Rode Media

Iphendule Ndzipho, Sustainability Consultant – Built Environment, WSP in Africa

One of the biggest challenges for healthcare facilities is reducing their carbon emissions and transitioning to net zero, especially as the demand for health services grows. Healthcare buildings perform a critical role in communities worldwide, but they are also among the most carbon-intensive facilities, directly and indirectly. Overall, healthcare is responsible for almost 5% of global carbon emissions. 
 
As we grapple with the impacts of a climate emergency, different healthcare systems worldwide are responding to their unique circumstances with various strategies and design solutions to decarbonise their facilities. Decarbonisation can potentially improve health outcomes in the short and longer term, making it crucial for the future viability of health systems. By focusing attention on the hospital environment and transitioning to cleaner forms of energy, for example, better conditions for patients, staff, and wider communities can be achieved.
 
The primacy of clinical need and infection control standards is universal. Meeting these requirements is often viewed as diametrically opposed to decarbonisation, which requires drastic energy and water use reductions. But these two priorities can, in fact, work together symbiotically – considering aspects such as air change rates and recirculation, heat recovery, alternatives to fossil fuels for sterilisation, and how digital modelling and occupant-sensing controls might be used to improve both healthcare environments and energy performance.
 
A good example of this symbiosis in action is Roha Health Inc’s multimillion-dollar Roha Advanced Multi-Speciality Hospital project in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Due for completion in 2026 and supported by WSP’s comprehensive engineering and sustainability services, the facility aims to meet critical healthcare needs on the continent. The hospital will span 40,000m² and feature 350 beds with eight operating theatres. It will also offer advanced specialities and cutting-edge technology, including oncology, dialysis, neurosurgery, spine surgery, and cardiac surgery. It will also offer a dedicated Mother & Child floor offering maternal and child health services. It aims to become Ethiopia’s first JCI (Joint Commission International) accredited hospital – robustly assessed for patient safety and quality of care. Careful planning has also integrated sustainable building principles centred around patient care and targeting EDGE certification, including energy-efficient lighting, water-saving measures, plans for renewable energy and a forest and park to provide a natural healing environment.
 
Other healthcare systems on the continent should also be examined. In South Africa, healthcare contributes 2.5% of national emissions or 15.93 MtCO2e (2015). South Africa’s healthcare sector is primed to turn the country’s infrastructure challenges into a catalyst for innovation as it works to expand access across this large, geographically diverse country and address historically entrenched inequality.
 
Energy demand drives change
 
South Africa’s ongoing energy crisis is prompting healthcare operators to seek alternative sources that reduce their reliance on the grid, with the installation of photovoltaics becoming an increasingly popular strategy. To encourage investment in renewables, the government has removed the requirement for independent power producers to hold generation licences and capped the amount they can generate. This enables healthcare providers to meet a higher proportion of their own needs on-site, with benefits for resilience and decarbonisation.
 
Healthcare operators are also reducing electricity demand by installing energy-efficient LED light fittings, occupancy sensors, and water aerators in non-clinical settings. These devices reduce the flow rate and, therefore, the amount of energy required for water heating without compromising pressure. Sensor taps with timers also reduce the quantity of water used.
 
Heat pumps are often used to provide cooling and heating. Although gas or oil-powered boilers are typically favoured for supplying hot water and steam for sterilisation, the business case may be made for a hybrid solar hot water/heat pump system to reduce energy-linked carbon while promoting reliability. Developing heat pump technologies that can deliver water at higher temperatures is a major opportunity to drive more widespread adoption. In existing facilities, owners are taking the first essential step of improving the measurement and monitoring of energy and water consumption as a fact-finding exercise to inform decarbonisation strategies. This involves installing building management systems and smart metering to identify the areas or systems within a building where energy and water use is greatest.
 
Investors make sustainability a prerequisite
 
Investment is a driver of decarbonisation across the continent. This is partly because international hospital groups are bringing their own decarbonisation policies and targets with them. WSP is part of the design-build team applying the US standard LEED at the African Medical Centre of Excellence in Abuja, Nigeria. It is being developed in partnership with King’s College Hospital in the UK with funding from the African Export-Import Bank.
 
Development banks also drive decarbonisation by making sustainability measures a prerequisite for funding or by tying more favourable terms to carbon savings. The EDGE rating tool was developed by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) for use in emerging markets. It focuses on energy consumption, water consumption and embodied energy in the form of construction materials. Local versions are tailored to each market and for various sectors, including healthcare. The target is a 20% reduction in these three parameters against a country-specific baseline building.
 
There is a palpable enthusiasm for decarbonisation through collaboration among healthcare providers, policymakers and green building councils across the continent. All these stakeholders recognise that sustainability in African healthcare provision is a balancing act between sustainable, leading-edge engineering and providing basic access.
 
In the pursuit of a prosperous future of inclusive and sustainable growth, where all African people have a high standard of living, quality of life, sound health, and well-being, learning from global trends and adapting these to suit African conditions is the key to building successful networks of healthcare infrastructure and medical facilities. And always, it’s about working towards net zero on a continent with limited infrastructure but an abundance of resilience and optimism.