Current:Home > reviewsWorld Food Prize goes to 2 who helped protect vital seeds in an Arctic Circle vault -USAMarket
World Food Prize goes to 2 who helped protect vital seeds in an Arctic Circle vault
View
Date:2025-04-18 18:18:05
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Two men who were instrumental in the “craziest idea anyone ever had” of creating a global seed vault designed to safeguard the world’s agricultural diversity will be honored as the 2024 World Food Prize laureates, officials announced Thursday in Washington.
Cary Fowler, the U.S. special envoy for Global Food Security, and Geoffrey Hawtin, an agricultural scientist from the United Kingdom and executive board member at the Global Crop Diversity Trust, will be awarded the annual prize this fall in Des Moines, Iowa, where the food prize foundation is based. They will split a $500,000 award.
The winners of the prize were named at the State Department, where Secretary or State Antony Blinken lauded the men for their “critical role in preserving crop diversity” at seed banks around the world and at a global seed vault, which now protects over 6,000 varieties of crops and culturally important plants.
Fowler and Hawtin were leaders in effort starting about 2004 to build a back-up vault of the world’s crop seeds at a spot where it could be safe from political upheaval and environmental changes. A location was chosen on a Norwegian island in the Arctic Circle where temperatures could ensure seeds could be kept safe in a facility built into the side of a mountain.
The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened in 2008 and now holds 1.25 million seed samples from nearly every country in the world.
Fowler, who first proposed establishing the seed vault in Norway, said his idea initially was met by puzzlement by the leaders of seed banks in some countries.
“To a lot of people today, it sounds like a perfectly reasonable thing to do. It’s a valuable natural resource and you want to offer robust protection for it,” he said in an interview from Saudi Arabia. “Fifteen years ago, shipping a lot of seeds to the closest place to the North Pole that you can fly into, putting them inside a mountain — that’s the craziest idea anybody ever had.”
Hundreds of smaller seed banks have existed in other countries for many decades, but Fowler said he was motivated by a concern that climate change would throw agriculture into turmoil, making a plentiful seed supply even more essential.
Hawtin said that there were plenty of existing crop threats, such as insects, diseases and land degradation, but that climate change heightened the need for a secure, backup seed vault. In part, that’s because climate change has the potential of making those earlier problems even worse.
“You end up with an entirely new spectrum of pests and diseases under different climate regimes,” Hawtin said in an interview from southwest England. “Climate change is putting a whole lot of extra problems on what has always been significant ones.”
Fowler and Hawtin said they hope their selection as World Food Prize laureates will enable them push for hundreds of millions of dollars in additional funding of seed bank endowments around the world. Maintaining those operations is relatively cheap, especially when considering how essential they are to ensuring a plentiful food supply, but the funding needs continue forever.
“This is really a chance to get that message out and say, look, this relatively small amount of money is our insurance policy, our insurance policy that we’re going to be able to feed the world in 50 years,” Hawtin said.
The World Food Prize was founded by Norman Borlaug, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for his part in the Green Revolution, which dramatically increased crop yields and reduced the threat of starvation in many countries. The food prize will be awarded at the annual Norman E. Borlaug International Dialogue, held Oct. 29-31 in Des Moines.
veryGood! (79216)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Family sues after teen’s 2022 death at Georgia detention center
- France’s train network hit by 'massive attack' before Olympics opening ceremony
- Horoscopes Today, July 26, 2024
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Bougie bear cub takes a dip in $6.9M mansion pool in North Carolina: See video
- Jensen Ackles returns to 'The Boys' final season, stars in 'Vought Rising' spinoff
- Olympics schedule today: Every event, time, competition at Paris Games for July 26
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Leagues Cup soccer schedule: How to watch, what to know about today's opening games
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Powerful cartel leader ‘El Mayo’ Zambada was lured onto airplane before arrest in US, AP source says
- Canadian Olympic Committee Removes CWNT Head Coach After Drone Spying Scandal
- A look at ‘El Mayo’ Zambada, the kingpin of Mexico’s Sinaloa drug cartel who is now in US custody
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Scores of wildfires are scorching swaths of the US and Canada. Here’s the latest on them
- Dodgers Player Freddie Freeman's 3-Year-Old Son Can't Stand or Walk Amid Viral Infection
- Steward Health Care announces closure of 2 Massachusetts hospitals
Recommendation
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Christian Nodal, Ángela Aguilar get married nearly 2 months after announcing relationship
New York City turns to AI-powered scanners in push to keep guns out of the subway system
Watch a shark's perspective as boat cuts across her back, damaging skin, scraping fin
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Arkansas standoff ends with suspect dead after exchange of gunfire with law enforcement
New Ohio law mandates defibrillators in schools, sports venues after 2023 collapse of Bills’ Hamlin
Arkansas abortion measure’s signatures from volunteers alone would fall short, filing shows