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Inside the plan to create Earth’s ‘Black Box’: Indestructible device in remote Tasmanian airfield will record every step humanity takes towards the apocalypse

by LJ News Opinions
June 20, 2026
in Technology
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A bizarre structure dubbed ‘Earth’s Black Box’ will be built in a remote Tasmanian airfield as a silent witness to humanity’s destruction.

Its design is inspired by aeroplane flight recorders – reinforced boxes that store data in the case of a crash.

Just like these real ‘black boxes’, Earth’s Black Box will patiently record every step humanity takes towards a deadly disaster.

The site’s heavily protected data storage will gather information from space agencies, weather stations, and universities to provide an ‘unbiased account’ for future generations.

When completed, the structure will be a 52 feet (16 metres) long, 13 feet (four metres) tall, near–indestructible recording device.

Rouser Lab, the agency behind the project, says the box’s steel walls will be able to withstand every disaster, including cyclones, earthquakes, fires, floods or attacks.

Built on 500–million–year–old granite on Tasmania’s west coast, Rouser Lab says the box will be in the most politically and geologically stable place on Earth.

And with 36 solar panels encased in glass alongside thermo–electric power generation, Earth’s Black Box will be recording long after the last humans are gone.

A bizarre structure dubbed ‘Earth’s Black Box’ will be built as a silent witness to humanity’s destruction in a remote Tasmanian airfield. Pictured: Artist’s rendering 

Earth’s Black Box was announced in 2021 to coincide with the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow.

At the time, digital hard drives were used to record data from the talks that would later be transferred into the final structure.

However, the project has been seemingly dead in the water for the last five years.

Now, at long last, Rouser Lab has confirmed that construction is underway on the Black Box.

The agency says that the finished project will be installed just outside of Queenstown, Tasmania, by December this year.

Jonathan Kneebone, the artistic director of Earth’s Black Box, told The Guardian: ‘It will be approximately five years to the day that we are finally able to install the work.

‘In those five years, we have been evolving the design, data storage systems, source materials, web platform – as well as developing funding models to sustain the project into the future.’

Mr Kneebone did not provide an estimate for how much it will cost to build and operate Earth’s Black Box.  

When completed, the structure will be a 52 feet (16 metres) long, 13 feet (four metres) tall, near¿indestructible recording device

When completed, the structure will be a 52 feet (16 metres) long, 13 feet (four metres) tall, near–indestructible recording device 

What is Earth’s Black Box? 

Earth’s Black Box is a 32ft–long steel monolith filled with hard drives that will download data from the internet.

Once built, the solar–powered machine will be collecting two types of data:

  1. Measurements of land and sea temperatures, ocean acidification, atmospheric CO2, species extinction, land–use changes, as well as human population, military spending and energy consumption. 
  2. Contextual data such as newspaper headlines, social media posts, and news from key events like Conference of the Parties (COP) climate change meetings.

When it is finally completed, the structure should begin recording and storing a vast array of datasets on the progress of climate change.

These will include measurements of temperature, sea levels, atmospheric CO2, as well as details of humanity’s response, including energy consumption and social data.

To give this information context, Rouser Lab says that the device will also record speeches, media stories, academic articles and social media relating to climate change.

The creators’ plan for Earth’s Black Box will ‘provide an unbiased account of the events that lead to the demise of the planet, hold accountability for future generations, and inspire urgent action.’

Rouser Lab adds: ‘How the story ends is completely up to us. Only one thing is certain, your actions, inactions, and interactions are now being recorded.’

However, they’re still working out how humans would be able to access its data following a catastrophic climate apocalypse – or if anyone would be alive to do so.

It’s possible that a small group of humanity’s survivors could learn more about the fall of civilisation due to catastrophic fires, flooding and drought.

The long overdue announcement of a construction date puts an end to speculation that the entire project was nothing more than an elaborate publicity stunt.

Its creators say that the thick steel walls will be able to withstand cyclones, earthquakes, fire, flood or attack

Its creators say that the thick steel walls will be able to withstand cyclones, earthquakes, fire, flood or attack

The structure will gather and store climate data into the future, acting like the flight recorder in an aeroplane that provides an unbiased account of an unfolding disaster

The structure will gather and store climate data into the future, acting like the flight recorder in an aeroplane that provides an unbiased account of an unfolding disaster 

The University of Tasmania was originally affiliated with the project, but dropped out over the intervening years and requested to be removed from the website.

This left behind a collaboration of advertising agencies, creative networks, and architects without any professional scientific guidance.

Rouser Lab also began raising funds for another far–fetched project, this time aiming to build a ‘techno–obelisk’ that would constantly transmit an ‘SOS’ radio signal into space.

But Mr Kneebone now says the project is being coordinated by the Earth’s Black Box Foundation, a registered charity dedicated to the idea, and should soon reach fruition.

Once construction is complete, the foundation will upload Earth’s Black Box with all the climate data that has been collected in the last few years, and recording will begin.

Shane Pitt, mayor of the West Coast council in Tasmania, said that the project had been ‘a long time coming’.

Adding: ‘It certainly is something we can see as a tourist attraction.’

THE PARIS AGREEMENT: A GLOBAL ACCORD TO LIMIT TEMPERATURE RISES THROUGH CARBON EMISSION REDUCTION TARGETS

The Paris Agreement, which was first signed in 2015, is an international agreement to control and limit climate change.

It hopes to hold the increase in the global average temperature to below 2°C (3.6ºF) ‘and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C (2.7°F)’.

It seems the more ambitious goal of restricting global warming to 1.5°C (2.7°F) may be more important than ever, according to previous research which claims 25 per cent of the world could see a significant increase in drier conditions. 

The Paris Agreement on Climate Change has four main goals with regards to reducing emissions:

1)  A long-term goal of keeping the increase in global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels

2) To aim to limit the increase to 1.5°C, since this would significantly reduce risks and the impacts of climate change

3) Governments agreed on the need for global emissions to peak as soon as possible, recognising that this will take longer for developing countries

4) To undertake rapid reductions thereafter in accordance with the best available science

Source: European Commission 

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Tags: dailymailGlasgowsciencetechTasmania
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