Hospitals should not be smoking a giant cigarette
Hospitals should not be smoking a giant
cigarette
Despite New
Zealand being a signatory to the new Paris climate
agreement, the Ministry of Health is considering the use of
coal in Christchurch Hospital’s boiler. OraTaiao, the New
Zealand Climate and Health Council and the New Zealand
Medical Students’ Association (NZMSA) say to do so would
be a mistake for the climate and for health. Although coal
burning may achieve short-term financial savings, it is a
false economy. Coal burning is inconsistent with the
Ministry’s legislated responsibility to protect health.
OraTaiao and the NZMSA are jointly urging the Ministry
to support Christchurch Hospital’s switch to lower
emission wood waste rather than coal.
While coal was
historically useful in providing energy for economic
development, mining and burning coal has also come at a
heavy price to human wellbeing. At the local level, adverse
effects include the hazards of mining and environmental
contamination by mineral residues and air pollution. At a
global level, coal is one of the worst possible fuels for
the climate. Now that safer alternatives are available,
continued use of coal is indefensible.
“People who
live in cities with higher exposure to coal combustion have
a higher risk of cardiovascular death, and suffer higher
levels of respiratory disease such as asthma and chronic
bronchitis,” says George Laking, a cancer specialist and
OraTaiao executive member.
“A coal-burning boiler is
like the hospital chain-smoking a giant cigarette. The
Ministry must support hospitals as they kick this dangerous
habit.”
In 2013 the World Health Organization (WHO)
found the average for very small airborne particles (PM2.5)
in Christchurch was more than double that of Auckland, and
comfortably in breach of guidelines for lung-damaging
pollutants. PM2,5 levels contribute to shorter lives and
worse quality of life. As the Energy Efficiency and
Conservation Authority (EECA) states, a modern wood burner
can produce 80 percent fewer particulate emissions than coal
– which makes wood a healthier and more sustainable
long-term investment.
As well as local harms, greenhouse
gas and black carbon emissions from coal are heating up our
planet, the groups say.
“Climate change impacts upon
human health through increased heatwaves, extreme weather,
floods, and threats to agricultural and geopolitical
security,” says Carmen Chan from the New Zealand Medical
Students’ Association.
“Global health experts are
clear that continued global warming will ‘undermine the
last half century of gains in development and global
health’.”
In a breath-taking irony, Canterbury
District Health Board (CDHB) has recently been awarded an
Energy-Mark Bronze Award for its installation of high tech
wood waste burners at Burwood Hospital. Canterbury DHB CEO
David Meates said, “The next step for CDHB is to build on
our achievement in the future through meeting the
requirements for Energy-Mark Silver certification, and then
Energy-Mark Gold.”
Its Hillmorton site also already has
a high tech, low pollution wood waste burner.
“The DHB
won’t be able to achieve this goal by burning coal to heat
the new Christchurch Hospital. Choosing coal is more like
Energy-Mark Arsenic,” says Dr Laking.
As a signatory to
the COP21 Paris Agreement, New Zealand has committed to
renewable energies such as plantation wood waste.
“Our
health services should be at the vanguard of this
commitment. As health bodies worldwide are urging
governments to phase out coal power, it is imperative New
Zealand’s district health boards are enabled to do the
same,” says Dr Laking.
Statements from New Zealand Medical
Students Organisations
Medical
students from around the country have strongly objected to
the step backwards in Christchurch District Health Board’s
environmental sustainability:
The Christchurch Medical Students’
Association is unequivocal in its opposition to retaining a
coal boiler in Christchurch Hospital. We must consider both
the environmental as well as the medical implications of
having a coal boiler when the alternatives are much safer on
both counts. The CDHB is in a position to make a positive
and patient-centred statement by using cleaner technology.
With the rebuild, many other buildings throughout the city
are moving away from coal power, and we urge Christchurch
Hospital to stay ahead of the curve and do the
same.
Marcus Bentley, President of the
Christchurch Medical Students’
Association
The Wellington
Medical Students’ Association fundamentally disagrees with
the retention of a coal boiler at the Christchurch hospital.
The health care system in New Zealand needs to be future
focussed. Climate change is going to present significant
challenges for health in the future, and so every little bit
we can do to reduce emissions matters. It might save money
in the short-term, but we have to be forward looking.
Mike Peebles, President of the Wellington Medical Student’s Association
The
Auckland Medical Students’ Association insists that the
Canterbury District Health Board reconsider and change its
stance in retaining the use of a coal boiler at the
Christchurch hospital. We need to be proactive and lead the
way to a more sustainable future. Climate change is a
pressing matter and its effects are already impacting upon
the health of countless communities. We ask our future
colleagues at CDHB to be the change that we need. Let us
live up to our clean and green image.
Andrew Thushyanthan, President of the Auckland
Medical Students’ Association
The New Zealand Medical
Students’ Association strongly urges the Canterbury
District Health Board to not take a step backwards and use
coal for Christchurch Hospital’s boiler. Burning coal is
widely recognised to produce carcinogenic pollutants as well
as drive global climate change. It makes little sense to use
a boiler that makes people sick to help run a hospital that
is trying to make people better. We call on the CDHB to lead
from the front in improving health by installing a wood or
gas powered boiler rather than a polluting coal powered
one.
David Bassett, Vice-President External, New
Zealand Medical Students’ Association (NZMSA)
As a nation-wide global health interest group, Medical Students for Global Awareness (MSGA) strongly disagrees with the use of coal in the boiler for the new Christchurch Hospital. The health care system of New Zealand cannot claim to be improving the health of our population while simultaneously powering hospitals with fossil fuels that have been shown to negatively affect communities around the world through pollution and climate change. We would urge the Canterbury District Health Board to rethink their decision and to instead make a tangible commitment towards a more sustainable future through the selection of a clean alternative to coal.
Apurva Kasture, National Coordinator, Medical Students for Global Awareness (MSGA)