CIAT at Svalbard
Transcription
CIAT at Svalbard
CIAT at Svalbard The International Centre for Tropical Agriculture and the Svalbard Global Seed Vault 2 March 2008 1 Contents 1. Background 2 2. The genetic resources collections in-trust at CIAT 3 3. The distribution of germplasm by CIAT GRU 3 4. The safety back-ups 4 5. The process leading to Svalbard 5 6. The way ahead 10 7. Acknowledgments 11 8. The event in some media 12 2 1. Background The International Centre for Tropical Agriculture (known as CIAT, its acronym for Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical) is a member of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). It was established in 1967 in Palmira, in the department of Valle del Cauca, Colombia, as a non-profit agricultural research institution to increase food crop productivity in the tropics. The period 1968-1973 was a time of intense activity in Palmira, not only for the physical establishment of CIAT itself (figure below), but also for the definition of the programmes of work. After a series of international conferences, and consultations with agricultural ministries, development agencies and experts, CIAT decided to increase food availability and quality for the peoples in the tropics working on four crop commodities: beans, cassava, tropical forages, and rice. The latter was a regional mandate for Latin America, while the mandate was global for the former three. These staple food crops were – and continue to be - critical for the daily supply of carbohydrates and proteins in the diet of millions of poor people in both rural and urban areas of Latin America, Africa and South Asia. There are many ways to increase crop productivity; CIAT decided to produce a series of technological packages based on improved varieties and to train the National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) and farmers to adopt such packages. These staple food crops were behind in yield and adaptation as compared to cereals, particularly temperate cereals. The breeding strategy was two-fold: by securing first the harvest through multiple resistances to diseases and pests, and through tolerance to drought and acid, low fertility soils, and by increasing yield and adaptation. This strategy was eventually going to work – as it has worked for the temperate crops – if it was possible to identify and combine useful traits from the immense variability existing in these staple food crops. Two steps were then of critical importance to make progress: to assemble diverse (large) collections, and to evaluate them for all traits identified by plant breeders and agronomists. 3 2. The genetic resources collections in-trust at CIAT Once crop diversity was acknowledged as critical to genetic progress and hence stronger agricultural systems and higher food availability, CIAT started assembling large genetic resources collections, and established in 1978 the Genetic Resources Unit (GRU) to host them. The collections were obtained initially through exchanges and donations from different gene banks around the world, and then enlarged through specific germplasm explorations with the support among others of the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR). These explorations were essential because if some genetic collections existed for beans, namely in temperate countries (because of the interest for snap beans), few collections existed for cassava and the tropical forages. These explorations were carried out with scientists of the NARS in areas of diversity, mainly in tropical America. After thirty years of work the genetic resources collections at CIAT are the most diverse and largest ones in the world for their kind (Table 1). Table 1. Number of accessions for the three groups of crops maintained by CIAT GRU (figures by December 2007). Crop commodity Phaseolus beans Manihot cassava Tropical forages Total Rank 1 1 1 Number of taxa 44 33 728 805 Number of accessions 35,683 6,467 23,140 65,290 On 16 October 2006, CIAT signed an agreement with the Governing Body of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, by which it made a specific commitment to keep the genetic resources collections in-trust for the progress of agricultural research worldwide. The collections are maintained first because in many cases this biological heritage no longer exists in farmers’ fields or in natural vegetations. The collections are also maintained in order to provide users at anytime with samples with known characteristics, free of diseases and of optimal viability. The collections are part of the biological heritage of 141 countries. 3. The distribution of germplasm by CIAT GRU CIAT through its GRU has distributed many samples of the genetic collections maintained in trust (Figure 1). All in all, the GRU has distributed eleven times the bean collection, four times the cassava collection, and almost four times the collection of tropical forages. There are several reasons for the high level of distribution: the commodity programmes of CIAT have undertaken an evaluation work to a level unmatched in history. Collaborators have used the recently identified sources of useful traits in additional breeding programmes. Often for some species for farmers and for university departments the only source is CIAT GRU. Since the beginning of its operations, the GRU has distributed 517,916 samples to institutions and farmers of 136 countries. 4 A service to the world agricultural development Distribution of germplasm samples by CIAT-GRU (period 1973 - 2007) 517,916 samples to 136 different countries cassava : 30,847 (6%) or 4.4 x 84,012 (16%) or 3.6 x forages : beans cassava forages beans : 403,057 (78%) or 11 x source: CIAT - GRU, 2008 Figure 1. Distribution of samples of the three genetic collections. 4. The safety back-ups It is normal procedure for genebanks to make safety back-ups. CIAT GRU systematically makes copies for the country of origin, one for CIMMYT and one for Svalbard. In 2004, CIAT and the Centro Internacional de Mejoramiento de Maíz y Trigo (CIMMYT) in Mexico signed a specific agreement in order to maintain a copy of its seed collections at its headquarters at El Batán, close to Texcoco, Mexico. In 2005, CIAT and the Centro Internacional de la Papa (CIP) signed a specific agreement in order to maintain a copy of its cassava collection maintained under slow growth in vitro. In 2007, CIAT and the Ministry of Agriculture and Food of the Royal Government of Norway signed a specific agreement in order to maintain a copy of its seed collections in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault close to Longyearbyen, Spitzberg, Norway. With the first shipment to Svalbard, collections from 124 countries are safely duplicated there. The status of safety duplication can be seen in Table 2. Table 2. Status of safety duplication (figures as by February 2008). Phaseolus beans Manihot cassava Tropical forages CIMMYT 14,140 (40%) --7,118 (31%) 21,258 (36%) CIP --5,014 (77%) --5,014 (77%) Svalbard 21,698 (61%) 9,213 (40%) 30,911 (52.5%) (% on number of accessions in the main collection maintained by GRU in CIAT HQ). 5 CIMMYT and the Svalbard Vault act as long-term deposits: they offer on a continuing basis the technical infrastructure of shelving at low temperature, and they organize the different shipments in numerical sequence. Because the viability of the accessions is monitored on the same seed lots by the GRU in Palmira, if there is any need, both CIMMYT and the Svalbard Vault can store a replacement sample. The older sample is sent back to Palmira for any future study. At CIP the cassava collection is maintained under slow growth in vitro; it is periodically replaced as the plantlets are reaching the top of the test tubes or have exhausted the growing media. These safety back-ups do not imply any transfer of legal ownership, and the collections remain the property of the countries when known. 5. The process leading to Svalbard The possibility of sending seed to Svalbard actually materialized with the assembling of the first bean collections in 1973 with donations of bean germplasm by the Departamento de Investigaciones Agrícolas (Palmira Station) of the Ministry of Agriculture of Colombia, and the Department of Agriculture of the United States of America (USDA Pullman Station). In the case of explorations, the starting point was often a single seed rescued from a farmer’s mixture, and that seed needed careful multiplication (Fig. 2). Once seeds have been multiplied, they are tested for physical purity (Fig. 3), physiological quality (Fig. 4), and absence of diseases of quarantine importance (Fig. 5). After a third cycle of drying (Fig. 6), the seeds are packed in such as way to prevent moisture to get back in (Fig. 7), and maintained under low temperatures (Fig. 8). Subsamples have been prepared for long-term conservation in Palmira, viability testing, future distribution, and safety duplication. From 1996 onwards, GRU prepared systematically samples for safety duplication with view of celebrating specific institutional agreements to that end. In 2003, thanks to the support of the World Bank, in the framework of an activity of the System-wide Genetic Resources Programme (SGRP), the GRU increased the rate of multiplication of accessions with low seed availability. Figure 2. Seed multiplication 6 Figure 3. Seed testing for physical purity. Figure 4. Viability testing. 7 Figure 5. Germplasm health. Figure 6. Drying of seeds. 8 Figure 7. Packing of seeds. Figure 8. Long-term conservation at – 18oC in GRU cold room. 9 Figure 9. Special boxes for the long-term conservation in Svalbard. Figure 10. Plastic aluminium pouches orderly placed in the boxes. 10 Figure 11. The shipment ready to go. Special boxes for Svalbard arrived in late November (Fig. 9), and the samples were progressively packed in 93 boxes (Fig. 10). On January 30, 2008, the GRU sent 30,911 samples to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault (Fig. 11). 6. The way ahead Continue with the safety duplication. The shipment of 30,911 samples of the genetic collections maintained in-trust by CIAT means a safety back-up for 52% of the seed collections. The remaining 48% will be sent in the coming years (the last shipment is planned for 2013). Continue with exploration. The size of the genetic collections may look impressive. Yet it is far from being fully representative of the genetic diversity existing in these groups of crops. While the common bean is relatively well represented, particularly the varieties that have been commercialized, the Lima bean, a hardy crop of the tropics, has yet up to half of its genetic diversity to be sampled and conserved. The Southwestern corner of the homeland of cassava could be represented by far more accessions than those already maintained ex situ. Advance research. There is a cost associated with the conservation of each item of the genetic resources collections. The priority in research is thus two-fold: (i) understanding 11 the physiological processes of seed aging so that seed longevity can be increased, thus reducing the needs for frequent regenerations. (ii) understanding the structure of genetic diversity in order to make sure that each accession conserved is a unique item representative of the genetic diversity existing in the species, so that farmers and breeders will find the trait they need. Participate in education. The effort of collecting, studying and conserving crop genetic resources is not restricted to beans, cassava and tropical forages, but should be carried out on the entire world crop heritage. For several reasons this effort should be international, and capacity building and public awareness and education are the cornerstone of its success and sustainability. CIAT, Bioversity, other Centers, sometimes in the framework of SGRP, have organized several training activities, developed training and public awareness products, or interacted with the media, with the objective of raising knowledge and sense of responsibility towards the conservation of the ‘future harvest’. 7. Acknowledgments Many individuals, namely of the CIAT commodity programmes, the Communication Unit, and GRU, and many institutions throughout the world from 1973 to 2008 have made the shipment of 30,911 samples to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault possible, and it will be impossible to mention them all here. We would like to mention the superb help of the following institutions over the last eight months. Dirección de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales de Colombia The European Union Global Crop Diversity Trust Ministerio de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural de Colombia Instituto Colombiano Agropecuario Policía Nacional de Colombia System-wide Genetic Resources Programme The United States Agency for International Development The World Bank Further information: Dr. Ir Daniel G. Debouck Head, Genetic Resources Unit, CIAT Email: [email protected] Last update: 2 March 2008 12 8. The event in some media Advertising media about the shipment of seeds to the Svalbard Global Vault by CIAT in Colombia. Print and electronic media Colombia almacenará 30 mil copias de semillas en el banco de germoplasma más grande del mundo In: El Tiempo (Colombia) http://www.eltiempo.com/economia/tierrasyganados/2008-01-26/ARTICULO-WEBNOTA_INTERIOR-3933380.html Colombia almacenará 30 mil copias de semillas en el banco de germoplasma más grande del mundo In: World Press (agencia internacional) http://siemprerebelde.wordpress.com/2008/01/27/colombia-almacenara-30-mil-copiasde-semillas-en-el-banco-de-germoplasma-mas-grande-del-mundo/ http://es.wordpress.com/tag/boveda-global-de-semillas/ La bóveda ártica guardará nuestro más caro tesoro In: El Colombiano (Colombia) http://www.elcolombiano.com.co/BancoConocimiento/L/la_boveda_artica_guardara_nue stro_mas_caro_tesoro/la_boveda_artica_guardara_nuestro_mas_caro_tesoro.asp Arca de Noé Vegetal con sabor colombiano In: El País (Colombia) http://www.elpais.com.co/paisonline/notas/Enero302008/reg01.html Guardan semillas del CIAT para la posteridad In: Portafolio (Colombia) http://www.portafolio.com.co/port_secc_online/porta_domi_online/2008-0123/ARTICULO-WEB-NOTA_INTERIOR_PORTA-3758989.html Semillas colombianas serán guardadas en Noruega para bien de la humanidad In: Financiero.com (Guatemala) http://www.financiero.com/agricultura/semillas-colombianas-seran-guardadas-noruegapara-bien-humanidad.asp Semillas colombianas serán guardadas en Noruega para bien de la humanidad In: Prodigy (Portal MSN) http://tecnologia.prodigy.msn.com/LandinTech/landingpage.aspx?cpdocumentid=6066647 13 Desde Colombia también salen Semillas de Cultivos Básicos para protegerlos en una Bóveda en el Polo Norte In: Portal de la Red de Desarrollo Sostenible de Colombia http://www.rds.org.co/oficina.htm?x=1057567 Colombia almacenará 30 mil copias de semillas en El Banco De Germoplasma más grande del mundo In: Opinión Caribe (Portal de la Costa Caribe de Colombia) http://www.opinioncaribe.com/?ac=noticias&id=1599 Semillas colombianas van a Noruega In: El Nuevo Día (Colombia) http://www.elnuevodia.com.co/dia/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id= 4112&Itemid=55 Semillas colombianas serán guardadas en Noruega para bien de la humanidad In: Prensa Libre (Guatemala) http://www.prensalibre.com/pl/2008/enero/23/080122205215.q9zrcq7g.html De Colombia llega un barco cargado de... In: Agencia de Noticias de Ciencia y Tecnología de Colombia http://www.noticyt.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=72&Itemid =76 Enviarán frijoles al “arca” de semillas en el Ártico In: La Prensa (Nicaragua) http://www.laprensa.com.ni/archivo/2008/febrero/04/noticias/campoyagro/ La Bóveda Ártica del Fin del Mundo In: La Tarde (Pereira) www.latarde.com/2008/sema/6/neg.htm Radio: Amplio cubrimiento por las principales emisoras de Colombia y algunas de América Latina, con entrevistas en directo. Televisión: Despliegue por el noticiero Noti5, con amplía sintonía en el occidente colombiano. Nota especial por el Canal RCN de Colombia. Nota especial por Telepacífico. 14 15 25 de enero al 8 de febrero de 2008 Edición 92 Informe Especial Guardan duplicados de germoplasma del CIAT en el Polo Norte El CIAT es protagonista de primer orden de uno de los proyectos más ambiciosos del mundo, en el que se busca preservar de cualquier catástrofe el patrimonio agrícola de la humanidad, mediante una bóveda construida en un remoto lugar del Ártico. Conocido como la Bóveda Global de Semillas, la Bóveda Ártica del Fin del Mundo o el Arca de Noé Vegetal, este Ampliar gigantesco depósito ubicado en las entrañas de una montaña del archipiélago de Svalbard, en Noruega, tendrá una capacidad para almacenar hasta 4.5 millones de duplicados de semillas, es decir, que albergará prácticamente todas las variedades de casi todos los cultivos alimentarios importantes del mundo (Ver nota). El objetivo principal de este proyecto es garantizar a la humanidad la producción alimentaria durante muchos siglos, si ésta se viera amenazada por una catástrofe regional o mundial. Cultivos tan ancestrales como el arroz, el trigo, la cebada, el fríjol, el sorgo, la lenteja, el maíz, entre muchos otros alimentos, junto con plantas forrajeras y agroforestales, se protegerán en dicha bóveda, cuya temperatura será de -18 grados centígrados, a 10 metros de profundidad de la arenisca que rodea el depósito y al final de un túnel de 120 metros. Las semillas serán despachadas a finales de enero desde distintos puntos del planeta a la aldea de Longyearbyen, en la isla de Spitsbergen, archipiélago de Svalbard. La inauguración oficial de la bóveda está provista para el 26 de febrero. La fortaleza polar fue construida por el gobierno de Noruega como un servicio a la comunidad mundial, y su operación será financiada por el Fondo Mundial para la Diversidad de Cultivos, una ONG internacional con sede en Roma. Ampliar Colombia está representada por el CIAT que, junto con los demás centros que forman parte del Grupo Consultivo para la Investigación Agrícola Internacional (CGIAR), enviarán más de 200 mil duplicados de variedades de cultivos de Asia, África, América Latina y el Oriente Medio, que se conservan en sus bancos de 16 germoplasma. Estas colecciones son consideradas como un tesoro entre los círculos científicos, pues les permiten a los fitomejoradores crear nuevas variedades con mayores rendimientos, más valor nutritivo, resistencia a plagas y enfermedades, y con capacidad para sobrevivir en condiciones climáticas variables. En el caso del CIAT, en su banco de germoplasma se protegen más de 65 mil accesiones de fríjol, yuca y forrajes tropicales, y es la colección más grande del mundo. Algunos de estos cultivos ya están extinguidos en sus lugares de origen. El apoyo que la Unidad de Recursos Genéticos del CIAT ha brindado a científicos y agricultores de los cinco continentes, en 4 décadas, se mide en el número de materiales distribuidos: más de 500 mil. Asimismo, ha sido determinante en campañas humanitarias para evitar Ampliar hambruna de pueblos, como en el caso de la guerra civil en Rwanda o el desastre provocado por el huracán Mitch en Honduras y Nicaragua, donde quedaron devastados los campos de fríjol. De esa colección y con miras a guardar un duplicado para la posteridad, el CIAT enviará a Svalbard, 30,911 accesiones entre fríjol Phaseolus (21,698) y forrajes tropicales (9,213). "Será el primero de cuatro envíos y representará un 52.7% de nuestra colección", dijo el Dr. Daniel Debouck, director de la URG. "Prácticamente todos los países de América Latina, con excepción de algunas islas del Caribe y las Guyanas, tendrán su duplicado en la bóveda ártica", agregó. Por su parte, Geoff Hawtin, Director General Interino del CIAT y antiguo director ejecutivo del Fondo que financia esta operación, calificó de vital este proyecto para proteger más las colecciones de cultivos alimenticios. "Con los cambios climáticos venideros, el alza de los precios de los alimentos y la expansión de los mercados para biocombustibles, nuestras mejores opciones disponibles para el progreso, por no decir supervivencia, estarán en lo que hemos conservado y estudiado contra todas las predicciones imaginables", dijo. Ampliar El cargamento desde el CIAT saldrá embalado en 93 cajas especialmente construidas para ello, con un peso de 1,310 kilos. El itinerario será Cali-Bogotá-Madrid-Oslo. Dos días después, y tras un vuelo especial que dura 5 horas, este tesoro agrícola procedente de América Latina llegará a su destino final: las entrañas del Polo Norte para garantizar la supervivencia de la humanidad. 17 25 de enero al 8 de febrero de 2008 Edición 92 Informe Especial Una fortaleza bajo el hielo polar La Bóveda Global de Semillas es una fortaleza construida por el gobierno de Noruega debajo de los hielos polares en una isla del archipiélago de Svalbard, en el Círculo Polar Ártico. Es una mole maciza, cincelada en el interior de una montaña y con un túnel de 120 metros en acero reforzado. Los tesoros quedarán guardados en una bóveda a 10 metros de profundidad, en la que hay tres cuartos fríos, de 10 por 27 metros cada uno. El lugar es ideal porque cuenta con permafrost, un tipo de superficie que, junto con la arenisca del lugar, ofrece temperaturas bajas constantes, ideales para conservar la gran estructura de esta 'arca de Noé vegetal'. Ampliar En su construcción básicamente los ingenieros utilizaron la roca como una cámara frigorífica, lo cual se ha vuelto popular como una manera de establecer sistemas de refrigeración energéticamente eficientes. La bóveda deberá mantenerse a una temperatura de -18 grados centígrados, tal como en el cuarto frío a largo plazo de la Unidad de Recursos Genéticos del CIAT. Además del permafrost natural del área, también será importante en el proceso de refrigeración a largo plazo la nieve y el hielo que cubre la montaña durante gran parte del año, lo cual asegura que la roca permanezca por lo menos a -4 grados centígrados. Ampliar Ampliar La iniciativa para construir esa descomunal obra, a un costo de 8 millones de dólares, fue del Fondo Mundial para la Diversidad de Cultivos. Su diseño comenzó en 1980, con el apoyo de más de 100 países, pero sólo pudo empezar a concretarse en el 2001, cuando la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Agricultura y la Alimentación (FAO) adoptó el Tratado Internacional sobre Recursos Genéticos de Plantas para la Alimentación y la Agricultura. Mediante ese acuerdo hubo vía libre para ubicar en la isla de Svalbard esta "bodega del fin del mundo". La meta es guardar 4.5 millones de duplicados de semillas de los cultivos alimentarios más importantes de todo el mundo. 18 Nota del editor: Para ver más fotos relacionadas con la bóveda, visite: http://www.croptrust.org/main/arctic.php?itemid=217> Arriba Arcos Digital 2007 - Ext. 3224 - Outlook: CIAT- Arcos Realización: María Fernanda Mejía C. Colaboración: Gladys Rodríguez N., ....................................................................... Eduardo Figueroa C. 19 8 al 22 de febrero de 2008 Edición 93 Noticias Gracias gente de la URG Cuando la última caja fue acomodada dentro del camión que llevaría la preciada carga hasta el aeropuerto Alfonso Bonilla Aragón para iniciar su largo viaje hasta el Polo Norte, el personal de la Unidad de Recursos Genéticos (URG) no pudo contener la emoción y todos empezaron a aplaudir. Últimos preparativos. Culminaba así una tarea que comenzó en octubre de 2007 y que involucró a todo el personal de la URG, y de la cual hoy se sienten orgullosos porque saben que ya son parte de uno de los acontecimientos históricos de la humanidad. Y no es exageración. Este equipo, liderado por Daniel Debouck y María Celia Lima, preparó duplicados de miles de variedades de fríjol y forrajes tropicales que se conservan en el Banco de Germoplasma del CIAT, para enviarlos a una remota bóveda en el círculo polar ártico, en Noruega. El objetivo: preservarlas de cualquier catástrofe y garantizarle a las generaciones siguientes su seguridad alimentaria. Fue un riguroso proceso de planificación y de estricto cumplimiento de cronogramas. La responsabilidad era ante el mundo. Y cumplieron. Y por eso aplaudieron. Trasteo cuidadoso. A las 12:20 de la tarde del miércoles 30 de enero, la carga salió del CIAT. Fueron 5 grandes cajas que contenían 93 "cofres" especiales que albergan 30.912 accesiones entre fríjol Phaseolus (21.699) y forrajes tropicales (9.213). Su peso total fue de 1.310 kilos. Es el primero de cuatro envíos y representa un 52.7% de la colección del Centro. En la noche del martes 5 de febrero, las semillas llegaron a Oslo, la capital de Noruega, y este viernes 8 saldrán Esfuerzo colectivo. rumbo a la aldea de Longyearbyen, en la isla de Spitsbergen, archipiélago de Svalbard, donde está la Bóveda Global de Semillas o el Arca de Noé Vegetal. La inauguración oficial de la bóveda está provista para el 26 de febrero. 20 La misión se cumplió a cabalidad. El CIAT, por estos días, ha figurado en diferentes medios de comunicación, nacionales e internacionales. La opinión pública reconoce que es un proyecto maravilloso. Nosotros lo sabemos, y también sabemos que se logró porque contamos con gente maravillosa. Ahora somos nosotros los que aplaudimos al equipo de la URG. Se lo merecen. Misión cumplida. Por Eduardo Figueroa Información Pública Arriba Arcos Digital 2007 - Ext. 3224 - Outlook: CIAT- Arcos Realización: María Fernanda Mejía C. Colaboración: Gladys Rodríguez N., ....................................................................... Eduardo Figueroa C. The World - US News and World Report Page 1 of 1 Tuesday, February 26, 2008 Nation & World Health Money & Business Education Opinion Science Photo Video Rankings The World Posted 2/11/07 Page 2 of 2 As interesting as the numbers is the fact that the study was published in the state-run Chinese-language Oriental Outlook magazine. Chinese authorities are touchy about religion, restricting religious practices to constrain groups seen as potentially challenging Communist Party authority. Building the Fort Knox of Seeds On a remote Arctic island, not far from the North Pole, Norway is about to start construction of a "doomsday vault" to safeguard a uniquely valuable resource-seed samples of nearly every food crop on Earth-from a global catastrophe such as massive crop disease, biological contamination, or SAUDI ARABIA. King Abdullah is flanked by Hamas's Mashaal (left) and Palestinian Authority President Abbas. SUHAIB SALEM-GETTY IMAGES/POOL nuclear war. The Svalbard International Seed Vault, due to go into operation by late 2008, is intended to hold in cold storage as many as 3 million seeds to combat the loss of biological diversity, to reduce vulnerability of agricultural production to climate change, and to secure future food production capability. The Norwegian government is paying the $3 million construction cost, and there are plans for governments, foundations, and seed companies to fund a $260 million endowment to sustain the facility in perpetuity. While there are other seed collections, this facility is seen as the bank of last resort, the backup for the whole world. It will be carved into a mountainside, kept cold by the natural permafrost, and secured with fences, blastproof doors, air locks, and motion detectors. "The presence of polar bears, which prowl the area," say organizers, "may be seen by some as providing an additional layer of security." With Associated Press Copyright © 2008 U.S.News & World Report, L.P. All rights reserved. http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/070211/19world_2.htm 2/26/2008 Latinamerica Press: Article Page 1 of 1 Search Home Español Related articles: Friday, February 15, 2008 Printer friendly version About Us LATIN AMERICA Products & Services A frozen Noah’s Ark Noticias Aliadas. Feb 14, 2008 Andean potatoes for the world Innovative projects encourage native potato production. 1/31/2008 Support Us Articles by Country Articles by Theme At the end of January, research centers in 10 countries around the world, including Colombia, Mexico and Peru, sent thousands of seeds to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in Norway — close to the Arctic Circle — which is part of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). Statistics Archive Interviews Archive Radio on line The CGIAR, founded in 1971, comprises 15 agricultural research centers globally, including the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT for its initials in Spanish) in Colombia, the International Center for Maize and Wheat Improvement (CIMMYT) in Mexico, and the International Potato Center (CIP) in Peru. Free Digital Services Free Web Access Trial Links Contact Us The project’s objective is to guarantee human food production over the next centuries, in case of any threat by a regional or global catastrophe. CIAT sent 31,000 varieties of bean, yucca and tropical forage, CIMMYT sent 48,000 samples of wheat and 7,000 of maize and CIP sent 12,000 species of potato and sweet potato. These seeds are duplicates of those already in the centers’ germplasm banks. Home | Español | About Us | Products & Services | Support Us | Statistics Archive | Interviews Archive | Radio on line | Free Digital Services | Free Web Access Trial | Links | Contact Us | Noticias Aliadas/Latinamerica Press 2005 Independent Information & Analysis Website Manager: [email protected] Internal Mail file://C:\Documents and Settings\amhernandez\Desktop\noticias\las que son\Latinamerica... 30/07/2008 Svalbard's giant cold store | Environment | guardian.co.uk Page 1 of 2 Svalbard's giant cold store Today sees the opening of the global seed vault, built to preserve samples of nearly all the world's seed crops deep in an Arctic mountain Gwladys Fouché in Longyearbyen guardian.co.uk, Tuesday February 26 2008 Link to this video Hardly anything grows on Svalbard. In this Arctic archipelago, the permafrost is 1,000ft deep, the nearest tree grows 600 miles to the south, and the sun does not rise for four months of the year. But it is on this frozen, barren outpost that the future of mankind's food supply depends. Today sees the inauguration of the Svalbard global seed vault, a top-security repository that will house batches of seeds from nearly every variety of food crop on the planet, such as wheat, rice or maize. The aim is to protect them in case of a global catastrophe. "It is the last line of defence against the extinction of our agricultural diversity," says Cary Fowler, executive director of the Global Diversity Crop Trust (GDCT), the brain behind the project. "People are aware of the extinction of the dinosaurs, but they don't know that we are currently experiencing a mass extinction of our crop diversity." According to Fowler, maintaining agricultural diversity is essential to protect our food supply. "We need [it] to help farmers and to help agriculture adapt to climate change, pests and diseases, droughts, and whatever demands we're going to have make of agriculture, including feeding more people." "If we only cultivate the same variety of wheat, a disease can easily wipe it out. It has happened before," adds the 58-year-old US scientist, pointing out the blight that ravaged northern Europe's potato crops in the 1840s - and contributed to the great Irish famine. Preserving crop diversity is becoming increasingly complex with global i I i i b " h bi hi h i l l http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/feb/26/food.conservation/print 2/26/2008 Svalbard's giant cold store | Environment | guardian.co.uk Page 2 of 2 "We think we will be seeing concrete effects for which we will need new varieties of agricultural crops within the next twenty years. We're going to need that crop diversity more and more to be able to adapt," he says. So to protect the planet's crops, a £4.7m refrigerated warehouse has been built inside a mountain overlooking Longyearbyen, a mining community of about 2,000 souls. It has been dubbed the "doomsday vault". From the outside the vault looks like the perfect layer for a 007 villain. The entry, a narrow triangular portal made of concrete and steel, shoots out of the mountainside and offers spectacular views over Svalbard's snow-capped mountains and the Arctic Sea. Inside, a 120m reinforced concrete tunnel gently slopes into the heart of the mountain towards three chambers, each measuring about 1,500 cubic metres. The seeds will be stored at –18C to prevent them from germinating. They will be contained in grey envelopes made of polyethylene and aluminium to protect them from air and moisture. The envelopes are stored in corrugated plastic boxes, up to 400 envelopes per box, on metal shelves. At today's ceremony, the first 250,000 samples will be placed in the vault, with more on their way. It is estimated there are 2-3m unique varieties of crops in the world. Should a variety of crop disappear, a sample could be taken out of the vault and sent to the gene bank it belongs to. It could then be germinated - and the crop reconstituted. The Svalbard seed vault is not the first seed bank in the world. There are at least 1,500 of them worldwide. But some of the existing seed banks are vulnerable, and this is the first attempt to build a complete collection. "I don't think there is a single seed bank in the world that is securely funded," reckons Fowler. "None have secure multi-year budgets. Many are located in dangerous places in the world. All would be vulnerable to certain kinds of standard risks, such as fire, natural disasters; that type of thing." The seed banks in Iraq and Afghanistan, for instance, were looted and destroyed, and most of the seed collections of the Philippines's National Plant Genetic Resources Laboratory were obliterated during a typhoon two years ago. A backup was needed, and this is why Svalbard was chosen. The cold keeps the seeds at constant freezing temperature; the islands are isolated; it is far away from the troubles of the world; instead "we have a friendly, stable and well-respected government with Norway [which has sovereignty over Svalbard]," reckons Fowler. "I can't think of a better location." Norway also financed the construction of the vault. The GDCT will take charge of the £63,000 yearly operating costs. Britain is an indirect contributor too: it is providing £10m to the trust's overall budget between 2007 and 2011 - the largest contribution by any country. So from today, the world's food supply should be a little safer. For Fowler, "this is an insurance policy for the most valuable natural resource on earth". Audio: Cary Fowler of the GDCT Gallery: gobal seed vault guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008 http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/feb/26/food.conservation/print 2/26/2008 SeedQuest - Central information website for the global seed industry Page 1 of 1 News section home news forum careers events suppliers solutions markets resources directories advertise contacts search site plan . Svalbard not the only safe haven for crop diversity . February 26, 2008 As the sun finally clears the horizon, signalling an end to the long winter night, the eyes of the world will be on the Global Seed Vault, dug into the mountainside above the town of Longyearbyen in Svalbard, Norway. The first boxes of 12 tonnes a hundred million seeds - will be carried down the long tunnel to the deep freezers within, there to be kept in safety just in case. The specimens will all be what scientists call orthodox seeds, those that can be dried and stored at low temperatures without harm. Ironically, species that cannot be dried and stored have no place in the frozen Svalbard vault. They need cold, but they also need regular human attention. Where will they be secure? For some, in the sunny south of France. The first few hundred samples of banana and plantain from the International Musa Germplasm Collection, managed by Bioversity International and supported by the Belgian government, have been safely delivered from the International Transit Centre (ITC) at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium to the French Research Institute for Development (IRD) in Montpellier, France. The "black box" collection at IRD - in reality a large vat kept at an extremely chilly -196°C by liquid nitrogen - represents the same kind of safety backup that Svalbard offers for orthodox seeds. Should anything happen to the samples at Leuven, like the typhoon that damaged the Philippine rice genebank or the looters who wiped out the genebank at Abu Ghraib in Iraq, duplicates will be available at IRD. "It's a mirror of the need for crop diversity itself," said Emile Frison, Director General of Bioversity International, which is working closely with the Global Crop Diversity Trust to secure important collections of agricultural biodiversity. "Just as humanity needs different varieties of different crops, so different crops need different kinds of long-term storage." Bart Panis (left) transfers to samples to Nicolas R Like bananas and plantains, crops such as coconut, cassava, yam, potato, sweet potato and taro are vitally important foods that are best conserved in field genebanks and tissue culture. But those methods are expensive, so scientists are working to develop protocols for cryopreservation, long-term storage at very low temperatures. KULeuven is a leader in this area and has been designated a Global Centre of Excellence on Plant Cryobiology. The experts there have been working with the genebanks of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research and others to develop cryopreservation protocols and safety duplicates of important collections. "The safety duplicates are at KULeuven in Belgium," Frison said. "But because the primary banana collection is already there, we had to put the safety duplicate somewhere else." "We chose IRD to house the black box collection because of the expertise of their scientists in cryopreservation," said Professor Rony Swennen, Honorary Research Fellow at Bioversity and Director of the ITC. IRD researchers made an important contribution to cryopreservation by working out how many samples of each variety should be conserved. "There is no guarantee that a thawed piece of plant tissue will regenerate into a fully viable plant," Swennen explained. "IRD scientists solved that problem by developing a method to calculate the number of samples needed to ensure a 95% chance that at least one of them will produce a plant." Stephane Dussert takes care of the safety duplicate collection at IRD. The method is based on the survival rate of the accession, the risk level the genebank manager is willing to accept, and the time between regenerations. Armed with this information Bart Piette and Bart Panis, Belgian scientists at KULeuven, cryopreserved a batch of accessions three separate times, to minimise the risk that all might be contaminated. One of each repetition has gone to France while the other two remain in Belgium. Just as the Trust is supporting the ongoing operations of the Global Seed Vault and the preparation and shipping of seeds to Svalbard, it is also supporting research into cryopreservation and safety backups for crops that need it. Tissue culture is expensive and time-consuming because fresh cultures must frequently be made, while field collections are vulnerable to environmental disasters. Research at the Global Centre of Excellence on Plant Cryobiology at KULeuven and elsewhere is delivering improved cryopreservation protocols that enable much longer storage without the need for human interference. "The Trust's support in making sure that crops such as banana are safely stored for the global community is very much appreciated," said Frison. "But I think it is also important to recognize Belgium's contributions. The government has been a long-term supporter of research on the banana, from laboratory studies at KULeuven to field deployment of improved varieties and growing techniques. Without that, we might not have had any cryopreserved specimens to send to France." The news item on this page is copyright by the organization where it originated - Fair use notice Other news from this source Copyright © SeedQuest - All rights reserved http://www.seedquest.com/News/releases/2008/february/21855.htm 2/26/2008 Global seed vault opens in Norway - Print Version - International Herald Tribune Page 1 of 2 Global seed vault opens in Norway The Associated Press Tuesday, February 26, 2008 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, standing in one of the frosty vaults against of backdrop of large discs made of ice. 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. To mark the opening, guests carried the first 75 boxes of seeds down a red carpet through the steel and concrete-lined tunnel to the vaults. Norway owns the vault in Svalbard, a frigid archipelago about 620 miles from the North Pole. It paid $9.1 million for the construction. Other countries can deposit seeds without charge and reserve the right to withdraw them upon need. The collecting of seeds 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 placed the first box of seeds in the vault during the opening ceremony container of rice seeds from 104 countries. a "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. 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 http://www.iht.com/bin/printfriendly.php?id=10396848 2/26/2008 Global seed vault opens in Norway - Print Version - International Herald Tribune Page 2 of 2 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. ___ On the Net: http://www.croptrust.org http://www.seedvault.no Notes: Copyright © 2008 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com http://www.iht.com/bin/printfriendly.php?id=10396848 2/26/2008 Financial Express : Icrisat to deposit germplasm at Svalbard Global Seed Vault Page 1 of 1 Close Window Print Story Icrisat to deposit germplasm at Svalbard Global Seed Vault Commodities Bureau Posted online: Tuesday , February 26, 2008 at 0136 hrs Hyderabad, Feb 25International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (Icrisat) has joined a group of international organisations that will deposit seeds of germplasm of mandate crops at the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, to be inaugurated on Tuesday. It is the global initiative to store seeds of agricultural crops from across the world in a specially created seed vault. The Svalbard archipelago is half way between the northern coast of Norway and the North Pole. Located in a remote, yet accessible location within a mountain under permafrost (permanently frozen layer) conditions, the Svalbard Seed Vault has a natural temperature of minus six degree centigrade (-6°C). The vault is further cooled to -18°C and is designed to provide ultimate secure protection against catastrophes to plant genetic resources for food and agriculture. According to William Dar, director general, Icrisat’s participation in the duplicate conservation of seeds in the vault adds a special significance to the project - it gives increased protection to global agriculture from climate change. The seeds of germplasm that will be transferred by Icrisat are those of hardy dryland crops that can withstand climate change when it happens. These are the seeds of sorghum, pearl millet, chickpea, pigeonpea, groundnut and six small millets. “Mandated to increase agricultural productivity in the drylands of Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, our crops have the ability to withstand the perils of climate variability and change,” Dar said. Though a global disaster may or may not happen, seeds stored in genebanks (such as the one at Icrisat) are routinely used to re-start agriculture in areas affected by natural disasters and civil strife. For instance, sorghum germplasm lost during civil wars in Ethiopia and Rwanda was replenished from the collection stored in the Icrisat genebank. Icrisat repatriated germplasm to several countries: Botswana (sorghum), Iran (chickpea), Nepal (chickpea), Kenya (pigeonpea), Sudan (sorghum), Zambia (sorghum, pearl millet, pigeonpea, groundnut and finger millet), and India (all crops). Icrisat will deposit seeds of 20,000 germplasm accessions in the first installment this year, which will be the first year of the five-year schedule during which the institute will transfer about 1,10,000 germplasm accessions. The Global Crop Diversity Trust, one of the agencies supporting the project and a partner of Icrisat, is providing the financial support for the transfer of sample. The samples being sent to Svalbard are duplicates of the collection at Icrisat’s gene bank. Among the largest public-funded gene banks globally, the facility at Icrisat’s headquarters at Patancheru, India, holds 1,18,882 accessions of various crops, along with their wild relatives, representing 144 countries. Icrisat’s collection has benefited the crop improvement efforts of many national agricultural research systems. Sixty-six germplasm accessions of various crops have been released directly as cultivators in 44 countries contributing to food security. In addition, a vast number of germplasm accessions distributed have been used as building blocks for numerous varieties and hybrids that are cultivated in many parts of the world. http://www.financialexpress.com/printer/news/277198/ 2/26/2008 ENN: Arctic seed vault opens doors for 100 million seeds Page 1 of 2 From: Global Crop Diversity Trust Published February 26, 2008 09:41 AM Arctic seed vault opens doors for 100 million seeds LONGYEARBYEN, NORWAY (26 FEBRUARY 2008) — The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened today on a remote island in the Arctic Circle, receiving inaugural shipments of 100 million seeds that originated in over 100 countries. With the deposits ranging from unique varieties of major African and Asian food staples such as maize, rice, wheat, cowpea, and sorghum to European and South American varieties of eggplant, lettuce, barley, and potato, the first deposits into the seed vault represent the most comprehensive and diverse collection of food crop seeds being held anywhere in the world. At the opening ceremony, the Prime Minister of Norway, Jens Stoltenberg, unlocked the vault and, together with the African Nobel Peace Prize-winning environmentalist Wangari Maathai, he placed the first seeds in the vault. The President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and a host of dignitaries and agriculture experts from around the globe deposited seeds during the ceremony. A variety of Norwegian musicians and choirs also performed in the opening ceremony held 130 metres deep inside the frozen mountain. Built near the village of Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen, the vault at its inception contains 268,000 distinct samples of seeds—each one originating from a different farm or field in the world. Each sample may contain hundreds of seeds or more. In all, the shipments of seeds secured in the vault today weighed approximately 10 tonnes, filling 676 boxes. The opening of the seed vault is part of an unprecedented effort to protect the planet’s rapidly diminishing biodiversity. The diversity of our crops is essential for food production, yet it is being lost. This “fail-safe” facility, dug deep into the frozen rock of an Arctic mountain, will secure for centuries, or longer, hundreds of millions of seeds representing every important crop variety available in the world today. As well as protecting against the daily loss of diversity, the vault could also prove indispensable for restarting agricultural production at the regional or global level in the wake of a natural or man-made disaster. Contingencies for climate change have been worked into the plan. Even in the worst-case scenarios of global warming, the vault rooms will remain naturally frozen for up to 200 years. “With climate change and other forces threatening the diversity of life that sustains our planet, Norway is proud to be playing a central role in creating a facility capable of protecting what are not just seeds, but the fundamental building blocks of human civilization,” said Norway’s Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg. “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, Executive Director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is funded and established by Norway as a service to the world. The Global Crop Diversity Trust is providing support for the ongoing operations of the seed vault, as well as organizing and funding the preparation and shipment of seeds from developing countries to the facility. NordGen will manage the facility and maintain a public on-line database of samples stored in the seed vault, which has the capacity to house 4.5 million samples—some 2 billion seeds. Prime Minister Stoltenberg and Wangari Maathai, founder of the African Green Belt Movement and 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, delivered together the first box of seeds to the vault. It contained rice seeds specially prepared with varieties originating from 104 countries. The box was opened during the ceremony, and then resealed before being placed in the vault. “The significant public interest in the seed vault project indicates that collectively we are changing the way we think about environmental conservation. We now understand that along with international movements to save endangered species and the rainforests of the world, it is just as important for us to conserve the diversity of the world’s crops for future generations,” Maathai said. “The opening of the seed vault marks a historic turning point in safeguarding the world’s crop diversity,’’ said Fowler. “But about 50 percent of the unique diversity stored in seed banks still is endangered. We are in the midst of trying to rescue these varieties. Our success means we will guarantee the conservation and availability of these wildly diverse crops. Forever.” http://www.enn.com/ecosystems/article/31808/print 2/26/2008 ENN: Arctic seed vault opens doors for 100 million seeds Page 2 of 2 Unique Building The building of the vault itself has attracted much outside interest due to its location and its unusual engineering, security, and aesthetic features. Its engineering allows it to stay cool with only a single 10-kilowatt compressor, which is powered by locally generated electricity. The vault consists of three highly secure rooms sitting at the end of a 125-metre tunnel blasted out of a mountain on Norway’s Svalbard archipelago. The seeds will be stored at minus 18 degrees Celsius (minus 0.4 degrees Fahrenheit) and sealed in specially-designed four-ply foil packages. The packages are sealed inside boxes and stored on shelves inside the vault. Each vault is surrounded by frozen arctic permafrost, ensuring the continued viability of the seeds should the electricity supply fail. The low temperature and moisture level inside the vaults will ensure low metabolic activity, keeping the seeds viable. If properly stored and maintained at minus 20 degrees Celsius (about minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit), some seeds in the vault will be viable for a millennium or more. For example, barley can last 2000 years, wheat 1700 years, and sorghum almost 20,000 years. Anyone seeking access to the seeds themselves will have to pass through four locked doors: the heavy steel entrance doors, a second door approximately 115 metres down the tunnel and finally the two keyed air-locked doors. Keys are coded to allow access to different levels of the facility. Not all keys will unlock all doors. Motion detectors are set up around the site. Boxes of seeds inside the rooms are scanned before entering the seed vault. A work of art also will make the vault visible for miles around. Artist Dyveke Sanne and KORO, the Norwegian agency overseeing art in public spaces, have worked together to fill the roof and vault entrance with highly reflective steel, mirrors, and prisms. The installation acts as a beacon, reflecting polar light in the summer months, while in the winter, a network of 200 fibre-optic cables will give the piece a muted greenish-turquoise and white light. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy 2007. Copyright Environmental News Network http://www.enn.com/ecosystems/article/31808/print 2/26/2008 Archives - lesoir.be Page 1 of 3 Le Soir en ligne Identifiant z z z z Mot de passe ok » recherche » mot de passe oublié? » s'inscrire » à propos des archives Retour à la recherche en cours Une Arche de Noé verte dans l’Arctique { Publié le Mardi 26 février 2008 dans INTERNET, page 0. { Publié le Mardi 26 février 2008 dans Soir en Ligne. 601 mots dans cet article Auteurs: n.c. Une « Arche de Noé verte » abritant des graines des principales cultures vivrières a été inaugurée mardi en plein cœur de l’Arctique, véritable cocon pour la diversité végétale menacée par les catastrophes naturelles, les guerres et le changement climatique. Enfouie dans une montagne de Longyearbyen, chef-lieu de l’archipel norvégien du Svalbard (Spitzberg), à 1.000 km du pôle Nord, la réserve de semences pourra accueillir jusqu’à 4,5 millions d’échantillons, deux fois plus que le nombre de variétés existant dans le monde. « C’est un jardin d’Eden glacé », a affirmé le président de la Commission européenne, José Manuel Barroso, lors de la cérémonie d’inauguration. Chaudement emmitouflés, la militante écologiste kényane et prix Nobel de la paix Wangari Maathai et le Premier ministre norvégien Jens Stoltenberg ont ensuite déposé symboliquement des graines de riz dans une des chambres froides. « Le monde est un endroit plus sûr aujourd’hui », a déclaré à l’AFP le père du projet, Cary Fowler, directeur du Fonds mondial pour la diversité des cultures (GCDT), peu après la cérémonie cosmopolite qui mêlait chant traditionnel lapon, musique d’inspiration africaine et choeur d’enfants. « Nous pouvons maintenant stocker en toute sécurité un nombre considérable de semences vulnérables et précieuses », a-t-il dit. Surplombant un fjord et ornée pour l’occasion de sculptures de glace et de lumières bleutées, la réserve de semences ressemble à un trident souterrain : un long tunnel débouche sur trois grandes alcôves. Les graines y reposeront dans des sachets hermétiques alignés sur des étagères métalliques. Seule l’entrée émerge de la montagne enneigée, laissant apparaître deux hautes parois surmontées d’une http://archives.lesoir.be/t-20080226-00F17Q.html?query=svalbard&andor=and&when=-1&sort=datedesc 2/29/2008 Archives - lesoir.be Page 2 of 3 oeuvre d’art faite de miroirs et de morceaux de fer qui forment un prisme visible, dit-on, des kilomètres à la ronde dans l’obscurité permanente et totale de l’hiver polaire. Un filet de sécurité pour l’avenir La réserve de semences fonctionnera comme un filet de sécurité. Elle conservera dans des conditions optimales, à -18ºC, des doubles de graines stockées dans les 1.400 banques de gènes existantes. Celles-ci n’offrent pas les mêmes garanties que la nouvelle venue : protégée par des tonnes de roc, des portes blindées et des parois en béton armé, elle peut résister à une chute d’avion ou à un missile nucléaire. Caméras de télésurveillance et ours polaires complètent le dispositif. Si une variété de culture vient à disparaître dans son milieu naturel, les Etats et institutions pourront récupérer les graines qu’ils ont déposées et dont ils demeurent propriétaires. Sous l’effet des maladies, du changement climatique ou encore des activités humaines, la diversité génétique s’appauvrit. En 1949, les paysans chinois cultivaient plus de 10.000 variétés de blé, dix fois moins 20 ans plus tard. Or, la diversité est indispensable pour mettre au point des cultures plus résistantes, moins gourmandes en eau et en engrais, aptes à s’adapter au réchauffement climatique et plus nutritives. D’autant qu’en 2050, il y aura 9 milliards de bouches à nourrir. « Nous espérons et œuvrons pour le meilleur, mais nous devons nous préparer au pire », a précisé M. Barroso. Grand comme deux fois la Belgique pour une population de 2.300 âmes, le Svalbard --où aucune culture ne pousse-- est considéré comme l’endroit idéal pour une réserve de semences. Isolé mais accessible, politiquement stable, l’archipel est recouvert d’un permafrost qui garantit à l’Arche suffisamment de fraîcheur même en cas de défaillance des systèmes de réfrigération. La réserve de semences a coûté environ 6 millions d’euros, financés par la Norvège. (d’après AFP) http://archives.lesoir.be/t-20080226-00F17Q.html?query=svalbard&andor=and&when=-1&sort=datedesc 2/29/2008 Archives - lesoir.be Page 3 of 3 Wangari Maathai et José Manuel Barroso. Photo AP z Retourner en haut http://archives.lesoir.be/t-20080226-00F17Q.html?query=svalbard&andor=and&when=-1&sort=datedesc 2/29/2008 The Norway Post : Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened Page 1 of 3 Norwegian Webcams Send flowers in Norway Top - Links Subscribe to newsletter Contact us Search SEARCH Tue, 26.02.2008 Path: / The Norway Post / News / Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened Front page Other news News 26.02.2008 Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened Business Sport Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened Weather The Svalbard Global Seed Vault (photo) was opened by Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg Tuesday. The facility will house seed samples of food plants from absolutely the entire world. Travel Culture Classifieds Education Counties Shopping FactsAbout / np 26.02.2008 09:08 Prime Minister Stoltenberg, unlocked the vault and, together with the African Nobel Peace Prize-winning environmentalist Wangari Maathai, he placed the first seeds in the vault. The President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and a host of dignitaries and agriculture experts from around the globe deposited seeds during the ceremony. A variety of Norwegian musicians and choirs also performed in the opening ceremony held 130 metres deep inside the frozen mountain. Features Calendar Hundreds of invited guests and representatives from international media werere present when the vault was opened. 26.02.2008 International disarmament conference in Oslo 26.02.2008 Norwegian troops may be sent to Southern Afghanistan 26.02.2008 Trains back on schedule 26.02.2008 Shipping: Odfjell contracts newbuildings in China 26.02.2008 Cross Country Skiing: Juniors on the way 25.02.2008 Islamabad Embassy open as usual 25.02.2008 Afghan Foreign Minister visits Norway Worship Advertise Norway Post Contact us Built near the village of Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen, the vault at its inception contains 268,000 distinct samples of seeds—each one originating from a different farm or field in the world. Each sample may contain hundreds of seeds or more. In all, the shipments of seeds secured in the vault today weighed approximately 10 tonnes, filling 676 boxes. The opening of the seed vault is part of an unprecedented effort to protect the planet’s rapidly diminishing biodiversity. The diversity of our crops is essential for food production, yet it is being lost. This “failsafe” facility, dug deep into the frozen rock of an Arctic mountain, will secure for centuries, or longer, hundreds of millions of seeds representing every important crop variety available in the world today. As well as protecting against the daily loss of diversity, the vault could also prove indispensable for restarting agricultural production at the regional or global level in the wake of a natural or man-made disaster. Contingencies for climate change have been worked into the plan. Even in the worst-case scenarios of global warming, the vault rooms will remain naturally frozen for up to 200 years. “With climate change and other forces threatening the diversity of life that sustains our planet, Norway is proud to be playing a central role in creating a facility capable of protecting what are not just seeds, but the fundamental building blocks of human civilization,” said Norway’s Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg. “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, Executive Director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust. Most popular 26.02.2008 Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened 26.02.2008 Norwegian troops may be sent to Southern Afghanistan The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is funded and established by Norway as a service to the world. The Global Crop Diversity Trust is providing support for the ongoing operations of the seed vault, as well as organizing and funding the preparation and shipment of seeds from developing countries to the facility. NordGen will manage the facility and maintain a public on-line database of samples stored in the seed vault, which has the capacity to house 4.5 million samples—some 2 billion seeds. 26.02.2008 International disarmament conference in Oslo Ola Westengen, operation manager of NordGen/Svalbard Global Seed Vault says the seeds come from every corner of the world: 26.02.2008 Shipping: Odfjell contracts newbuildings in China z We are getting several thousand numbers of potato seeds from CIP, the seed bank in Lima, Peru z 30,000 samples of different beans, plus a number of grass species are en route from CIAT in Colombia z CIMMYT in Mexico is shipping 47,000 seed samples of wheat and 10,000 types of maize z The seed banks in North America and Canada are each shipping several thousands samples of a large number of cultivars http://www.norwaypost.no/cgi-bin/norwaypost/imaker?id=132337 26.02.2008 Cross Country Skiing: Juniors on the way 21.06.2006 Afghan asylum seekers end hunger strike 2/26/2008 The Norway Post : Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened Page 2 of 3 z From Europe seeds are coming in from the Netherlands and Germany z 30,000 seed samples of mostly barley and wheat are coming from the region usually regarded as the cradle of agriculture, namely the Middle East. z Despite of all the conflicts going on in those countries, seeds from Kenya and Pakistan will be there for the opening. z The biggest contributor of all is IRRI in the Philippines. They are shipping 70,000 (!) different varieties of rice from 120 different countries Totally, seeds from almost every country in the world have arrived in Svalbard before the opening. Great enthusiasm “We have achieved an very good collaboration with all of the seed banks that are sending seeds to Svalbard. Enthusiasm for the project is great everywhere in the world. There may be a number of practical obstacles preventing some of the seed shipments from reaching the opening on the 26th of February. But none of those asked have answered no,” says Westengen. 4.5 million seed samples Svalbard Global Seed Vault consists of three enormous caverns blasted 130 metres into the permafrost outside Longyearbyen. The facility is designed to store duplicates of seeds from every corner of the world. With the capacity to store up to 4.5 million seed samples, the vault will eventually house seeds of as well as all important food plants in the world. If seeds are lost, e.g. as a result of natural disasters, war or simply a lack of resources, the seed collections may be reestablished using seeds from Svalbard. The seed vault is owned by Norway, which has also funded the entire project costing nearly NOK 50 million. (NRK/croptrust/Press release) Rolleiv Solholm Tell a friend Your e-mail address Recipients e-mail address Send Museums Festival Roots Travel&Public Transport Arts&crafts Food Attractions Science & Research http://www.norwaypost.no/cgi-bin/norwaypost/imaker?id=132337 2/26/2008 The Norway Post : Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened Page 3 of 3 Imaker Content Management Systems - © 1996 - 2005 Imaker as http://www.norwaypost.no/cgi-bin/norwaypost/imaker?id=132337 2/26/2008 Print Story: 'Doomsday' seed vault opens in Arctic on Yahoo! News Back to Story Page 1 of 2 - Help 'Doomsday' seed vault opens in Arctic By DOUG MELLGREN, Associated Press Writer 15 minutes ago 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. ___ On the Net: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080226/ap_on_re_eu/norway_doomsday_vault&printer=1 2/26/2008 Print Story: 'Doomsday' seed vault opens in Arctic on Yahoo! News Page 2 of 2 http://www.croptrust.org http://www.seedvault.no Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Copyright © 2007 Yahoo All rights reserved.Copyright/IP Policy |Terms of Service |Help |Feedback NOTICE: We collect personal information on this site. To learn more about how we use your information, see our» Privacy Policy http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080226/ap_on_re_eu/norway_doomsday_vault&printer=1 2/26/2008 Page 1 of 2 Web address: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/ 080226092753.htm Arctic 'Doomsday' Seed Vault Opens Doors For 100 Million Seeds ScienceDaily (Feb. 27, 2008) — The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened February 26 on a remote island in the Arctic Circle, receiving inaugural shipments of 100 million seeds that originated in over 100 countries. With the deposits ranging from unique varieties of major African and Asian food staples such as maize, rice, wheat, cowpea, and sorghum to European and South American varieties of eggplant, lettuce, barley, and potato, the first deposits into the seed vault represent the most comprehensive and diverse collection of food crop seeds being held anywhere in the world. At the opening ceremony, the Prime Minister of Norway, Jens Stoltenberg, unlocked the vault and, together with the African Nobel Peace Prize-winning environmentalist Wangari Maathai, he placed the first seeds in the vault. The President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and a host of dignitaries and agriculture experts from around the globe deposited seeds during the ceremony. A variety of Norwegian musicians and choirs also performed in the opening ceremony held 130 metres deep inside the frozen mountain. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened February 26 on a remote island in the Arctic Circle, receiving inaugural shipments of 100 million seeds that originated in over 100 countries. (Credit: Mari Tefre/Global Crop Diversity Trust) Built near the village of Longyearbyen on the island of Spitsbergen, the vault at its inception contains 268,000 distinct samples of seeds--each one originating from a different farm or field in the world. Each sample may contain hundreds of seeds or more. In all, the shipments of seeds secured in the vault today weighed approximately 10 tonnes, filling 676 boxes. The opening of the seed vault is part of an unprecedented effort to protect the planet's rapidly diminishing biodiversity. The diversity of our crops is essential for food production, yet it is being lost. This "fail-safe" facility, dug deep into the frozen rock of an Arctic mountain, will secure for centuries, or longer, hundreds of millions of seeds representing every important crop variety available in the world today. As well as protecting against the daily loss of diversity, the vault could also prove indispensable for restarting agricultural production at the regional or global level in the wake of a natural or man-made disaster. Contingencies for climate change have been worked into the plan. Even in the worst-case scenarios of global warming, the vault rooms will remain naturally frozen for up to 200 years. "With climate change and other forces threatening the diversity of life that sustains our planet, Norway is proud to be playing a central role in creating a facility capable of protecting what are not just seeds, but the fundamental building blocks of human civilization," said Norway's Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg. "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, Executive Director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is funded and established by Norway as a service to the world. The Global Crop Diversity Trust is providing support for the ongoing operations of the seed vault, as well as organizing and funding the preparation http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/080226092753.htm 2/27/2008 Page 2 of 2 and shipment of seeds from developing countries to the facility. NordGen will manage the facility and maintain a public on-line database of samples stored in the seed vault, which has the capacity to house 4.5 million samples--some 2 billion seeds. Prime Minister Stoltenberg and Wangari Maathai, founder of the African Green Belt Movement and 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, delivered together the first box of seeds to the vault. It contained rice seeds specially prepared with varieties originating from 104 countries. The box was opened during the ceremony, and then resealed before being placed in the vault. "The significant public interest in the seed vault project indicates that collectively we are changing the way we think about environmental conservation. We now understand that along with international movements to save endangered species and the rainforests of the world, it is just as important for us to conserve the diversity of the world's crops for future generations," Maathai said. "The opening of the seed vault marks a historic turning point in safeguarding the world's crop diversity,'' said Fowler. "But about 50 percent of the unique diversity stored in seed banks still is endangered. We are in the midst of trying to rescue these varieties. Our success means we will guarantee the conservation and availability of these wildly diverse crops. Forever." Unique Building The building of the vault itself has attracted much outside interest due to its location and its unusual engineering, security, and aesthetic features. Its engineering allows it to stay cool with only a single 10-kilowatt compressor, which is powered by locally generated electricity. The vault consists of three highly secure rooms sitting at the end of a 125-metre tunnel blasted out of a mountain on Norway's Svalbard archipelago. The seeds will be stored at minus 18 degrees Celsius (minus 0.4 degrees Fahrenheit) and sealed in specially-designed four-ply foil packages. The packages are sealed inside boxes and stored on shelves inside the vault. Each vault is surrounded by frozen arctic permafrost, ensuring the continued viability of the seeds should the electricity supply fail. The low temperature and moisture level inside the vaults will ensure low metabolic activity, keeping the seeds viable. If properly stored and maintained at minus 20 degrees Celsius (about minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit), some seeds in the vault will be viable for a millennium or more. For example, barley can last 2000 years, wheat 1700 years, and sorghum almost 20,000 years. Anyone seeking access to the seeds themselves will have to pass through four locked doors: the heavy steel entrance doors, a second door approximately 115 metres down the tunnel and finally the two keyed air-locked doors. Keys are coded to allow access to different levels of the facility. Not all keys will unlock all doors. Motion detectors are set up around the site. Boxes of seeds inside the rooms are scanned before entering the seed vault. A work of art also will make the vault visible for miles around. Artist Dyveke Sanne and KORO, the Norwegian agency overseeing art in public spaces, have worked together to fill the roof and vault entrance with highly reflective steel, mirrors, and prisms. The installation acts as a beacon, reflecting polar light in the summer months, while in the winter, a network of 200 fibre-optic cables will give the piece a muted greenish-turquoise and white light. Adapted from materials provided by Svalbard Global Seed Vault. Need to cite this story in your essay, paper, or report? Use one of the following formats: APA MLA Svalbard Global Seed Vault (2008, February 27). Arctic 'Doomsday' Seed Vault Opens Doors For 100 Million Seeds. ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 27, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/080226092753.htm http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/02/080226092753.htm 2/27/2008 LaLibre.be - Bienvenue sur la Libre Belgique Page 1 of 2 NO RVÈG E - ENVIRONNEMENT Une chambre forte verte G.T. Mis en ligne le 27/02/2008 ----------- Une chambre forte va abriter des échantillons des espèces végétales indispensables de la planète. Une sorte de police d'assurances pour l'avenir. C'est un bunker hors du commun qui a été inauguré lundi dans les entrailles d'une montagne située sur une île isolée de l'archipel norvégien du Svalbard, à un millier de kilomètres du pôle Nord. Protégé par l'hostilité des lieux, cet entrepôt souterrain de 800 m2 conçu comme une véritable forteresse doit en effet abriter les doubles de plus de quatre millions d'échantillons de semences issues des principales cultures alimentaires de la planète (riz, blé, pommes de terre...). Une "Arche de Noé" des espèces végétales qui doit en quelque sorte servir de filet de sécurité afin de garantir la pérennité de ces ressources essentielles à la survie de l'Humanité en cas de catastrophe majeure. Si quelque 1 400 "banques génétiques" de ce type existent à travers le monde, aucune n'offre en effet les mêmes garanties de sécurité que la "Svalbard Global Seed Vault" dotée de portes blindées à l'épreuve des explosions, de caméras de surveillance, de détecteurs de mouvements et de murs en béton armé d'un mètre d'épaisseur incrustés dans la montagne. De l'extérieur, seule est visible l'entrée de l'édifice. Cette chambre forte est aussi une chambre froide équipée de systèmes de réfrigération qui permettront de conserver les graines à une température idéale de -18 ° C. En outre, en cas de défaillance, le permafrost (sol gelé en permanence) qui entoure le bâtiment lui garantira une réfrigération naturelle suffisante. Enveloppées dans des emballages hermétiques les protégeant de l'humidité, les semences seront ainsi soigneusement classées sur des étagères métalliques. Situé à 130 mètres au-dessus du niveau de la mer, le site est également censé échapper à une éventuelle montée des océans. Un "jardin d'Eden glacé" "C'est un jardin d'Eden glacé", a déclaré le président de la Commission européenne, José Manuel Barroso, convié lundi à la cérémonie d'inauguration à laquelle était également présente la militante écologiste kényane et prix Nobel de la paix, Wangari Maathai. Entamée en 2006, sa construction aura coûté 6 millions d'euros financés par la Norvège. Mais l'"arche" serait également indirectement sponsorisée par des donateurs privés tels la Fondation Bill Gates, la Fondation Rockefeller ou encore les principaux représentants de l'industrie semencière - ce que les milieux altermondialistes ne voient pas d'un bon oeil. La gestion du site sera assurée par la Banque nordique des gènes, et les pays d'origine des semences resteront propriétaires de celles-ci. Face à l'érosion croissante et accélérée de la biodiversité qui est notamment menacée par les activités humaines mais aussi par les catastrophes naturelles, les guerres, les changements climatiques ou encore les problèmes de gestion qu'ont connus les banques de gènes de certains pays en développement, l'abri de Svalbard représente donc une ultime police d'assurances. Il doit permettre de disposer des patrimoines végétaux originaux à partir desquels on pourrait reconstituer des cultures viables en cas de problème majeur, comme l'apparition d'une maladie inconnue pour une espèce par exemple. http://www.lalibre.be/article_print.phtml?art_id=404874 2/29/2008 LaLibre.be - Bienvenue sur la Libre Belgique Page 2 of 2 Cet article provient de http://www.lalibre.be http://www.lalibre.be/article_print.phtml?art_id=404874 2/29/2008 Europa - ELTIEMPO.COM -> Crean un 'Arca de Noé' para salvar a las semillas del mundo Page 1 of 2 PARTICIPACIÓN: BLOGS | FOROS | REPORTAJES GRÁFICOS | Zona de Usuarios: >Registro >Ingreso ¿QUÉ ES ESTO? Patrocinado por: Colombia - Jueves 28 de febrero de 2008 Noticias Deportes Tecnología Entretenimiento Bogotá Ciencia/Ecología Conflicto armado Economía Colombianos en España Elecciones EU 2008 EU - Canadá Editorial Clasificados Internacional Justicia Europa Latinoamérica El Tiempo Impreso Multimedia Servicios Nación Política Cultura Vida de hoy Oriente Medio Otras Regiones Contacto Ayuda RSS Salud eltiempo.com / internacional / europa Artículo 1 de 6 >> Publicidad Febrero 28 de 2008 Crean un 'Arca de Noé' para salvar a las semillas del mundo El objetivo es preservar la biodiversidad agrícola del planeta. Colombia ya envío 30.000 semillas. Preservar en una cámara hermética a millones de semillas y salvar así la capacidad de la humanidad para cultivar sus alimentos es el propósito con el que fue construida una singular 'Arca de Noé', capaz de mantener su contenido a salvo de los cambios climáticos, terremotos, guerras y hasta explosiones nucleares, y que esta semana fue inaugurada en el norte de Europa. Foto: AP La instalación (en la foto) fue diseñada para resistir terremotos, deshielos y hasta un ataque con armas nucleares. La Cámara Mundial de Semillas de Svalbard está ubicada en el remoto archipiélago noruego del mismo nombre (a unos 1.000 kms del polo norte) y fue ubicada dentro de una montaña de esta zona ártica. "Es nuestra póliza de seguro", dijo el primer ministro noruego Jens Stoltenberg a los delegados en la ceremonia inaugural. Y añadió: "Es el Arca de Noé para asegurar la diversidad biológica a las generaciones futuras". El presidente de la Comisión Europea José Manuel Barroso, y el keniano Wangar Maathai, ganador del Premio Nobel de la Paz del 2004, estuvieron entre docenas de invitados a la presentación en sociedad de la cámara, que estará ubicada a 130 metros de profundidad. 4,5 millones de semillas La cámara, que formará parte de una red de bancos de semillas en el mundo, tiene la capacidad para almacenar 4,5 millones de muestras de semillas de todo el mundo y protegerlas de desastres. Y, si fuera necesario, sería utilizada para 'refundar' la agricultura a nivel mundial. La bóveda principal, de 5 metros de alto, 5 de ancho y 15 de altura, ha sido construida para resistir un terremoto o un ataque nuclear. En esta 'Arca de Noé vegetal' no habrá ninguna persona, pues las instalaciones serán manejadas y vigiladas a distancia gracias controles remotos, detectores y cámaras. La seguridad será formidable, pues habrá que atravesar cuatro puertas blindadas antes de llegar a las semillas. Y su apertura solo será posible con una llave electrónica. Noruega es propietaria de la cámara de Svalbard, sin embargo, otros países pueden depositar semillas en ella y reservarse el derecho a retirarlas si llegaran a necesitarlas. Colombia decidió participar en el proyecto y a través del Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical envío 30.000 semillas de variedades de yuca, fijol y otros alimentos. Las semillas se mantendrán congeladas a una temperatura de entre 10 y 20 grados centígrados. Pero incluso si los sistemas fallaran, la temperatura de la helada montaña las mantendría a menos 4 grados centígrados: temperatura suficiente para salvar a la mayor parte de ellas. El gobierno noruego pagó 6 millones de euros para la construcción del complejo, que demoró poco menos de un año. file://C:\Documents and Settings\amhernandez\Desktop\noticias\las que son\Europa - EL... 30/07/2008 Europa - ELTIEMPO.COM -> Crean un 'Arca de Noé' para salvar a las semillas del mundo Page 2 of 2 La cámara se inauguró con 268.000 variedades distintas de semillas, Y algunas de ellas, como las del sorgo, pueden durar hasta 20 mil años. LONGYEARBYEN, NORUEGA (AP) Herramientas Comentar Enviar Imprimir Reportar file://C:\Documents and Settings\amhernandez\Desktop\noticias\las que son\Europa - EL... 30/07/2008 #cnnSTCVideo#cnnSTCVideo#cnnSTCVideo Page 1 of 2 Powered by 'Doomsday' seed vault opens in Norway z z z z Story Highlights Ultimate safety net for the world's seed collections has opened in Norway The vault received inaugural shipments of 100 million seeds Norwegian govt. built vault in glacial mountain between Norway and North Pole LONGYEARBYEN, Norway (CNN) -- A vast underground vault storing millions of seeds from around the world took delivery of its first shipment Tuesday. Dubbed the "Doomsday Vault," the seed bank on a remote island near the Arctic Ocean is considered the ultimate safety net for the world's seed collections, protecting them from a wide range of threats including war, natural disasters, lack of funding or simply poor agricultural management. Norwegian musicians performed Tuesday as part of an elaborate opening ceremony marking the opening of the vault, located 130 meters (427 feet) inside a frozen mountain. Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan environmental and political activist who won the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize, placed the first seeds inside the vault, followed by other dignitaries. The inaugural shipment represent 268,000 distinct samples of seeds, with each sample containing a hundred-plus seeds and originating from a different farm or field around the world. In all, the shipment of seeds secured in the vault Tuesday weighed approximately 10 tons, filling 676 boxes. The shipment amounts to a 100 million seeds in total, ranging from major African and Asian food staples like maize, rice, and wheat to European and South American varieties of eggplant, lettuce, barley, and potato, according to the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which is paying to collect and maintain the seeds. Watch as "Doomsday" seed vault opens » Eventually the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, as it is officially known, will hold as many as 4.5 million distinct samples of seeds -- or some 2 billion seeds in total -- encompassing almost every variety of most important food crops in the world, the Global Crop Diversity Trust said. The Norwegian government paid to build the vault in a mountainside near Longyearbyen, in the remote Svalbard islands between Norway and the North Pole. Building began last year. The United Nations founded the trust in 2004 to support the long-term conservation of crop diversity, and countries and foundations provide the funding. "The seed vault is the perfect place for keeping seeds safe for centuries," said Cary Fowler, executive director of the trust. "At these temperatures, seeds for important crops like wheat, barley and peas can last for up to 10,000 years." The vault's location deep inside a mountain in the frozen north ensures the seeds can be stored safely no matter what happens outside. "We believe the design of the facility will ensure that the seeds will stay well-preserved even if such forces as global warming raise temperatures outside the facility," said Magnus Bredeli Tveiten, project manager for the Norwegian government. The vault sits at the end of a 120-meter (131-yard) tunnel blasted inside the mountain. Workers used a refrigeration system to bring the vault to -18 degrees Celsius (just below 0 degrees Fahrenheit), and a smaller refrigeration system plus the area's natural permafrost and the mountain's thick rock will keep the vault at at least -4 C (25 F). The vault at Svalbard is similar to an existing seed bank in Sussex, England, about an hour outside London. The British vault, called the Millennium Seed Bank, is part of an scientific project that works with wild plants, as opposed to the seeds of crops. Paul Smith, the leader of the Millennium Seed Bank project, said preserving the seeds of wild plants is just as important as preserving the seeds of vital crops. http://cnn.site.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=%23cnnSTCVideo%23cnnSTCVideo%23cn... 2/29/2008 #cnnSTCVideo#cnnSTCVideo#cnnSTCVideo Page 2 of 2 "We must give ourselves every option in the future to use the whole array of plant diversity that is available to us," Smith told CNN. The idea for the Arctic seed bank dates to the 1980s but only became a possibility after the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources came into force in 2004, the Norwegian government said. The treaty provided an international framework for conserving and accessing crop diversity. Svalbard is designed to store duplicates of seeds from seed collections around the world. The Norwegian government says it has paid 50 million Norwegian Kroner ($9.4 million) to build the seed vault. CNN's Becky Anderson contributed to this report. All AboutNorway Find this article at: http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/02/26/norway.seeds/index.html#cnnSTCVideo Check the box to include the list of links referenced in the article. © 2008 Cable News Network http://cnn.site.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=%23cnnSTCVideo%23cnnSTCVideo%23cn... 2/29/2008