The (London) Times Life & Style (Women) section had a feature on the Millennium Seed Bank a few days ago and somehow or other we missed it. Slap wrist.
The jars of dried seed go into the cold store, an underground library full of sliding stacks of shelves, every one full of glass jars holding even tinier glass jars. The temperature is -20C but the air-conditioning system creates a further wind-chill.
In that room, the size of a corner shop, are seeds of 10 per cent of the world’s plants. Beyond is another, larger room that one day, Smith hopes, will hold the rest. Empty shelves stretch away into the gloom.
One quibble. The article makes the Svalbard Global Seed Vault sound like a purely Norwegian affair, which of course it isn’t.
Regarding the funding of the Seed Vault, the Norwegian government funded the construction of the Vault in its entirety (this cost $9 million), and will continue to fund the maintenance of the facility, for an annual cost of circa $150,000. The Global Crop Diversity Trust funds the operation and management of the Seed Vault, as well as the transport of the seeds from developing countries to the Arctic. This second component – the transport – is possible through our work with the United Nations Foundation, a partnership which is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.