Inside the Svalbard Seed Vault - YouTube

Channel: Veritasium

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So this is like the world's most important freezer?
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It is. Really. *laughs*
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The most important room in the world, someone has said.
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These are pretty big claims for a place located
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just 1300 km, or 800 miles
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from the north pole.
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But then, this is no ordinary place.
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It's the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.
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Well, actually, this is just it's front door.
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Inside the seed vault are a series of tunnels.
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It's not actually that cold right here, but
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as we go deeper, it is only going to get colder.
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This is Bente
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You're an engineer, Bente?
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Yes, I am
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Are you gonna show us where to go?
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*chuckles* Yeah
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Fantastic
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How many doors are there?
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One, two, three, four, five doors
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until we are into the secret room.
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Five doors to the secret room
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Woah.
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That's what I'm talking about.
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These are the lenghts of tunnel that take you down
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into the seed vault.
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This facility was built to last around 200 years
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and withstand earthquakes and explosions.
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It was placed on the side of a mountain
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so even if all the ice on earth melts
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it will still be above sea level.
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There are three separate vault rooms where seeds are stored
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but only one of them is in use right now.
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And it's buried over 120 meters from the front door.
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The whole point of putting the vaults so deep in this mountain
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is to put it within permafrost.
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So, all around me, the earth naturally stays
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around -4 or -5 all year round.
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And, that way, if something did happen
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and the cooling stopped flowing here, there was no power.
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Then, well, behind these doors
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it would still remain probably, you know,
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-4 or -5 Celsius, forever.
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Assuming, of course, global temperatures don't rise that much.
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This place is sometimes called "The Doomsday Vault",
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because even in a worst case scenario
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it should preserve the diversity of the world's food crops.
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Now we are really in the mountain.
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Surrounded by permafrost.
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And, here's a cross tunnel
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that leads to three vault doors.
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Vault number 1 is up there
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Vault number 2,
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and this is the one that is actually being used.
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And then, vault number 3.
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It's pretty amazing to look up and see
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ice covered ceilings and walls everywhere.
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The Svalbard Global Seed Vault works essentially like a bank vault?
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Yes, it's almost, yeah, because
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the seeds lay in the boxes like this.
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These boxes are sealed when they come to Svalbard.
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And none of us can open it
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We put it through the security system at the airports
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just to check that it isn't any explosives or anything in it.
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But it works like a bank box.
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We can't open this.
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Only the depositor can open and take out their seeds
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So you don't open any of the seeds, any of the boxes that come here?
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No.
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Well. How do you know that people are really deposing the seeds,
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like barely they say they are not, and other things?
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Just because they have signed the contract. That's it.
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We can't be sure about it. Of course, we trust them.
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Would there be seeds for some crops that
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people might consider illicit, like marijuana
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That is said that that shall not be in here.
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No drugs and also no gene-modified material
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No genetically modified seeds go in here?
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Yeah, Norway has asked for that no genetical material is kept in here.
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Are there any particularity strange crops?
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Has anyone deposited anything that is really odd or weird?
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Ahhh.. No, nothing weird is in here,
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but we get some questions from people that wants to put in their own private seeds.
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I've also has had letters from men wanting to put their gene material in here.
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That is really strange and we don't answer those.
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This is the door to the vault and behind here, there are nearly a million different varieties of seeds,
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from all over the world,
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kept at minus 18 degrees Celsius.
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You know how I can tell that it's minus 18掳C in here?
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You can actually feel the moisture in your nose freeze so,
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Your nostrils get all stiff...
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Yeah,
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And I see behind you we have some Canadian seeds,
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which is exciting for me because I am Canadian.
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So what sort of things do we have... From Canada,
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I'm really not... Not sure because... This box... On the outside doesn't tell what's in it,
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but,
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These numbers here are connected to a database on the internet so you can go in there afterwards.
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Derek: There you go. Bente: Yeah
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You can go find out what has Canada got stored in the Seed Vault.
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What are we looking at right here.
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It's like a bank vault except everything that you've put in there is publicly available.
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Yeah, it is. (chuckles)
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These are the coolest boxes I think. They are from North Korea.
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Derek: Oh my goodness! Bente: Wooden hand made boxes
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Derek: They look like they come from the 1960s or something. Do you think?
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Bente: Yeah, they do.
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Derek: They built them specially.
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Bente: They built them specially because they got the measurements of how big should the boxes be
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and these are built exactly of those measurements.
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And here you see that North Korea is placed on the same shelf as USA, it's just on the back there.
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It's on the back side.
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And you have South Korea, just on the back.
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So here there are like in a small United Nations, deep in the mountains of Svalbard.
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(Chuckles)
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So these are the last few bare shelves in Vault 2.
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Once the other two vaults are full, there will be around 3 million different species of plants stored here
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with over 500 seeds per sample.
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So one day, there may be over a billion seeds stored inside this mountain,
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representing the vast majority of Earth's agricultural diversity.
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And you don't know today what kind of seeds that you can grow in 20, 30, 40 years from now,
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because of the climate change.
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Perhaps you have to use another type of seed
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thirty years from now that can handle warmer climate, dryer climate, wetter climate,
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whatever is going to happen.
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So that is why it's so important to have a backup of all the seeds
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so that you are sure that you can also grow the food we need,
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for the next generations to come.
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But this isn't the only seed bank on Earth.
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There are around 1700 other gene banks around the world,
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run by different countries and organizations.
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And, at a cost of $9 million to build the Svalbard seed vault
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and millions more to run it,
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it's worth asking whether this is a costly redundancy, or a valuable insurance policy.
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And perhaps, the best people to answer this question are the Syrians, who, last year, were the first
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to make a withdrawal from the seed vault.
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The gene bank in Aleppo, in Syria, is now out of order, it's been bombed.
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So one third of the material that is kept in here is now taken down to Morocco and Lebanon.
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And this is some of the material that now has been returned, so to get the material going again.
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So that's why it's empty.
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Will those seeds actually be used to grow crops?
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Yeah, they will. Yeah.
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Over the last 13 thousand years we have cultivated millions of species of plants.
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The agricultural revolution underpinned the technological and population explosions
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that made our modern lives possible.
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The risk of a real Doomsday scenario is incredibly remote.
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But, whatever happens, thanks to this outpost at the top of the world
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at least our seeds are safe.
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Hey, I'm currently on a train traveling from Washington, D.C. to New York City so I can't talk to loud.
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And actually after Norway, I went to Seoul, South Korea, Los Angeles, Boston , New York and Washington,
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so it's been some crazy travels for me.
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And on all these travels I've been listening to audio books from Audible
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who also support Veritasium which I am very thankful for.
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If you didn't know already, Audible has like 250,000 titles in all areas of literature,
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including fiction, non-fiction and periodicals.
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And if you go to Audible.com/veritasium you can get a 30 day free trial of the website
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where you can just try out listening to a book.
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So if you are at all interested in listening to audio books, I highly recommend you check them out.
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And there is a book I can recommend to you, it is my favorite fiction book of all time.
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It's called "Everything is Illuminated" by Jonathon Safran Foer.
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It is- I don't know, its just such a complex interwoven novel, you have to
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read it or listen to it to know what i mean.
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But you can check it out. You can download that book for free for a one month trial
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or you can pick any other book of your choosing.
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So, I really want to thank Audible for supporting me and helping me go to all these amazing places.
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And I want to thank you for watching.