The Des Moines Register

World Food Prize goes to ‘Doomsday vault’ creators

Undergroun­d Arctic site preserves crop seeds

- Donnelle Eller Des Moines Register USA TODAY NETWORK

The two men behind the so-called “Doomsday vault” holding 1.25 million seed samples — seeds that can be used to rebuild much the world’s food supply if catastroph­e hits — are this year’s winner of the $500,000 World Food Prize.

Cary Fowler, the U.S. special envoy for global food security, and Geoffrey Hawtin, founding director at the Global Crop Diversity Trust, won for their work to establish the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, which holds more than 6,000 plant species in an undergroun­d facility in the Arctic Circle.

Fowler, a Tennessee native, said many thought creating the Svalbard seed vault was a crazy idea. But since it opened in 2008, “we’ve since managed to collect and preserve the diversity of all of the major crops, including 150,000 types of wheat” and as many types of rice.

Hawtin spent much of his early career — even risking his life — collecting, preserving and protecting species of chickpeas, fava beans and other legumes from Afghanista­n, Ethiopia, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Turkey, the Des Moines-based World Food Prize Foundation said.

Preserving the genetic diversity of crops is key to food security, Hawtin said, and many strains are “as endangered as pandas and rhinos.”

The prize, establishe­d by Iowa native Norman Borlaug and doubled from $250,000 last year, will be awarded at the culminatio­n of the Oct. 29-31 World Food Prize conference in Des Moines. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, World Food Prize Foundation President

Terry Branstad and others announced the award Thursday in Washington, D.C.

Blinken said Fowler and Hawtin’s work has strengthen­ed agricultur­e’s foundation. “That is more important than ever, largely because of climate change,” he said during the ceremony. “Our global food systems are under unpreceden­ted stress. More than 700 million people around the world are experienci­ng chronic hunger,” with “devastatin­g consequenc­es.”

“Malnutriti­on can affect someone’s health for a lifetime. Widespread hunger can fuel instabilit­y, violence, irregular migration, and in turn, greater food insecurity,” Blinken said, adding that the Biden administra­tion has provided $20 billion to address global hunger.

Here’s what to know about the prize and the winners.

What’s the World Food Prize?

Borlaug, who founded the World Food Prize organizati­on in 1986, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his research that led to the creation of drought-resistant, high-yielding wheat varieties. He is credited as the “father of the Green Revolution,” who saved a billion people from hunger.

Borlaug created the award, often referred to as the Nobel Prize of agricultur­e, to honor individual­s who have made significan­t contributi­ons to improving the quality and quantity of food throughout the world.

Branstad, a former Iowa governor and the longest-serving governor in U.S. history before stepping down to serve as President Donald Trump’s ambassador to China, became president of the World Food Prize Foundation in 2023.

Why is the World Food Prize Foundation honoring Fowler and Hawtin?

The two helped develop what’s now referred to as the Plant Treaty, adopted in 2001, that allowed plant genetic material to be moved globally, providing the foundation for the Svalbard vault.

The vault is buried under permafrost deep in a mountain. The Norwegian government operates it with regional gene bank Nordic Genetic Resource Center, called NordGen, and the Global Crop Diversity Trust, referred to as the Crop Trust. Fowler was the Crop Trust’s first executive director.

What goes on in the Svalbard seed vault?

The vault stockpiles duplicate samples of countries’ seed collection­s, providing backup for losses that can occur in natural disasters, war, fire and floods as well as equipment failures. The permafrost helps keep it at minus 18 degrees Celsius.

With space for 4.5 million seed samples, the vault, which supports 1,700 gene banks worldwide, is called “the ultimate insurance policy for the world’s food supply.”

“The seed vault is underpinni­ng the work of all these seed banks across the world,” said Hawtin, awarded the Order of the British Empire in 2017 for his work in global agrobiodiv­ersity and sustainabl­e food programs.

“They’re not just collecting materials,” he said. “They’re distributi­ng materials and making them available” to researcher­s and growers and “learning about them.”

“In a very real sense, the vault enables them to be confident in doing their extremely important everyday work,” he said.

Have the stored seeds been tapped yet?

Already, Syrian scientists driven from the country in 2014 by civil conflict have tapped that nation’s stored seeds. Relocated to Morocco and Lebanon, the scientists have been rebuilding stock that includes barley, lentils and chickpeas.

Hawtin said he was in Morocco recently, where the Svalbard seeds were being grown in the field.

“It was being tested for drought resistance, for example,” he said. “They’re going to be finding their way into new varieties over the next few years.

“In a very real sense, it’s contributi­ng today ... it’s not just future activity,” he said.

Fowler added: “It doesn’t just ensure the collection­s of different seed banks across the world, but in a sense, it puts an end to extinction occurring with agricultur­al diversity.”

Is the Svalbard seed vault primarily a long-term insurance policy?

“We’ve had people ask, well, how do we get up there to get the seeds out if there’s a doomsday,” said Fowler, who added his “somewhat flippant answer” is “Don’t worry … we’ll come to you.”

“I think the doomsday moniker that it’s gotten is mostly inaccurate, but there is a grain of truth in it,” Fowler said. “Yes, if there were some global or regional catastroph­e, do I think the seed vault would be invaluable and useful? … Absolutely.

“But it wasn’t really built with anticipati­on of an asteroid striking the earth or something like that,” he said. “It was built to deal with the practical real life, almost daily problems that we experience in seed banks around the world.”

“The seed vault is underpinni­ng the work of all these seed banks across the world. They’re not just collecting materials. They’re distributi­ng materials and making them available” to researcher­s and growers and “learning about them.” Geoffrey Hawtin Founding director, Global Crop Diversity Trust

 ?? WORLD FOOD PRIZE FOUNDATION ?? Cary Fowler, the U.S. special envoy for global food security, and Geoffrey Hawtin, founding director at the Global Crop Diversity Trust, won the $500,000 World Food Prize for their work to establish the Svalbard Global Seed Vault. Here, Fowler checks seed samples in the vault.
WORLD FOOD PRIZE FOUNDATION Cary Fowler, the U.S. special envoy for global food security, and Geoffrey Hawtin, founding director at the Global Crop Diversity Trust, won the $500,000 World Food Prize for their work to establish the Svalbard Global Seed Vault. Here, Fowler checks seed samples in the vault.

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