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Svalbard Global Seed Vault

The Svalbard Global Seed Vault (Norwegian: Svalbard globale frøhvelv) is a secure backup facility for the world's crop diversity on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen in the remote Arctic Svalbard archipelago.[5] The Seed Vault provides long-term storage of duplicates of seeds conserved in genebanks around the world. This provides security of the world's food supply against the loss of seeds in genebanks due to mismanagement, accident, equipment failures, funding cuts, war, sabotage, disease and natural disasters. The Seed Vault is managed under terms spelled out in a tripartite agreement among the Norwegian government, the Crop Trust, and the Nordic Genetic Resource Center (NordGen).[6][7]

Svalbard Global Seed Vault
Svalbard globale frøhvelv
Location within Norway
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeSeed bank
LocationSpitsbergen
Town or cityLongyearbyen
CountryNorway
Coordinates78°14′09″N 15°29′29″E / 78.23583°N 15.49139°E / 78.23583; 15.49139Coordinates: 78°14′09″N 15°29′29″E / 78.23583°N 15.49139°E / 78.23583; 15.49139
Elevation130 m (430 ft)
Groundbreaking19 June 2006[1]
Opened26 February 2008[2]
Cost45 million kr[3]
(US$8.8 million, 2008)
Technical details
Floor count1
Floor areac. 1,000 m2
(c. 11,000 sq ft)[4]
Awards and prizesNorwegian Lighting Prize for 2009
No. 6 TIME's Best Inventions of 2008
Website
Official website

The Norwegian government entirely funded the Seed Vault's approximately 45 million kr (US$8.8 million in 2008) construction cost.[3] Norway and the Crop Trust pay for operational costs. Storing seeds in the vault is free to depositors. The vault has been depicted in several films and other art forms, including Marcus Paus’ children's opera Children of Ginko.

History

 
Entrance to the Seed Vault taken in February 2020.

In 1984, the Nordic Gene Bank (now NordGen) began storing backup Nordic plant germplasm via frozen seeds in an abandoned coal mine outside of Longyearbyen.[8]

In 2001, the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (ITPGRFA) was adopted and national governments began to ratify the Treaty soon after. The Treaty establishes a multilateral system for plant genetic resources that includes providing access to the materials and providing mechanisms so that those who use the resources can share any derived benefits.[9]

A team led by conservationist Cary Fowler, in association with CGIAR,[10] actively campaigned for the development of the Seed Vault and approached the Norwegian Government. They conducted a feasibility study in 2004 and concurred that Svalbard was an appropriate location for long-term storage.[11]

Also in 2004, the ITPGRFA entered into force and created the legal framework for having one international security facility.[9] The FAO Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture endorsed the initiative[12] and in October 2004 the Norwegian Government committed to fund the Seed Vault and begin the construction.[8]

The Seed Vault officially opened on 26 February 2008,[2] although the first seeds arrived in January 2008.[13]

As part of the Seed Vault's first anniversary, more than 90,000 food crop seed samples were placed into storage, bringing the total number of seed samples to 400,000.[14] Among the new seeds included were 32 varieties of potatoes from Ireland's national genebanks and 20,000 new samples from the U.S. Agricultural Research Service.[15] Other seed samples came from genebanks in Canada and Switzerland as well as international genebanks in Colombia, Mexico and Syria.[16] This 4 t (3.9-long-ton; 4.4-short-ton) shipment brought the total number of seeds stored in the Seed Vault to over 20 million.[14] As of this anniversary, the Seed Vault contained samples from approximately one-third of the world's most important food crop varieties.[16] Also as part of the anniversary, experts on food production and climate change met for a three-day conference in Longyearbyen.[17]

Japanese sculptor Mitsuaki Tanabe [ja] presented a work to the Seed Vault named "The Seed 2009 / Momi In-Situ Conservation".[18]

In 2010, a delegation of seven U.S. congressmen handed over a number of different varieties of chili pepper.[19]

By 2013, approximately one-third of the genera diversity stored in genebanks globally was represented at the Seed Vault.[20]

In October 2016, the Seed Vault experienced an unusually large degree of water intrusion due to higher than average temperatures and heavy rainfall. While it is common for some water to seep into the Seed Vault's 100 m (328 ft) entrance tunnel during the warmer spring months, in this case the water encroached 15 m (49 ft) into the tunnel before freezing.[21] The Seed Vault was designed for water intrusion and as such the seeds were not at risk.[21] As a result, however, the Norwegian public works agency Statsbygg completed improvements to the tunnel in 2019 to prevent any such intrusion in the future, including waterproofing the tunnel walls, removing heat sources from the tunnel, and digging exterior drainage ditches.[22][23]

For the Seed Vault's 10th anniversary on 26 February 2018, a shipment of 70,000 samples was delivered to the facility, bringing the number of samples received to more than one million (not counting withdrawals).[24]

According to The Independent, as of March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic does not pose a risk to the vault "as there are no permanent staff at the Svalbard facility."[25]

As of June 2021, the Seed Vault conserves 1,081,026 distinct crop samples,[26] representing more than 13,000 years of agricultural history.[27]

In 2019, the seed vault cost about 2.4 million kr (US$282,000) to maintain.[28]

Construction

 
Cary Fowler at the Seed Vault during its construction

Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, and Iceland's prime ministers ceremonially laid "the first stone" on 19 June 2006.[1]

The seed bank is 130 m (430 ft) inside a sandstone mountain on Spitsbergen Island,[29] and employs robust security systems. The facility is managed by the Nordic Genetic Resource Center, though there are no permanent staff on-site.

Spitsbergen was considered ideal because it lacked tectonic activity and had permafrost, which aids preservation. It being 130 m (430 ft) above sea level will keep the site dry even if the ice caps melt.[29] Locally mined coal provides power for refrigeration units that further cool the seeds to the internationally recommended standard of −18 °C (−0.4 °F).[30] If the equipment fails, at least several weeks will elapse before the facility rises to the surrounding sandstone bedrock's temperature of −3 °C (27 °F),[5] and is estimated to take two centuries to warm to 0 °C (32 °F).[31]

A feasibility study prior to construction determined that the Seed Vault could preserve most major food crops' seeds for hundreds of years. Some, including those of important grains, could potentially remain viable for thousands of years.[32]

Running the length of the facility's roof and down the front face to the entryway is an illuminated artwork named Perpetual Repercussion by Norwegian artist Dyveke Sanne that marks the location of the vault from a distance.[33] In Norway, government-funded construction projects exceeding a certain cost must include artwork. KORO, the Norwegian State agency overseeing art in public spaces, engaged the artist to propose an artwork for the Seed Vault. The roof and vault entrance are filled with highly reflective stainless steel, mirrors, and prisms. The installation reflects polar light in the summer months, while in the winter, a network of 200 fibre-optic cables gives the piece a muted greenish-turquoise and white light.[34]

Mission

The Seed Vault's mission is to provide a backup against accidental loss of diversity in traditional genebanks. While the popular press has emphasized its possible utility in the event of a major regional or global catastrophe, the Seed Vault will be more frequently accessed when genebanks lose samples due to mismanagement, accident, equipment failures, funding cuts, and natural disasters. These events occur with some regularity. War and civil strife have a history of destroying some genebanks. The national genebank of the Philippines was damaged by flooding and later destroyed by a fire, the genebanks of Afghanistan and Iraq have been lost completely, while an international genebank in Syria became unavailable.[31] According to The Economist, "the Svalbard vault is a backup for the world's 1,750 seed banks, storehouses of agricultural biodiversity."[31]

Norwegian law has prohibited the storing of genetically modified seeds at the vault.[35]

The adjacent Arctic World Archive provides a similar service for data, which is etched as code into reels of film. Project lead Piql of Norway states that the film, when properly preserved, should last for 1,000 years.[36]

Tripartite agreement

The Seed Vault is managed under terms spelled out in a tripartite agreement among the Norwegian Government, the Crop Trust, and the Nordic Genetic Resource Center (NordGen).[6][7] The Kingdom of Norway owns the Seed Vault. The Crop Trust provides funding for ongoing operations and provides financial assistance to depositors in their preparation of shipments. NordGen operates the Seed Vault and maintains the public database of the deposits.[37]

An International Advisory Council provides guidance and advice. It includes representatives from the FAO, CGIAR, the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources and other institutions.[38][39]

Access to seeds

 
Seed storage containers on metal shelving inside the vault
 
Seeds are stored in aluminium bags since 2004
 
Glass tubes were originally used for storage

Vault seed samples are copies of samples stored in the depositing genebanks. Researchers, plant breeders, and other groups wishing to access seed samples cannot do so through the Seed Vault; they must instead request samples from the depositing genebanks. The samples stored in the genebanks will, in most cases, be accessible in accordance with the terms and conditions of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, approved by 148 countries or parties.[32][40]

The Seed Vault functions like a safe deposit box in a bank. The bank owns the building and the depositor owns the contents of their box. The Government of Norway owns the facility and the depositing genebanks own the seeds they send. The deposit of samples in Svalbard does not constitute a legal transfer of genetic resources. In genebank terminology this is called a "black box" arrangement. Each depositor signs a Deposit Agreement with NordGen, acting on behalf of Norway. The Agreement makes clear that Norway does not claim ownership over the deposited samples and that ownership remains with the depositor, who has the sole right of access to those materials in the seed vault. No one has access to anyone else's seeds from the seed vault.[32][41] The database of samples and depositors is maintained by NordGen.[42]

The Syrian civil war created a situation where the black box arrangement was demonstrated. As a result of the conflict, the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) was unable to maintain its genebank located at Tel Hadya, Syria and therefore unable to distribute samples.[43] In 2015, ICARDA withdrew some of the backup samples it had stored at the Seed Vault so that it could regenerate those seeds.[44][45][46] ICARDA made a second and larger withdrawal in 2017.[47] These seeds were planted in fields in Lebanon and Morocco and multiplied.[48] Some were then returned to the Seed Vault while others were added to ICARDA's genebanks in Lebanon and Morocco so they could be conserved and distributed.[49] These are the only withdrawals from the Seed Vault as of June 2021.[50]

Seed storage

The seeds are stored in sealed three-ply foil packages and then placed into plastic tote containers on metal shelving racks.[51] The storage rooms are kept at −18 °C (−0.4 °F). The low temperature and limited access to oxygen will ensure low metabolic activity and delay seed ageing. The permafrost surrounding the facility will help maintain the low temperature of the seeds if the electricity supply fails.[52][41]

Initially the Seed Vault would have some minor water intrusion at its entrance during the annual spring permafrost thawing. Warmer temperatures and heavy rainfall in October 2016 caused significantly greater amounts of water to seep into the entrance, but the facility's design ensured that the water froze after several meters and the seeds were not endangered.[21][53] Work completed in 2019 eliminated this water seepage.[23]

Attached to the seed boxes are a type of nanofilm that hold information on seed identity and other valuable information.[54]

Crop Trust

The Crop Trust, officially known as the Global Crop Diversity Trust, plays a key role in the planning of the Seed Vault and coordinating shipments of seed samples to the Seed Vault in conjunction with the Nordic Genetic Resource Center. The Crop Trust provides most of the annual operating costs for the facility and has set aside an endowment fund to do so,[55] while the Norwegian government finances upkeep of the structure itself. With support of its donors, the Crop Trust assists selected genebanks in developing countries as well as the international agricultural research centres in packaging and shipping seeds to the Seed Vault.

Awards and honors

Svalbard Global Seed Vault ranked at No. 6 on Time's Best Inventions of 2008.[56] It was awarded the Norwegian Lighting Prize for 2009.[57] It was ranked the 10th most influential project of the past 50 years by the Project Management Institute.[58]

Capacity

Seeds are stored in airtight aluminium bags. The number of seeds in each bag will vary depending on the size of the seed, but on average each bag will contain approximately 500 seeds. The facility has a storage capacity of 4.5 million seed samples.[59]

The table below presents the cumulative total of samples (i.e. accessions) deposited by year.

Year Species Total samples Ref.
2008 320,549 [28]
2009 490,054 [28]
2010 601,155 [28]
2011 714,519 [28]
2012 772,597 [28]
2013 801,752 [28]
2014 839,801 [28]
2015 4,000 837,858 [28][60][61]
2016 880,837 [28]
2017 890,886 [28]
2018 983,524 [28]
2019 992,032 [28]
2020 1,074,533 [62]
2021 1,125,419 [63]

Depositors

As of June 2021, 87 depositors safeguard their crop samples in the Seed Vault. The below table lists the top international genebanks followed by the top regional and national genebank in terms of the number of samples currently deposited in the Seed Vault.[64]

International genebanks Number of accessions
International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) 173,779
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) 126,447
International Crop Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) 117,713
International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) 97,123
International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) 57,534
The World Vegetable Center 29,147
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) 23,333
National and regional genebanks
National Plant Germplasm System (USA) 135,237
Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics (Germany) 58,862
Plant GeneResources of Canada (Canada) 32,609
Australian Pastures Genebank (Australia) 28,493
Nordic Genetic Resource Center (Sweden) 26,820
National Agrobiodiversity Center (Republic of Korea) 23,185
Centre for Genetic Resources (Netherlands) 21,703

Indigenous communities

Depositors to the Seed Vault are not limited to international, regional and national genebanks. Some indigenous communities have deposited seeds for safety duplication in the Seed Vault. In 2015, representatives of the Parque de la Papa in Peru deposited 750 samples of potatoes.[65] In 2020, the Cherokee Nation became the first US tribe to deposit when it safeguarded nine samples of heirloom food crops which predate European colonization.[66]

Cultural depictions

The Seed Vault was the inspiration for Ibsen International's art project "The Seed", supported by the Norwegian government. The children's opera Children of Ginko (Norwegian: Frøbarna) by Marcus Paus, which aimed to raise ecological awareness, "reveal the power of nature and celebrate children's courage in growing up",[67][68] was created as part of this project.

The Seed Vault was featured in "The Futurama Holiday Spectacular" which aired on 21 November 2010.[69]

The Seed Vault is featured in the second season of the Belgian Netflix TV series Into the Night and in the first season of its Turkish spin-off, the Netflix series Yakamoz S-245, both of which are based on the novel The Old Axolotl by Jacek Dukaj.[70]

In Season 4 of The Last Ship, seeds taken from the seed vault are contested over by multiple factions as they hold the key to stopping a global famine.

In Season 3 of 2016 MacGyver "Seeds + Permafrost + Feather" the team head to Greenland, where a man working in a highly secure international seed vault has vanished without a trace. Upon arrival, the team finds a dead body and one packet of seeds missing from a North Korean crate, the seeds being for a pea pod whose plant can be synthesized into a deadly poison.

In Season 3 of the TV series Scorpion, titled "Dirty Seeds, Done Dirt Cheap," the protagonists travel to Greenland for a simple job, repairing a malfunctioning system at the Granse World Seed Vault.

The vault is depicted in the second season of DuckTales in the episode "Raiders of the Doomsday Vault!".

In the Bobiverse books by Dennis E Taylor the Seed Vault has been improved to the Svalbard Global Trust, which also has genetic material from most Earth animals, and is critical to the attempts to move humans into colonies on other planets.

Science fiction author Stephen Baxter has used the Seed Vault, described as the "Svalbard vault", in his novels Flood and Ark. The vault is first purchased by a millionaire as the world floods, and then cached aboard a starship to take Earth life to new worlds.

See also

References

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External links

svalbard, global, seed, vault, norwegian, svalbard, globale, frøhvelv, secure, backup, facility, world, crop, diversity, norwegian, island, spitsbergen, remote, arctic, svalbard, archipelago, seed, vault, provides, long, term, storage, duplicates, seeds, conse. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault Norwegian Svalbard globale frohvelv is a secure backup facility for the world s crop diversity on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen in the remote Arctic Svalbard archipelago 5 The Seed Vault provides long term storage of duplicates of seeds conserved in genebanks around the world This provides security of the world s food supply against the loss of seeds in genebanks due to mismanagement accident equipment failures funding cuts war sabotage disease and natural disasters The Seed Vault is managed under terms spelled out in a tripartite agreement among the Norwegian government the Crop Trust and the Nordic Genetic Resource Center NordGen 6 7 Svalbard Global Seed VaultSvalbard globale frohvelvLocation within NorwayGeneral informationStatusCompletedTypeSeed bankLocationSpitsbergenTown or cityLongyearbyenCountryNorwayCoordinates78 14 09 N 15 29 29 E 78 23583 N 15 49139 E 78 23583 15 49139 Coordinates 78 14 09 N 15 29 29 E 78 23583 N 15 49139 E 78 23583 15 49139Elevation130 m 430 ft Groundbreaking19 June 2006 1 Opened26 February 2008 2 Cost45 million kr 3 US 8 8 million 2008 Technical detailsFloor count1Floor areac 1 000 m2 c 11 000 sq ft 4 Awards and prizesNorwegian Lighting Prize for 2009No 6 TIME s Best Inventions of 2008WebsiteOfficial websiteThe Norwegian government entirely funded the Seed Vault s approximately 45 million kr US 8 8 million in 2008 construction cost 3 Norway and the Crop Trust pay for operational costs Storing seeds in the vault is free to depositors The vault has been depicted in several films and other art forms including Marcus Paus children s opera Children of Ginko Contents 1 History 2 Construction 3 Mission 4 Tripartite agreement 5 Access to seeds 6 Seed storage 7 Crop Trust 8 Awards and honors 9 Capacity 10 Depositors 10 1 Indigenous communities 11 Cultural depictions 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksHistory Edit Entrance to the Seed Vault taken in February 2020 In 1984 the Nordic Gene Bank now NordGen began storing backup Nordic plant germplasm via frozen seeds in an abandoned coal mine outside of Longyearbyen 8 In 2001 the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture ITPGRFA was adopted and national governments began to ratify the Treaty soon after The Treaty establishes a multilateral system for plant genetic resources that includes providing access to the materials and providing mechanisms so that those who use the resources can share any derived benefits 9 A team led by conservationist Cary Fowler in association with CGIAR 10 actively campaigned for the development of the Seed Vault and approached the Norwegian Government They conducted a feasibility study in 2004 and concurred that Svalbard was an appropriate location for long term storage 11 Also in 2004 the ITPGRFA entered into force and created the legal framework for having one international security facility 9 The FAO Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture endorsed the initiative 12 and in October 2004 the Norwegian Government committed to fund the Seed Vault and begin the construction 8 The Seed Vault officially opened on 26 February 2008 2 although the first seeds arrived in January 2008 13 As part of the Seed Vault s first anniversary more than 90 000 food crop seed samples were placed into storage bringing the total number of seed samples to 400 000 14 Among the new seeds included were 32 varieties of potatoes from Ireland s national genebanks and 20 000 new samples from the U S Agricultural Research Service 15 Other seed samples came from genebanks in Canada and Switzerland as well as international genebanks in Colombia Mexico and Syria 16 This 4 t 3 9 long ton 4 4 short ton shipment brought the total number of seeds stored in the Seed Vault to over 20 million 14 As of this anniversary the Seed Vault contained samples from approximately one third of the world s most important food crop varieties 16 Also as part of the anniversary experts on food production and climate change met for a three day conference in Longyearbyen 17 Japanese sculptor Mitsuaki Tanabe ja presented a work to the Seed Vault named The Seed 2009 Momi In Situ Conservation 18 In 2010 a delegation of seven U S congressmen handed over a number of different varieties of chili pepper 19 By 2013 approximately one third of the genera diversity stored in genebanks globally was represented at the Seed Vault 20 In October 2016 the Seed Vault experienced an unusually large degree of water intrusion due to higher than average temperatures and heavy rainfall While it is common for some water to seep into the Seed Vault s 100 m 328 ft entrance tunnel during the warmer spring months in this case the water encroached 15 m 49 ft into the tunnel before freezing 21 The Seed Vault was designed for water intrusion and as such the seeds were not at risk 21 As a result however the Norwegian public works agency Statsbygg completed improvements to the tunnel in 2019 to prevent any such intrusion in the future including waterproofing the tunnel walls removing heat sources from the tunnel and digging exterior drainage ditches 22 23 For the Seed Vault s 10th anniversary on 26 February 2018 a shipment of 70 000 samples was delivered to the facility bringing the number of samples received to more than one million not counting withdrawals 24 According to The Independent as of March 2020 the COVID 19 pandemic does not pose a risk to the vault as there are no permanent staff at the Svalbard facility 25 As of June 2021 the Seed Vault conserves 1 081 026 distinct crop samples 26 representing more than 13 000 years of agricultural history 27 In 2019 the seed vault cost about 2 4 million kr US 282 000 to maintain 28 Construction Edit Cary Fowler at the Seed Vault during its construction Norway Sweden Finland Denmark and Iceland s prime ministers ceremonially laid the first stone on 19 June 2006 1 The seed bank is 130 m 430 ft inside a sandstone mountain on Spitsbergen Island 29 and employs robust security systems The facility is managed by the Nordic Genetic Resource Center though there are no permanent staff on site Spitsbergen was considered ideal because it lacked tectonic activity and had permafrost which aids preservation It being 130 m 430 ft above sea level will keep the site dry even if the ice caps melt 29 Locally mined coal provides power for refrigeration units that further cool the seeds to the internationally recommended standard of 18 C 0 4 F 30 If the equipment fails at least several weeks will elapse before the facility rises to the surrounding sandstone bedrock s temperature of 3 C 27 F 5 and is estimated to take two centuries to warm to 0 C 32 F 31 A feasibility study prior to construction determined that the Seed Vault could preserve most major food crops seeds for hundreds of years Some including those of important grains could potentially remain viable for thousands of years 32 Running the length of the facility s roof and down the front face to the entryway is an illuminated artwork named Perpetual Repercussion by Norwegian artist Dyveke Sanne that marks the location of the vault from a distance 33 In Norway government funded construction projects exceeding a certain cost must include artwork KORO the Norwegian State agency overseeing art in public spaces engaged the artist to propose an artwork for the Seed Vault The roof and vault entrance are filled with highly reflective stainless steel mirrors and prisms The installation reflects polar light in the summer months while in the winter a network of 200 fibre optic cables gives the piece a muted greenish turquoise and white light 34 Mission EditThe Seed Vault s mission is to provide a backup against accidental loss of diversity in traditional genebanks While the popular press has emphasized its possible utility in the event of a major regional or global catastrophe the Seed Vault will be more frequently accessed when genebanks lose samples due to mismanagement accident equipment failures funding cuts and natural disasters These events occur with some regularity War and civil strife have a history of destroying some genebanks The national genebank of the Philippines was damaged by flooding and later destroyed by a fire the genebanks of Afghanistan and Iraq have been lost completely while an international genebank in Syria became unavailable 31 According to The Economist the Svalbard vault is a backup for the world s 1 750 seed banks storehouses of agricultural biodiversity 31 Norwegian law has prohibited the storing of genetically modified seeds at the vault 35 The adjacent Arctic World Archive provides a similar service for data which is etched as code into reels of film Project lead Piql of Norway states that the film when properly preserved should last for 1 000 years 36 Tripartite agreement EditThe Seed Vault is managed under terms spelled out in a tripartite agreement among the Norwegian Government the Crop Trust and the Nordic Genetic Resource Center NordGen 6 7 The Kingdom of Norway owns the Seed Vault The Crop Trust provides funding for ongoing operations and provides financial assistance to depositors in their preparation of shipments NordGen operates the Seed Vault and maintains the public database of the deposits 37 An International Advisory Council provides guidance and advice It includes representatives from the FAO CGIAR the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources and other institutions 38 39 Access to seeds Edit Seed storage containers on metal shelving inside the vault Seeds are stored in aluminium bags since 2004 Glass tubes were originally used for storage Vault seed samples are copies of samples stored in the depositing genebanks Researchers plant breeders and other groups wishing to access seed samples cannot do so through the Seed Vault they must instead request samples from the depositing genebanks The samples stored in the genebanks will in most cases be accessible in accordance with the terms and conditions of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture approved by 148 countries or parties 32 40 The Seed Vault functions like a safe deposit box in a bank The bank owns the building and the depositor owns the contents of their box The Government of Norway owns the facility and the depositing genebanks own the seeds they send The deposit of samples in Svalbard does not constitute a legal transfer of genetic resources In genebank terminology this is called a black box arrangement Each depositor signs a Deposit Agreement with NordGen acting on behalf of Norway The Agreement makes clear that Norway does not claim ownership over the deposited samples and that ownership remains with the depositor who has the sole right of access to those materials in the seed vault No one has access to anyone else s seeds from the seed vault 32 41 The database of samples and depositors is maintained by NordGen 42 The Syrian civil war created a situation where the black box arrangement was demonstrated As a result of the conflict the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas ICARDA was unable to maintain its genebank located at Tel Hadya Syria and therefore unable to distribute samples 43 In 2015 ICARDA withdrew some of the backup samples it had stored at the Seed Vault so that it could regenerate those seeds 44 45 46 ICARDA made a second and larger withdrawal in 2017 47 These seeds were planted in fields in Lebanon and Morocco and multiplied 48 Some were then returned to the Seed Vault while others were added to ICARDA s genebanks in Lebanon and Morocco so they could be conserved and distributed 49 These are the only withdrawals from the Seed Vault as of June 2021 50 Seed storage EditThe seeds are stored in sealed three ply foil packages and then placed into plastic tote containers on metal shelving racks 51 The storage rooms are kept at 18 C 0 4 F The low temperature and limited access to oxygen will ensure low metabolic activity and delay seed ageing The permafrost surrounding the facility will help maintain the low temperature of the seeds if the electricity supply fails 52 41 Initially the Seed Vault would have some minor water intrusion at its entrance during the annual spring permafrost thawing Warmer temperatures and heavy rainfall in October 2016 caused significantly greater amounts of water to seep into the entrance but the facility s design ensured that the water froze after several meters and the seeds were not endangered 21 53 Work completed in 2019 eliminated this water seepage 23 Attached to the seed boxes are a type of nanofilm that hold information on seed identity and other valuable information 54 Crop Trust EditThe Crop Trust officially known as the Global Crop Diversity Trust plays a key role in the planning of the Seed Vault and coordinating shipments of seed samples to the Seed Vault in conjunction with the Nordic Genetic Resource Center The Crop Trust provides most of the annual operating costs for the facility and has set aside an endowment fund to do so 55 while the Norwegian government finances upkeep of the structure itself With support of its donors the Crop Trust assists selected genebanks in developing countries as well as the international agricultural research centres in packaging and shipping seeds to the Seed Vault Awards and honors EditSvalbard Global Seed Vault ranked at No 6 on Time s Best Inventions of 2008 56 It was awarded the Norwegian Lighting Prize for 2009 57 It was ranked the 10th most influential project of the past 50 years by the Project Management Institute 58 Capacity EditSeeds are stored in airtight aluminium bags The number of seeds in each bag will vary depending on the size of the seed but on average each bag will contain approximately 500 seeds The facility has a storage capacity of 4 5 million seed samples 59 The table below presents the cumulative total of samples i e accessions deposited by year Year Species Total samples Ref 2008 320 549 28 2009 490 054 28 2010 601 155 28 2011 714 519 28 2012 772 597 28 2013 801 752 28 2014 839 801 28 2015 4 000 837 858 28 60 61 2016 880 837 28 2017 890 886 28 2018 983 524 28 2019 992 032 28 2020 1 074 533 62 2021 1 125 419 63 Depositors EditAs of June 2021 87 depositors safeguard their crop samples in the Seed Vault The below table lists the top international genebanks followed by the top regional and national genebank in terms of the number of samples currently deposited in the Seed Vault 64 International genebanks Number of accessionsInternational Maize and Wheat Improvement Center CIMMYT 173 779International Rice Research Institute IRRI 126 447International Crop Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics ICRISAT 117 713International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas ICARDA 97 123International Center for Tropical Agriculture CIAT 57 534The World Vegetable Center 29 147International Institute of Tropical Agriculture IITA 23 333National and regional genebanksNational Plant Germplasm System USA 135 237Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics Germany 58 862Plant GeneResources of Canada Canada 32 609Australian Pastures Genebank Australia 28 493Nordic Genetic Resource Center Sweden 26 820National Agrobiodiversity Center Republic of Korea 23 185Centre for Genetic Resources Netherlands 21 703Indigenous communities Edit Depositors to the Seed Vault are not limited to international regional and national genebanks Some indigenous communities have deposited seeds for safety duplication in the Seed Vault In 2015 representatives of the Parque de la Papa in Peru deposited 750 samples of potatoes 65 In 2020 the Cherokee Nation became the first US tribe to deposit when it safeguarded nine samples of heirloom food crops which predate European colonization 66 Cultural depictions EditThe Seed Vault was the inspiration for Ibsen International s art project The Seed supported by the Norwegian government The children s opera Children of Ginko Norwegian Frobarna by Marcus Paus which aimed to raise ecological awareness reveal the power of nature and celebrate children s courage in growing up 67 68 was created as part of this project The Seed Vault was featured in The Futurama Holiday Spectacular which aired on 21 November 2010 69 The Seed Vault is featured in the second season of the Belgian Netflix TV series Into the Night and in the first season of its Turkish spin off the Netflix series Yakamoz S 245 both of which are based on the novel The Old Axolotl by Jacek Dukaj 70 In Season 4 of The Last Ship seeds taken from the seed vault are contested over by multiple factions as they hold the key to stopping a global famine In Season 3 of 2016 MacGyver Seeds Permafrost Feather the team head to Greenland where a man working in a highly secure international seed vault has vanished without a trace Upon arrival the team finds a dead body and one packet of seeds missing from a North Korean crate the seeds being for a pea pod whose plant can be synthesized into a deadly poison In Season 3 of the TV series Scorpion titled Dirty Seeds Done Dirt Cheap the protagonists travel to Greenland for a simple job repairing a malfunctioning system at the Granse World Seed Vault The vault is depicted in the second season of DuckTalesin the episode Raiders of the Doomsday Vault In the Bobiverse books by Dennis E Taylor the Seed Vault has been improved to the Svalbard Global Trust which also has genetic material from most Earth animals and is critical to the attempts to move humans into colonies on other planets Science fiction author Stephen Baxter has used the Seed Vault described as the Svalbard vault in his novels Flood and Ark The vault is first purchased by a millionaire as the world floods and then cached aboard a starship to take Earth life to new worlds See also EditArctic policy of Norway Arctic World Archive Center of origin Frozen zoo a similar concept but for animals National Ice Core Laboratory Amphibian Ark Coral reef organizations Rosetta Project Indian Seed Vault Millennium Seed Bank Partnership Orthodox seed Recalcitrant seed SurvivalismReferences Edit a b Work begins on Arctic seed vault BBC News 19 June 2006 Retrieved 3 July 2011 a b Mellgren Doug 27 February 2008 Doomsday seed vault opens in Arctic NBC News Associated Press Retrieved 3 July 2011 a b Hopkin Michael March 2008 Biodiversity Frozen futures Nature 452 7186 404 405 Bibcode 2008Natur 452 404H doi 10 1038 452404a PMID 18368094 Description of the facility Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food Archived from the original on 25 February 2012 Retrieved 15 April 2012 a b Charles Daniel 23 June 2006 A Forever Seed Bank Takes Root in the Arctic Science 312 5781 1730 1731 doi 10 1126 science 312 5781 1730b PMID 16794050 S2CID 34138995 a b What is NordGen Nordic Genetic Resource Center Archived from the original on 21 April 2012 Retrieved 15 April 2012 a b Svalbard Global Seed Vault NordGen Retrieved 28 May 2021 a b The History Svalbard Global Seed Vault 4 July 2017 Retrieved 2 June 2021 a b Overview International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture www fao org Retrieved 7 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Siebert Charles July 2011 Food Ark National Geographic 220 1 108 131 OCLC 741814684 Fowler C George W Shands H Skovmand B 2004 Study to Assess the Feasibility of Establishing a Svalbard Arctic Seed Depository for the International Community Prepared for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Norway Center for International Environment and Development Studies Agricultural University of Norway Tenth Regular Session of the Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture PDF FAO 8 12 November 2004 Retrieved 7 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kinver Mark 31 January 2008 Doomsday seeds arrive in Norway BBC News Retrieved 3 July 2011 a b Walsh Bryan 27 February 2009 The Planet s Ultimate Backup Plan Svalbard Time Retrieved 1 March 2009 ARS ships more seeds to genebank facility in Norway High Plains Journal 2 March 2009 Retrieved 20 July 2017 a b Young Linda 26 February 2009 Global Seed Vault Marks First Anniversary 20 Million Seeds From One Third Of Earth s Food Crops Now Stored In Case Of Disaster All Headline News Archived from the original on 25 May 2011 Retrieved 1 March 2009 More seeds for doomsday vault BBC News 26 February 2009 Retrieved 27 February 2009 日本人彫刻家の作品が種子貯蔵庫へ in Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Norway 2009 Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 3 July 2011 Kinver Mark 13 July 2010 Red hot chillies arrive at frozen seed vault BBC News Retrieved 3 July 2011 Westengen Ola T Jeppson Simon Guarino Luigi May 2013 Global Ex Situ Crop Diversity Conservation and the Svalbard Global Seed Vault Assessing the Current Status PLOS One 8 5 e64146 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 864146W doi 10 1371 journal pone 0064146 PMC 3650076 PMID 23671707 a b c Griggs Mary Beth 22 May 2017 Turns out the Svalbard seed vault is probably fine Popular Science Retrieved 20 July 2017 Aschim Hege Njaa 20 May 2017 Improvements on the Svalbard Global Seed Vault Norwegian Directorate of Public Construction and Property Retrieved 20 July 2017 a b Statsbygg Svalbard Global Seed Vault www statsbygg no Retrieved 28 May 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Smith George 26 February 2018 Seed Vault marks 10th anniversary with 70 000 new samples New Food Retrieved 22 October 2018 Boyl Louise 27 March 2020 The Doomsday seed vault protecting the world s crops amid catastrophes like coronavirus The Independent Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 18 September 2021 Main Page Svalbard Global Seed Vault 4 July 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2021 Duggan Jennifer April 2017 Inside the Doomsday Vault Time Archived from the original on 8 April 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Svalbard Global Seed Vault Annual Progress Report 2019 PDF Nordic Genetic Resource Center June 2020 a b Deep Freeze Modern Marvels Season 14 Episode 34 25 September 2007 History Svalbard Global Seed Vault From safety in permafrost to optimal conditions Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food 20 May 2008 Archived from the original on 2 August 2008 Retrieved 18 July 2008 a b c Banking against Doomsday The Economist 10 March 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2014 a b c Fowler Cary 26 February 2008 The Svalbard Global Seed Vault Securing the Future of Agriculture PDF Global Crop Diversity Trust Svalbard Global Seed Vault KORO Public Art Norway Retrieved 20 April 2021 Svalbard Global Seed Vault Lighting Installation Crop Trust Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 3 July 2011 FAQ about the Seed Vault Crop Trust Crop Trust Retrieved 19 April 2017 Deamer Kacey 1 April 2017 Doomsday Library Joins Seed Vault in Arctic Norway Live Science Retrieved 4 April 2017 FAQ about the Seed Vault Crop Trust Retrieved 7 June 2021 Fowler Cary Spring Summer 2014 A Doomsday Seed Vault to Protect the World s Diversity An interview with Cary Fowler PDF Journal of International Affairs 67 2 141 146 JSTOR 24461740 Archived from the original PDF on 9 December 2014 International Advisory Panel NordGen Retrieved 28 May 2021 Contracting Parties International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations www fao org Retrieved 20 May 2021 a b Svalbard Global Seed Vault Management and Operations Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Retrieved 3 July 2011 SGSV by Depositor Nordic Genetic Resources Center 24 August 2010 Retrieved 3 July 2011 Westengen Ola T Lusty Charlotte Yazbek Mariana Amri Ahmed Asdal Asmund 9 November 2020 Safeguarding a global seed heritage from Syria to Svalbard Nature Plants 6 11 1311 1317 doi 10 1038 s41477 020 00802 z ISSN 2055 0278 PMID 33168982 S2CID 226297971 Doyle Alister 21 September 2015 Syrian war spurs first withdrawal from doomsday Arctic seed vault Reuters Retrieved 22 September 2015 Robins Early Nick 22 September 2015 Syrian War Causes The Global Doomsday Seed Vault s First Withdrawal The Huffington Post Retrieved 24 September 2015 Dan Charles 24 September 2015 Reclaiming Syria s Seeds From An Icy Arctic Vault NPR Retrieved 19 October 2015 Over 50 000 seeds withdrawn from Seed Vault Crop Trust 13 September 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Regenerating crop wild relatives in the Fertile Crescent CGIAR Genebank Platform 17 September 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2021 Dudley Dominic 22 February 2017 Middle East Seeds Restored To World s Doomsday Vault Two Years After Withdrawal Due To Syrian War Forbes Retrieved 8 September 2019 Griffin Andrew 4 March 2018 Seed vaults protect the world from the apocalypse but what if doomsday is already here The Independent Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Svalbard Global Seed Vault Crop Trust Retrieved 20 July 2017 Svalbard Global Seed Vault Frequently Asked Questions Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food Archived from the original on 21 October 2011 Retrieved 3 July 2011 Netto Joseph Simon Darran 21 May 2017 Water breaches Doomsday vault entrance seeds unharmed CNN Retrieved 20 July 2017 Nanofilm will safeguard identity of the more than 1 mill seed samples in the Seed Vault Svalbard Global Seed Vault 14 February 2022 Retrieved 4 March 2022 The Endowment Fund Crop Trust Retrieved 28 May 2021 Best Inventions of 2008 The Global Seed Vault Time 29 October 2008 Retrieved 3 July 2011 Svalbard Global Seed Vault Awarded the Norwegian Lighting Prize for 2009 Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food 4 November 2009 Retrieved 15 April 2012 Project Management Institute Announces the Top 50 Most Influential Projects of the Last 50 Years Financial Post 7 October 2019 Retrieved 2 June 2021 More about the physical plant Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food 23 February 2015 Retrieved 20 July 2017 A global backstop Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food 23 February 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2015 Straehley Steve 7 March 2015 Doomsday Seed Vault Adds Tree Seeds for First Time AllGov com Retrieved 5 May 2015 Annual Review 2020 www nordgen org Retrieved 28 May 2021 Annual Review 2021 www nordgen org Retrieved 17 December 2022 Svalbard Global Seed Vault seedvault nordgen org Retrieved 16 June 2021 Andean Potato Varieties Lost Now Safe Forever Crop Trust 27 August 2015 Retrieved 16 June 2021 GrrlScientist Cherokee Nation Sends Heirloom Seeds To Doomsday Seed Vault In Norway Forbes Retrieved 16 June 2021 Children of Ginko Premiere in Shanghai Ibsen International Retrieved 23 December 2020 Marcus Paus premiere i Shanghai Klassisk musikk Retrieved 23 December 2020 The Futurama Holiday Spectacular The Infosphere the Futurama Wiki theinfosphere org Retrieved 20 June 2021 Yakamoz S 245 on IMDB IMDb Retrieved 22 April 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Svalbard Global Seed Vault Wikinews has related news Seeds placed in Norwegian vault as agricultural insurance policy Official website Svalbard Global Seed Vault by the Norwegian Ministry of Agriculture and Food Svalbard Global Seed Vault by the Crop Trust Svalbard Global Seed Vault by the Nordic Genetic Resource Center NordGen Online searchable database of deposits at NordGen Inside the Svalbard Seed Vault on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Svalbard Global Seed Vault amp oldid 1131425018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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