AI gets buzzier

The beehive gets an upgrade | Today's newsletter looks at h o w robotic hives and...
The beehive gets an upgrade |
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Today's newsletter looks at how robotic hives and AI are lowering the risk of bee colony collapse. You can read and share the full story with your friends and followers on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe

AI gets buzzier

By Brian Kahn

Lifting up the hood of a Beewise hive feels more like you're getting ready to examine the engine of a car than visit with a few thousand pollinators. 

The unit — dubbed a BeeHome — is an industrial upgrade from the standard wooden beehives, all clad in white metal and solar panels. Inside sits a high-tech scanner and robotic arm powered by artificial intelligence. Roughly 300,000 of these units are in use across the US, scattered across fields of almond, canola, pistachios and other crops that require pollination to grow.

It's not exactly the romantic vision of a beehive or beekeeper lodged in the cultural consciousness, but then that's not what matters; keeping bees alive does. And Beewise's units do that dramatically better than the standard hive, providing constant insights on colony health and the ability to provide treatment should it start to falter.

The US has observed a startling uptick in the number of die-offs since the mid-2000s as beekeepers have struggled to keep pace with the rise of disease-carrying mites, climate extremes and other stressors that can wipe out colonies. That's endangering billions of dollars in crops from almonds to avocados that rely on the pollinators. This past year saw the worst colony losses on record. Beewise has raised nearly $170 million, including a $50 million Series D earlier this month, and it has a plan to change the industry. 

The Beewise hive exterior is made of white metal and solar panels. Photographer: Kelsey McClellan/Bloomberg

AI and robotics are able to replace "90% of what a beekeeper would do in the field," said Beewise Chief Executive Officer and co-founder Saar Safra. The question is whether beekeepers are willing to switch out what's been tried and true equipment.

Ultimately, the fate of humans is tied to that of bees. Roughly 75% of crops require pollinators, with nuts and fruits particularly dependent. While other species of bees and insects can play a role, they can't replace honeybees. 

"There would essentially be no crop without the bees," said Zac Ellis, the senior director of agronomy at OFI, a global food and ingredient seller.

The beehive hasn't seen much technological innovation in 170 years. The Langstroth hive, named after the American reverend who patented it in 1852, is a simple wooden box with frames that can house the queen and her worker bees, larvae and honey. 

"Langstroth hives are easy to work with, break down, build up, manipulate frames, make splits" and move, said Priya Chakrabarti Basu, a Washington State University bee researcher. 

These boxes are the backbone of the agriculture industry and the high-value crops that are heavily reliant on the 2.5 million commercial hives that crisscross the US on semi-trailers. Beekeepers with thousands of hives will travel from as far away as Florida to provide pollination services for California's $3.9 billion almond crop in spring before moving on to other states and crops. 

"Almonds are one of the largest pollination events in the world," said Ellis, who uses Beewise's hives on 30% of the acres he manages. "Typically, a grower needs two hives per acre," each with up to 40,000 bees.

Pollinating the 10,000 acres of almonds, walnuts and pistachios he oversees requires millions of bees doing the brunt of the pollination work.

The number of hives and demand have created a problem, though: Beekeepers are only able to check on their colonies' health every week or two. But a growing number of threats to bees means entire colonies can be wiped out or weakened past the point of no return in just a few days. 

Toxic pesticides, a changing climate and a sharp uptick in the invasive, disease-transmitting varroa mite since the 1980s have contributed to the rise of what's known as colony collapse disorder. The exact role each of these issues plays in wiping out colonies is unclear, but they are also likely interacting with each other to take a toll.

"You are rarely going to find a bee who is only, for example, stressed by a mite or a bee who's stressed by a disease only or a bee who's only stressed by poor nutrition," Chakrabarti Basu said. "It is always a combination."

The impacts, though, are clear. From the 12-month period starting last April, more than 56% of commercial colonies were wiped out, according to the Apiary Inspectors of America. Beekeepers have taken a major economic hit as a result: Between last June and March, colony losses cost beekeepers an estimated $600 million, according to the Honey Bee Health Coalition

While a new hive design alone isn't enough to save bees, Beewise's robotic hives help cut down on losses by providing a near-constant stream of information on colony health in real time — and give beekeepers the ability to respond to issues. Equipped with a camera and a robotic arm, they're able to regularly snap images of the frames inside the BeeHome, which Safra likened to an MRI. The amount of data they capture is staggering. 

Each frame contains up to 6,000 cells where bees can, among other things, gestate larvae or store honey and pollen. A hive contains up to 15 frames and a BeeHome can hold up to 10 hives, providing thousands of datapoints for Beewise's AI to analyze.

A hive contains up to 15 frames inside the BeeHome. Photographer: Kelsey McClellan/Bloomberg

While a trained beekeeper can quickly look at a frame and assess its health, AI can do it even faster, as well as take in information on individual bees in the photos. Should AI spot a warning sign, such as a dearth of new larvae or the presence of mites, beekeepers will get an update on an app that a colony requires attention. The company's technology earned it a BloombergNEF Pioneers award earlier this year.

"There's other technologies that we've tried that can give us some of those metrics as well, but it's really a look in the rearview mirror," Ellis said. "What really attracted us to Beewise is their ability to not only understand what's happening in that hive, but to actually act on those different metrics."

That includes administering medicine and food as well as opening and closing vents to regulate temperature or protect against pesticide spraying. Safra noted that after two hurricanes hit Florida last year, BeeHomes in the state were still operational while many wooden hives were destroyed. 

That durability and responsiveness has Ellis convinced on expanding their use. Today, BeeHomes are on 30% of his acres, but he said within three years, they're aiming for 100% coverage. Whether other growers and beekeepers are as keen to make the switch remains to be seen, though, given nearly two centuries of loyalty to the Langstroth design.

The startup wants to more than triple the number of BeeHomes in use, reaching 1 million in three years.

"We're in a race against time," Safra said. "We might have the best product on planet earth in 15 years, but it doesn't matter" if there aren't any bees left.

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

What we learned this week

  1. NOEM was floated as a new name for FEMA. An internal US government memo detailed ways to abolish and rebrand the Federal Emergency Management Agency. One idea included naming it National Office of Emergency Management (NOEM) — an acronym that dovetails with the Homeland Security secretary's name.
  2. Officials from central banks and finance ministries had to call a timeout. A meeting of the world's most powerful financial watchdog last week collapsed into clashes over the US's stance on climate change.
  3. Cow dung is really bad for global warming. Manure accounts for roughly 10% of livestock methane emissions, a greenhouse gas that's more than 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide over a 20-year period. 
  4. Ireland no longer has any active coal-fired power plants. The country became the latest European nation to completely shut down its coal-fired power generation, with Spain and Italy set to follow soon.
  5. Climate change is likely intensifying the heat wave scorching the UK. Global warming has increased the chances of an early season heat wave in the UK from once every 50 years in a pre-industrial climate to every five years, according to analysis.
A woman covers her head from the sun on Westminster Bridge in London. Photographer: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Worth your time

This summer will be an energy doozy in the US as climate change exacerbates heat waves and a rash of new data centers and crypto mines come online. But these new power vacuums arrive in concert with a stack of big batteries. America, particularly its Sun Belt, has been a gusher of renewable energy for years; now, utilities will be able to bottle up much of that sun and wind and discharge it around the clock. Read the full story on how big batteries could prevent summer power blackouts in the US. 

Weekend listening

When will China's emissions peak? The timing could make a big difference to the fate of the planet. And now Lauri Myllyvirta, co-founder of the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, thinks that moment may have arrived. This week on Zero, Akshat Rathi asks Myllyvirta how confident he is that this really is a peak. What's behind the decline in emissions? And how will the trade war with the US affect China's climate and energy policies in the years to come? Listen now, and subscribe on AppleSpotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

A floating solar farm built on the site of a former coal mine, since filled with water, in Huainan, China in 2023.  Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

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Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

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