Yale Climate ConnectionsPolicyJul 3 Super Typhoon Bavi becomes the 3rd Cat 5 of 2026
Bavi is expected to pass through the U.S. Northern Mariana Islands near Tinian and Saipan islands Sunday afternoon (U.S. EDT) as a Cat 5, potentially causing catastrophic damage. The post Super Typhoon Bavi becomes the 3rd Cat 5 of 2026 appeared first on Yale Climate Connections.
Abatify Summary
**Super Typhoon Bavi highlights the escalating physical risks of extreme weather events to coastal ecosystems, severely threatening Blue Carbon and LULUCF projects in the Pacific.**
- Catastrophic storm surges and high-velocity winds pose acute permanence risks, threatening to reverse carbon sequestration in coastal Blue Carbon assets.
- Extreme meteorological events destabilize local LULUCF frameworks, causing immediate biomass loss and long-term soil carbon degradation.
- The rapid succession of Category 5 typhoons undermines baseline ecological resilience, hindering the recovery of biodiversity and native habitats.
**The intensification of extreme weather events forces a critical re-evaluation of carbon credit permanence under the ICVCM Core Carbon Principles (CCPs) and strengthens the need for robust buffer pools.**
- Market participants must recalibrate risk premiums and insurance mechanisms for nature-based offsets to align with ICVCM CCP requirements on permanence and risk mitigation.
- Systemic physical risks of this magnitude threaten Scope 3 supply chain resilience, potentially disrupting corporate decarbonization pathways aligned with SBTi.
- Under Article 6.2 and 6.4, the physical destruction of mitigation outcomes highlights the urgent need for robust accounting frameworks to handle force majeure events in ITMO registries.