The RCP has published its first report card on its progress to improve its environmental sustainability as an organisation, following signing up to the UKHACC commitments in 2024.
As a royal college and employer, the RCP is committed to minimising the environmental impacts of its operations and is continually seeking innovative ways to improve its sustainability.
The RCP’s first progress report gives an overview of the RCP’s current activities against the ‘UKHACC Commitments’, developed by the UK Health Alliance on Climate Change (UKHACC) to help health organisations take steps to mitigate and adapt to climate change. It also sets out the action it will take over the coming year.
Work to deliver the UKHACC commitments is the latest development in the RCP’s ambition to improve its sustainability and drive progress. In April 2021, the RCP announced that it had ended all fossil fuel investments two years earlier than planned.
In the report card, the RCP pledges to undertake a piece of research into the green banks available that would meet its banking requirements and risk profile, as well as highlighting the RCP’s work to campaign on mitigating and adapting to the planetary crisis.
The research into the green banks will be completed in 2025 and shape any next steps in the RCP moving to greener banking.
Other highlights in the progress report include:
The RCP has committed to publish annual updates on its work to improve its environmental sustainability.
Interim co-chief executive Tom Baker said:
“The RCP is committed to minimising the environmental impacts of its operations. The climate emergency is a health emergency, and the RCP has a vital role to play in ensuring that the work we do for physicians is balanced with our environmental responsibilities.
“Today’s progress report shows the good work we are doing - such as campaigning and supporting our members to practise more sustainable medicine - as well as where we have further to go, like exploring greener banking options. We are committed to this agenda and look forward to delivering on the plans we have to drive further progress over the coming year.”
Royal College of Physicians special adviser on healthcare sustainability and climate change, Dr Mark Harber said:
“I welcome the RCP’s report card setting out the work it is doing against each of the UKHACC Commitments. Driving progress on sustainability within healthcare is essential if we are to protect both the health of patients and the health of our planet.
“Our Green Physician Toolkit, with practical actions to help physicians reduce the carbon footprint of healthcare delivery, is just one example of how the RCP is supporting members to embed sustainability into clinical practice. There is more we can and will do. With the health impacts of climate change increasingly visible, I am committed to working across the RCP, and through our sustainability in healthcare and climate change advisory group, to drive further progress.”
Read or download the first progress report.