The Independent ClimatePolicyJun 15 Climate crisis is changing when plants flower, artificial intelligence study finds
A global study using AI to analyse eight million digitalised plant specimens dating back a century revealed flowering has shifted by 2.5 days earlier or later per decade on average
Abatify Summary
**Shifting plant phenology disrupts critical ecological interactions, directly threatening the long-term stability and permanence of nature-based carbon sequestration.**
- Disrupted phenology decouples mutualistic relationships between plants and pollinators, accelerating localized biodiversity loss.
- Unpredictable flowering schedules alter biomass accumulation rates, complicating carbon baseline modeling in forest ecosystems.
- Accelerated climate shifts increase vegetation vulnerability to mismatch-induced stress, raising the risk of reversal in carbon sinks.
**Altered ecological baselines challenge the reliability of nature-based carbon credits under ICVCM guidelines, driving a market demand for more dynamic monitoring frameworks.**
- ICVCM Core Carbon Principles (CCPs) concerning robust quantification are compromised as historical LULUCF baselines become obsolete due to shifting climate variables.
- Project developer risk profiles are increasing, likely driving a price premium for highly monitored Article 6.4 mechanism projects that utilize real-time AI and satellite verification.
- Corporate buyers aiming for SBTi compliance may increasingly pivot capital toward hybrid technical removal solutions to hedge against the permanence risks of traditional LULUCF offsets.