Lowering Carbon Emissions: Guidance for Hospitals 

Primary purpose is to aid managers of existing buildings in planning retrofit and operational strategies to achieve deep carbon reductions.

By HFT staff


The push to curtail climate change and its impact on communities and facilities is gaining momentum, and healthcare facilities are coming under mounting scrutiny to limit their carbon emissions as part of these efforts. 

To support healthcare facilities managers in their efforts to reduce their buildings’ carbon emissions, the Better Buildings program from U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has developed a guidance document, Low Carbon Technology Strategies, for healthcare facilities. The primary purpose is to aid managers of existing buildings in planning retrofit and operational strategies to achieve deep carbon reductions. These strategy documents supplement existing energy design guides where new construction is the focus. 

The document includes steps managers can implement to achieve smart, healthy and low-carbon hospitals within their existing building portfolios. Hospitals typically include complex heating and cooling systems and specialty medical equipment. Managers can assess current conditions in their buildings against the simple, intermediate and advanced options to begin planning the next steps to reduce carbon emissions. The document addresses opportunities in these categories: 

  • Lighting 
  • Space conditioning and water heating 
  • Controls and analytics 
  • Building envelope 
  • Plug and process loads 
  • Renewables and battery storage. 


December 22, 2022


Topic Area: Sustainable Operations


Recent Posts

Hospital Evacuation Highlights Importance of Emergency Preparedness

Berger Hospital was evacuated after smoke was discovered in the basement.


Building a Culture of Infection Prevention

Investing in infection prevention can benefit healthcare organizations and patient outcomes.


Ground Broken on Sanford Health Fargo's Peltier Lodge

The 28,400-square-foot facility will feature spaces to support patients and loved ones during treatment and throughout their outpatient care and monitoring.


Arkansas Urology Associates Experiences Data Security Incident

The incident occurred in March.


The Role of Facilities Managers in Healthcare Design

Jiayin Li discusses the way in-house facilities teams can help shape the design of key spaces.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

 
 
 
 

Healthcare Facilities Today membership includes free email newsletters from our facility-industry brands.

Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Posts

Copyright © 2023 TradePress. All rights reserved.