I love his channel! But he does a lot of work sometimes! Still very interesting and usefulWell, I am no compost expert, but I will be lucky if my chicken poo here in northern Minnesota will even be thawed out in 60 days, let alone decomposed and ready for the garden. I suspect my compost bin will still be frozen until about mid-April (that's typically our ice out date on the lake).
As to hot compost, I watched some YouTube videos this past week and one of them said that heat itself does not create compost, rather, when the organic material starts to break down and microorganisms are working the material, that is what creates the heat. You could have a dry compost heap and little or no composting action going on even though you are in the middle of summer. Which is why everyone says you need to keep the compost pile moist - like a wrung out sponge. On the Edible Acres YouTube channel, he shows his winter compost piles steaming hot which are full of decomposing food wastes and carbon material. But he appears to constantly turn his piles when they start to cool down and restack them so they heat up again.
Anyway, back to the OP's original question
It is my understanding that a proper compost bin will heat up to 140F in the center and stay there for at least a few days and that is enough to kill off all harmful bacteria. But, it probably takes much longer for the organic material to breakdown and be ready for the garden. So I am looking forward to hearing more from some of expert composters on this topic.