Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Global warming prompts Norway to strengthen its doomsday seed vault with $13M

- Matthew Diebel

Global warming has prompted Norway to invest about $13 million to strengthen its 10-year-old doomsday seed vault, in which about a million crop varieties are stored on a remote, ice-covered island.

The update at Svalbard, an archipelag­o near the Arctic Circle, would cover “constructi­on of a new, concrete-built access tunnel, as well as a service building to house emergency power and refrigerat­ing units and other electrical equipment,” according to a statement from Norway’s Ministry of Agricultur­e and Food.

The new work comes after a thaw of permafrost in 2016 caused some water to flow into the vault’s entrance. No seeds were damaged, but the Norwegian government decided the store, designed to withstand nuclear war and earthquake­s, needed an upgrade in case global warming intensifie­d.

Norway built the vault in an abandoned coal mine to ensure that plant species affected by rising global temperatur­es and other disasters could be preserved. For instance, the Agricultur­e Ministry said, in 2015 seeds were sent from Norway to Syria after the war-torn nation’s smaller seed repository near Aleppo was damaged by military action. Last year, seeds harvested from plants generated by the Norwegian supply in Syria were sent back to Svalbard.

“This demonstrat­es that the seed vault is a worldwide insurance for food supply for future generation­s,” said Jon Georg Dale, Norway’s minister of agricultur­e and food.

Meanwhile, the BBC reported, more than 70,000 crops are to be added this week to the storage chambers, which stay at a steady zero degrees Fahrenheit.

The new stash includes unusual crops like the Estonian onion potato, as well as barley used to brew Irish beer.

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