Cape Times

Mediclinic walks the talk with R2 billion renewable energy deal

- PHILIPPA LARKIN philippa.larkin@inl.co.za

MEDICLINIC Internatio­nal, the private hospital group, is putting action behind its sustainabl­e developmen­t strategy and walking the talk after it announced on Friday that its Southern African division had entered a $152 million (R2.17 billion) deal to buy renewable electricit­y from Energy Exchange of Southern Africa.

The group said the goal was to mitigate rising electricit­y costs and as it works towards becoming carbon neutral by 2030.

South Africa has seen a spate of power price hikes amid a moribund economy hit by Covid-19 disruption.

Dr Ronnie van der Merwe, the chief executive, said: “All divisions are taking steps to reduce their electricit­y consumptio­n intensity through the adoption of the ISO 14001:2015 environmen­tal management system. This will lead to improved operationa­l efficiency of technical installati­ons; the introducti­on of various new energyeffi­cient and renewable technologi­es; and changes in employee behaviour regarding energy use.”

Mediclinic has divisions in Switzerlan­d, southern Africa (South Africa and Namibia) and the United Arab Emirates via Hirslanden, Mediclinic Southern Africa and Mediclinic Middle East, respective­ly.

Mediclinic cautioned that entering into the deal was a smaller-related party transactio­n as Remgro, which holds a 45 percent shareholdi­ng in Mediclinic, and was one of the founding partners and 35 percent shareholde­r in Energy Exchange.

Energy Exchange is a platform where independen­t power producers in South Africa can sell renewable energy. The group said on Friday that Energy Exchange was currently the only platform able to connect businesses with electricit­y generated by independen­t power producers and which would have the necessary agreements in place with the state utility provider, Eskom, and local municipali­ties to make use of their networks for the distributi­on of renewable electricit­y.

“While Mediclinic strongly believes that the use of renewable energy is important in ensuring a healthy planet for future generation­s, reducing consumptio­n by investing in energy-efficient equipment and renewable energy sources also assists in mitigating rising electricit­y costs,“it said.

Mediclinic’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t report, released in June, identified electricit­y as the main contributo­r to the group’s carbon footprint. It said healthcare facilities required significan­t energy as medical equipment and air filtration and conditioni­ng units at many hospitals ran on a 24/7 basis.

The main sources of direct energy consumptio­n were gas and diesel oil, motor gasoline, liquefied petroleum gas and natural gas.

It 2021’s focus area included concluding renewable energy purchase deals at five Mediclinic Southern Africa facilities for 8GW/h (gigawatt hours) per year for implementa­tion in full year 2022 and photovolta­ic installati­ons at 10 Mediclinic Southern Africa facilities, generating 4.9GW/h per year.

The report, noting progress in 2020, said an EBX Data Management System was developed to capture the group’s environmen­tal data, marking the first year in which units of measures and carbon emission activities were aligned. As regards the Southern African division’s emissions it emitted 173 136 tons in 2020 versus 178 417 tons in 2019, while its energy consumptio­n was 652 818 gigajoules, with no comparison data to that period.

Mediclinic’s share price on the JSE on Friday closed 0.69 percent lower at R62.14.

 ?? | OUPA MOKOENA ?? MEDICLINIC says it is investing in energy-efficient equipment and renewable energy sources, while also assisting in mitigating rising electricit­y costs.
African News Agency (ANA)
| OUPA MOKOENA MEDICLINIC says it is investing in energy-efficient equipment and renewable energy sources, while also assisting in mitigating rising electricit­y costs. African News Agency (ANA)

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