For more than a year, the world’s doctors, nurses, hospitals and health systems have been on the front lines in the battle against COVID-19. Many have served heroically as first responders, care givers, truth tellers and anchors of resilience in communities beset by the pandemic.
A growing number of these leaders are now recognizing and speaking out about another major health crisis that looms on the horizon. The growing climate emergency threatens to make the COVID-19 pandemic pale by comparison—impacting the health and well-being of nearly everyone, all across the globe for generations to come.
Ironically, health care, whose mission it is to heal, is a major contributor to this crisis that is making the planet and the people who inhabit it sick. Health care contributes to more than 4.4 percent of net global greenhouse gas emissions, making the sector, if it were a country, the fifth largest climate polluter on the planet.
In the vanguard of the health care response are nearly 40 institutions collectively representing more than 3,000 healthcare facilities in 17 countries, who have just joined the UNFCCC’s Race to Zero. These hospitals and health systems have made public commitments to halving emissions by 2030 and reaching net zero by no later than 2050.
This first wave of Race to Zero health care institutions spans six continents and represents diverse organizations including individual hospitals, private health systems, and provincial health departments from both developed and developing countries. They are showing that you can deliver care and take on climate change at the same time. They are articulating a vision of healthy people on a healthy planet.
They join other Race to Zero members already in the campaign totaling over 4,000, including regions, cities, companies, universities, and investors, making up over 15% of the global economy. The United Nations Race to Zero initiative is the largest ever alliance outside of national governments committed to reducing climate pollution.
The Race to Zero health care cohort is also part of a broader movement led by the NGO and UNFCCC Race to Zero partner, Health Care Without Harm, of thousands more hospitals working for health care climate action. Leadership from these non-state actors is critical to accelerating the transition to a healthier, cleaner, and more resilient zero-carbon economy.
Leadership from national governments is also essential. The UNFCCC Climate Champions, Health Care Without Harm and the World Health Organization are also working together with the UK government, which will host COP26 in Glasgow in November, to encourage national governments’ health systems to make similar commitments to both decarbonization and resilience.
Our aim by the Glasgow climate conference, is to have a leading cohort of health ministries committed to health care climate action together with a growing movement of hospitals and health systems doing the same via Race to Zero. Together they can begin to put the health care sector on a trajectory to align with the ambition of the Paris Agreement of keeping global temperature increase at or below 1.5 degrees.
It has shed a harsh light on the profound inequalities in health and health care access within and between countries. COVID-19 has also highlighted the imperative to strengthen and transform our health systems to become more equitable, to be prepared for and to help prevent both future pandemics as well as the greatest global health threat of the 21st century, climate change.
The hospitals and health systems joining Race to Zero are showing it can be done. It is now imperative that the health sector seize this moment and provide the climate leadership the world so desperately needs.