Background
Skovmand, Bent was born on January 25, 1945 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Son of Sigurd Skovmand and Ragnhild Pedersen.
Skovmand, Bent was born on January 25, 1945 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Son of Sigurd Skovmand and Ragnhild Pedersen.
After serving in the Danish Army, Skovmand attended the University of Minnesota in the United States as part of the Minnesota Agricultural Student Trainee international exchange program He graduated in 1971 with a major in biological and physical sciences in agriculture, and then earned his masters in 1973 and doctorate in 1976 both in Plant Pathology from the University of Minnesota
After completing his doctorate, he joined the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in El Batán, Mexico, where he studied older seed strains and genetic variation among widespread strains.
Time Magazine wrote in 1991 that Skovmand, ""while not exactly a household name," had had "more to do with the welfare of the world"s five billion people than many heads of state.""
He also worked with governments and farmers across the world to increase the use of the advanced crops being developed. Continuing his work on preserving the genetic diversity among wheats, barleys, and oats, he was appointed the director of the Nordic Gene Bank, based in Alnarp, Sweden, in 2003, and founded the Svalbard International Seed Vault. The Seed Vault, also called the "Doomsday Vault", is supported by the Global Crop Diversity Trust and aims to preserve "the raw material of agriculture" to make it available for breeding and research even in the advent of disaster, war, or climate change.
The Vault was scheduled to open in late 2008.
Skovmand was opposed to patenting individual genes, describing it as "like copyrighting each and every word in Hamlet, and saying no one can use any word used in Hamlet without paying the author". He routinely released his catalogs of agricultural information on CDs, which he gave away for free, never attempting to patent the work.
In his work with the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, Skovmand set up collaborations with for-profit companies to develop improved strains of agricultural staples, with the proviso that patents not be used in developing nations. Skovmand fell ill in January 2007, and died February 6, 2007, at age 62 in Kävlinge, Sweden, from complications from a malignant brain tumour.
Member Danes International. Fellow: Crop Science Society of America, American Society Agronomy.
Married Eugenia De Los Angeles Araujo, September 25, 1981. Children: Kirsten, Annelise, Francisco, Astrid.