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‘Doomsday’
seed vault opens in Arctic
Foreign Desk Report
LONGYEARBYEN (Norway)—A “doomsday” seed vault built to protect millions
of food crops from climate change, wars and natural disasters opened
Tuesday deep within an Arctic mountain in the remote Norwegian
archipelago of Svalbard.
“The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is our insurance policy,” Norway’s Prime
Minister Jens Stoltenberg told delegates at the opening ceremony. “It is
the Noah’s Ark for securing biological diversity for future
generations.”
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and 2004 Nobel Peace
Prize winner Wangari Maathai of Kenya were among the dozens of guests
who had bundled up for the ceremony inside the vault, about 425 feet
deep inside a frozen mountain. “This is a frozen Garden of Eden,”
Barroso said.
The vault will serve as a backup for hundreds of other seed banks
worldwide. It has the capacity to store 4.5 million seed samples from
around the world and shield them from man-made and natural disasters.
Dug into the permafrost of the mountain, it has been built to withstand
an earthquake or a nuclear strike.
Norway owns the vault in Svalbard, a frigid archipelago about 620 miles
from the North Pole. It paid $9.1 million for construction, which took
less than a year. Other countries can deposit seeds without charge and
reserve the right to withdraw them upon need.
The operation is funded by the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which was
founded by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization and Biodiversity
International, a Rome-based research group.
“Crop diversity will soon prove to be our most potent and indispensable
resource for addressing climate change, water and energy supply
constraints, and for meeting the food needs of a growing population,”
said Cary Fowler, head of the Global Crop Diversity Trust.
Svalbard is cold, but giant air conditioning units have chilled the
vault further to -0.4 Fahrenheit, a temperature at which experts say
many seeds could last for 1,000 years.
Stoltenberg and Maathai delivered the first box of seeds to the vault
during the opening ceremony — a container of rice seeds from 104
countries. “This is unique. This is very visionary. It is a precaution
for the future,” Maathai, a Crop Diversity Trust board member, told The
Associated Press after the ceremony.
The seeds are packed in silvery foil containers — as many as 500 in each
sample — and placed on blue and orange metal shelves inside three
32-foot-by-88-foot storage chambers. Each vault can hold 1.5 million
sample packages of all types of crop seeds, from carrots to wheat.
Construction leader Magnus Bredeli-Tveiten said the vault is designed to
withstand earthquakes — successfully tested by a 6.2-magnitude temblor
off Svalbard last week — and even a direct nuclear strike.
Many other seed banks are in less protected areas. For example, war
wiped out seed banks in Iraq and Afghanistan, and one in the Philippines
was flooded in the wake of a typhoon in 2006.
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