Groups of health care leaders within the American Hospital Association (AHA) have launched the “Sustainability Roadmap for Hospitals,” a web-based resource for the hospital management to understand and achieve energy efficiency targets.
The website provides background material, sample actions plans, case studies, and target-setting and tracking tools for clear steps health care organizations can take to improve their sustainability efforts and reduce the environmental impacts of their facilities and operations.
According to the website, the groups reviewed benchmark standards established by the AIA 2030 Challenge, but agreed to adopt a year-2050 timeline — “still is an aggressive goal for the health care industry” — for hospitals to achieve carbon neutrality.
The group announced three stages to the plan to reduce energy consumption from fossil fuels:
- Stop all increases of energy consumed from fossil fuels no later than 2015.
- Drop energy consumed from fossil fuels to 40 percent below current levels by 2020.
- Further decrease fossil fuel consumption to 80 percent below current levels by 2050.
The roadmap also outlines entry-level activities, the so-called Green Light Projects. “The projects described all meet the criteria of “low-hanging fruit” in terms of ease of implementation, value, and opportunity for improvement (e.g., cost, environmental, and staff/patient satisfaction). Although the projects on the Green Light list can be implemented without benchmarking or strategic planning, these steps are still recommended as an early step for any project.
The Roadmap is a joint effort of the American Society for Healthcare Engineering (ASHE), the Association for the Healthcare Environment (AHE), and the American Society for Health care Resource and Materials Management (AHRMM) in conjunction with consulting firm, Mazzetti Nash Lipsey Burch. The plan follows up on the AHA’s sustainability statements from the July 2010 report, “Executive Primer on Hospital Environmental Sustainability.”