# Building India’s Low-Carbon Healthcare System: A Comprehensive Review of National Policies, Operational Frameworks, and Decarbonization Strategies

**Authors:** Harshini Thirumoorthi, Saravanan Sampoornam Pape Reddy

PMC · DOI: 10.5334/aogh.5096 · Annals of Global Health · 2026-01-28

## TL;DR

India is working to reduce healthcare-related carbon emissions through policies and frameworks, but implementation challenges remain.

## Contribution

A comprehensive review of India’s national policies and strategies for decarbonizing the healthcare sector.

## Key findings

- India has integrated health into climate planning with policies like the National Action Plan on Climate Change and Human Health.
- Solar energy adoption in healthcare centers has improved energy reliability and performance during extreme weather.
- Implementation of low-carbon practices is limited by data, funding, and capacity gaps.

## Abstract

Background: Climate change poses a profound threat to public health globally and in India, but ironically healthcare activities themselves contribute significantly to greenhouse gas emissions. The healthcare sector produces about 4–5% of global carbon emissions. India’s healthcare system is estimated to be the world’s seventh-largest carbon emitter in absolute terms. To align with climate goals and protect health, India has begun instituting policies to foster a low-carbon, climate-resilient healthcare system.

Objective: To comprehensively review India’s national policies, operational frameworks, and strategies aimed at reducing healthcare-related carbon emissions (decarbonization) while strengthening health system sustainability.

Methods: We conducted a narrative review of policy documents and PubMed-indexed literature from 2018 to 2025 focusing on climate change mitigation in the Indian health sector.

Findings: India has mainstreamed health into national climate planning with the release of the National Action Plan on Climate Change and Human Health (2018) and the launch of the National Programme on Climate Change and Human Health (2019). These set targets for climate–health surveillance and low-carbon, climate-resilient medical health facilities. Climate action and sustainability are being included in accreditation standards. Early benefits include: greater energy reliability and lower cost energy services for healthcare centers with solar energy and higher health facility performance during extreme weather events. However, implementation remains nascent. Gaps remain in data, funding, and capacity to scale low-carbon practices across India’s sprawling health system.

Conclusions: India has made initial strides in aligning its health sector with climate mitigation imperatives through policies and guidelines for sustainable, low-carbon healthcare. Strengthening governance, financing, and technical support will be critical to fully implement decarbonization strategies. A low-carbon healthcare system in India can not only reduce emissions but also improve public health, resilience, and healthcare quality, setting an example for sustainable healthcare development in low- and middle-income countries.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** Carbon (MESH:D002244)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

41 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12857628/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12857628