Oslo, Norway
February 2, 2007
'Noah’s Ark' for seeds designed to
outlast major rise in sea level and warming of permafrost
The Norwegian government has
revealed the architectural design for the Svalbard International
Seed Vault, to be carved deep into frozen rock on an island not
far from the North Pole. The entrance to the "fail-safe" seed
vault will "gleam like a gem in the midnight sun," signaling a
priceless treasure within: seed samples of nearly every food
crop of every country. The vault is designed to protect the
agricultural heritage of humankind—the seeds essential to
agriculture of every nation.
"This design takes us one step
closer to guaranteeing the safety of the world's most important
natural resource," said Dr. Cary Fowler, Executive Director of
the Global Crop Diversity
Trust, which will co-fund the vault's operations and pay for
the preparation and transport of seeds from all developing
nations to the Arctic island of Svalbard. "Every day that passes
we lose crop biodiversity. We must conserve the seeds that will
allow agriculture to adapt to challenges such as climate change
and crop disease. This design is as awesome physically as it is
attractive aesthetically, and both are fitting tributes to the
importance of the biological treasure to be stored there."
Construction is slated to begin
in March 2007 and to be completed in September 2007. The vault
will officially open in late winter 2008.
"By investing in a global
permafrost safety facility for seeds, the Norwegian Government
hopes to contribute to combating the loss of biological
diversity, to reduce our vulnerability to climatic changes, and
to enhance our ability to secure future food production," said
Mr. Terje Riis-Johansen, Minister of Agriculture and Food,
Norway.
The site was chosen, in part,
because the ground is perpetually frozen, providing natural
back-up refrigeration that would preserve the seeds should
electricity fail. Yet, even here, project architects had to
consider how to offset the potential impacts of climate change.
The design will accommodate
even worst-case scenarios of global warming in two main ways.
For one, the vault will be located high above any possible rise
in sea level caused by global warming: the vault will be located
some 130 metres above current sea level, ensuring that it will
not be flooded. This puts it well above a seven metre rise that
would accompany the melting of Greenland's ice sheet, or even a
61 metre rise that could accompany an unlikely total meltdown of
Antarctica.
Secondly, scientists determined
the impact of rising air temperatures on the permafrost, which
is normally between -4°C and -6°C (24.8°F and 21.2°F). They
found that the permafrost would warm much more slowly than the
air. In addition, the deeper into the mountain, the colder it
will remain. Therefore, the vault will be located an
extraordinary 120 metres into the rock, ensuring that rising
external air temperatures will have no influence on the
surrounding permafrost.
"Even climate change over the
next 200 years will not significantly affect the permafrost
temperature," says project manager Magnus Bredeli Tveiten, with
Statsbygg, the Norwegian government's Directorate of Public
Construction and Property.
To accomplish this, the
120-metre entry tunnel will penetrate through the permafrost,
opening to two large chambers capable of holding three million
seed samples. The tunnel and vaults will be excavated by means
of well-known boring and blasting techniques, with the rock
walls sprayed with concrete.
In contrast to this utilitarian
interior, "the exterior structure shoots out of the
mountainside," Tveiten said. The entrance portal will be a
narrow triangular structure of cement and metal, illuminated
with artwork which changes according to the special lighting
conditions of the Arctic. In the summer months, the entrance
"will gleam like a gem in the midnight sun," Tveiten says.
Throughout the dark winter, when the sun never rises, it will
glow with gently changing lights.
The design also reflects of the
project's approach to security.
"We decided early on that there
is no point in trying to hide this facility from the public,"
Tveiten said. "Instead we will rely on its presence being
well-known in the local community, so if the public sees
something suspicious, they will react to it."
Other security measures include
several sets of reinforced doors between the entrance and the
chambers, the absence of windows, and a video monitoring system.
Riis-Johansen emphasized the
vault's importance to the world community. "From a global
perspective the emphasis is on assisting developing countries by
offering a safe haven for their valuable biological material. I
also hope that the interest that is shown in the Svalbard Arctic
Seed Vault will create increased awareness for the need for
conservation and sustainable use of our genetic resources."
The Arctic seed vault is part
of a comprehensive global strategy being implemented by the
Global Crop Diversity Trust to protect collections of crop
genetic diversity around the world.
The mission of the Global
Crop Diversity Trust is to ensure the conservation and
availability of crop diversity for food security worldwide.
Although crop diversity is fundamental to fighting hunger and to
the very future of agriculture, funding is unreliable and
diversity is being lost. The Trust is the only organization
working worldwide to solve this problem. The Trust is finalizing
an agreement with the Royal Ministry of Agriculture and Food of
Norway and the Nordic Gene Bank to provide for the long-term
funding, management and operation of the vault. |