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The Svalbard Global Seed Vault
byGunnvor Berge
On the islands of Svalbard, close to the north pole, the international community decided to build a global seed vault
to safeguard the world’s biological diversity in food and agricultural plants
The airport at Svalbard. The Global Seed Vault is situated in the mountain right above the airport
The vault, with the long tube leading into the permafrost where the three chambers of the vault are placed
The entrance of the vault on the day of the opening, 26 February 2008
A local choir sings as Mari Boine arrives to perform during the opening ceremony
A polar bear made in ice by the artist Olav Storø guards the entrance of the vault. Its heart is made of local seeds that hopefully will sprout
as the bear melts during the short summer
Black boxes containing seeds from the gene banks of the world’s international agricultural research centres CGIAR,
arriving for the opening
The middle vault, the first one to be filled with seeds. The three chambers together may contain 4, 5 million seeds,
more than the total number of varieties on earth.
The generators in front cool the chamber down to minus 18
Boxes containing genetic material in custody of the CGIAR-centres: The International Potato Center CIP, The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
IITA, Africa Rice Center WARDA. In the previous picture: The International Rice Research institute IRRI, International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas ICARDA
The Norwegian prime minister Jens Stoltenberg and the president of the EU commission José Manuel Durão Barroso on the top of the Seed Vault
during the official opening
Cary Fowler, the head of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, on leave from NORAGRIC at the University of Life Sciences.
He is one of the brains behind the Vault and the idea of a safety deposit for the world’s heritage in seeds
An international council has been established to safeguard transparency in operations and serve as a link between the owners and managers of the vault, and the users and wider
public.
The Head of the Dept of International Environmental and Development Studies (Noragric), Prof. Ruth Haug, is a
member of this board.
(Here together with Wangari Maathai at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences)