OSLO, Norway (Reuters) — A vault built on an Arctic mountainside to preserve the world’s crop seeds received new deposits Feb. 14, including one from the first organization that made a withdrawal from the facility.
The Svalbard Global Seed Vault, on Spitsbergen island halfway between mainland Norway and the North Pole, is only opened a few times a year to limit its seed banks’ exposure to the outside world.
On Feb. 14, gene banks from Sudan, Uganda, New Zealand, Germany and Lebanon will deposit seeds, including millet, sorghum and wheat, as backups to their own collections.
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The International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas, which moved its headquarters to Beirut from Aleppo in 2012 because of the war in Syria, will deposit some 8,000 samples.
ICARDA made the first seed withdrawal from the vault in 2015 to replace a collection damaged by the war, and two further withdrawals in 2017 and 2019 to rebuild its own collections, now held in Lebanon and Morocco.
“The fact that the seed collection destroyed in Syria during the civil war has been systematically rebuilt shows that the vault functions as an insurance for current and future food supply and for local food security,” said Norwegian International Development Minister Anne Beathe Tvinnereim.
The vault, which holds more than 1.1 million seed samples of nearly 6,000 plant species from 89 seed banks globally, also serves as a backup for plant breeders to develop new crop varieties.
The world used to cultivate more than 6,000 different plants but United Nations experts say we now get about 40 percent of our calories from three main crops— corn, wheat and rice — making food supplies vulnerable if climate change causes harvests to fail.