What the Experts Want from GE2020 – Irish Doctors for the Environment

February 4th, 2020

Over the past three
weeks, as in all election cycles, we have become accustomed to the knock at the
door from canvassers or candidates themselves are they vie for our number one
at the ballot box.

We have asked leading
climate and biodiversity experts to tell us the key policy asks that they have raised
with candidates when they come a-knocking.

Next up is the collected policy response from
members of Irish Doctors for
the Environment
, a group of medical professionals
in Ireland who aim to create awareness and action on the climate crisis and its
profound impacts on health. The group strongly believes that the climate crisis
is a health crisis and that medical professional have a duty to act on this for
the sake of patients and the planet.

Commitment to increase
investment in sustainable transport

The transport sector is a leading consumer of fossil fuels and source
of air pollution, with the transport sector contributing to 20 per cent of
total greenhouse gas emissions in 2016. Over 1,250 annual premature deaths are
attributed to air pollution in Ireland.

Our current sedentary travel habits, coupled with the increasing
prevalence of obesity in Ireland, will contribute significantly to increased
rates of chronic disease in the future.

In this light, IDE wants to see candidates commit to improving public transport access in Ireland, supporting the expansion of electric car infrastructure, and, crucially, prioritising active transport by increasing the number, safety and reach of cycling lanes, better bike parking and expansion of city bike schemes. This will have beneficial effects for both the environment and population health.

Row of Bikes Photo: Pixabay

Commitment to a greener,
sustainable healthcare system

If the healthcare sector were a country, it would be the fifth
largest emitter in the world with a climate footprint of 4.4 per cent of global
net emissions. Hospitals generate over 29 pounds of waste per bed per day,
ranging from 5-11.5 million tons of waste per year depending on the size of the
hospital.

Hospitals also bear the burden of the escalating climate crisis,
with increased attendances at emergency departments during heatwaves,
increasing rates of lung and cardiac disease secondary to air pollution, and
spread of water-borne diseases during flooding.

IDE calls on election candidates to commit to greening our health
service, in line with the recent ambitions made by the NHS in the UK, working
towards reducing emissions, decreasing the use of single-use plastics and
investing in healthcare facility resilience for extreme weather events.

Commitment to monitoring
and evaluation

As part of a move towards a more sustainable health service, we
propose that candidates commit to measuring the carbon footprint of the HSE.
This carbon footprint should include emissions from building energy use, travel
to and from sites, goods and services procured by the HSE as well as emissions
relating to anaesthetic gases and waste disposal.

The NHS, from which we rely upon for most of our estimates on
healthcare related emissions, has been able to demonstrate an 11 per cent reduction
in emissions since 2007 when they first started quantifying their carbon
footprint.

The measurement of a similar footprint in Ireland will provide a benchmark from which we can form an understanding of both the scale of CO2 emissions in our own health service and their changes overtime. This will be essential in the pursuit of a sustainable health service.

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