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How extreme heat threatens honeybees » Yale Climate Connections

Abatify Summary

Nature & Climate Perspective

**Extreme heat-induced collapse of pollinator populations directly threatens the ecological integrity and carbon sequestration permanence of Nature-Based Solutions (NBS). **

  • Overwhelmed thermal regulation in honeybees disrupts plant-pollinator mutualisms, risking rapid declines in forest and grassland biodiversity.
  • Degraded pollination services reduce the reproductive success of angiosperms, directly compromising the long-term carbon sink capacity of LULUCF projects.
  • Weakened ecosystem stability increases vulnerability to secondary climate stressors, undermining the ecological permanence required for high-quality carbon crediting.

Market & Policy Outlook

**Systemic risks to agricultural supply chains and biodiversity loss necessitate stricter alignment with ICVCM Core Carbon Principles (CCPs) regarding environmental safeguards and SBTi Nature targets. **

  • The loss of wild and managed pollinators triggers significant Scope 3 supply chain volatility, directly impacting agricultural assets and corporate sustainability disclosures.
  • Carbon crediting programs must integrate rigorous biodiversity metrics to comply with ICVCM 'Do No Harm' safeguards, safeguarding projects against ecological collapse.
  • Financial markets are expected to increasingly discount LULUCF-derived carbon offsets that fail to prove resilient pollinator and biodiversity baselines under extreme heat scenarios.
Hot temperatures can overwhelm bees’ natural cooling systems.

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