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Norway doomsday seed vault hits 1/2 million mark

2010-03-12 08:20:59

By IAN MacDOUGALL, Associated Press Writer Ian Macdougall, Associated Press

Writer Wed Mar 10, 7:01 pm ET

OSLO, Norway Two years after receiving its first deposits, a "doomsday" seed

vault on an Arctic island has amassed half a million seed samples, making it

the world's most diverse repository of crop seeds, the vault's operators

announced Thursday.

Cary Fowler who heads the trust that oversees the seed collection, which is

620 miles (1,000 kilometers) from the North Pole, said the facility now houses

at least one-third of the world's crop seeds.

"In my lifetime, I don't think we'll go over 1.5 million. I'd be rather

surprised if we go over a million," Fowler told The Associated Press. "At that

point, we'd have all the diversity in the world ... and the most secure

samples."

Located in Norway's remote Svalbard archipelago, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault

is a safeguard against wars or natural disasters wiping out food crops around

the globe. It was opened in 2008 as a master backup to the world's other 1,400

seed banks, in case their deposits are lost.

War wiped out seed banks in Iraq and Afghanistan, and another bank in the

Philippines was flooded in the wake of a typhoon in 2006. The Svalbard bank is

designed to withstand global warming, earthquakes and even nuclear strikes.

Despite the rapid progress, Fowler said the bank still has significant holes in

its collection.

"There are a few unique collections that we don't have up there yet Ethiopia

and some of the Indian materials and some of the Chinese materials," he said.

The most recent additions include a mold-resistant bean from Colombia and a

collection of nearly every agricultural soybean species developed in the U.S.

in the last century.