just in case.

norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault

Well, in real life, there’s actually something quite similar to this - except it’s not meant for preserving fully grown sentient species. The upgrades and repairs will allow the vault to continue safeguarding global food security.įans of real-time space strategy game Stellaris may be familiar with a moment in the game when an elder alien civilization volunteers to “preserve” your in-game species by curating some of your adult population into vaults.

#Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault upgrade#

Norway’s “Doomsday” seed vault is getting a $13 million upgrade











Norway adds seeds to its doomsday vault