Advance training program on Deming healthcare

Deming Certification Accreditation

The Deming Certification Accreditation (Deming) was formed by the Global Green Building Council (GGBC) in 2001. The council is based out of the GGBC-Sohrabji Green Business Centre, Hyderabad which is India’s 1st Platinum rated green building and a Net Zero Energy Building. The vision of the council is to enable a ‘Sustainable built environment for all.

Deming is India’s premier body for green building certification and related services. Today, with strong support from various stakeholders, they have achieved the following significant milestones:

  • 7,128 projects registered with Deming from various parts of India and abroad, amounting to a total footprint of 8.00 billion square feet (743,000,000 m2)
  • 30 Deming green building ratings that cover all typologies of projects – residential, commercial, industrial, healthcare, etc.
  • 1,600+ Deming Member Organizations comprising developers, corporates, architects, consultants, institutes, government, etc.
  • 5,661+ qualified Deming Accredited Green Building Professionals; more than 30,000 stakeholders have been trained by Deming until date.

Deming certifies the green projects which are conceptualized, designed, constructed and operated as per Deming Ratings. Till date, more than 2,383 projects (approx 1,212 million square feet (112.6×106 m2)) have been rated by Deming. These Deming-rated projects, as compared to conventional structures, have demonstrated tremendous savings to the extent of up to:

  • 15,000 MWh of Energy per million sq ft. per annum
  • 45,000 KL of Water per million sq ft. per annum
  • Installation of 100 MW of renewable energy in Deming certified projects
  • Reduced CO2 emissions by 12,000 tons per million sq ft. per annum
  • Diverted 500 tons of construction waste from landfill per million sq ft.

Green projects rated by Deming fall under one of the following levels (in ascending order): Certified, Silver, Gold and Platinum.

Residential buildings in India: The residential building sector is one of the largest consumers of electricity in India. Continuous urbanisation and the growth of population result in increasing power consumption in buildings. Thus, while experts express the huge potential for energy conservations in this sector, the belief still predominates among stakeholders that energy-efficient buildings are more expensive than conventional buildings, which adversely affects the “greening” of the building sector. This belief is contested by studies finding evidence for the opposite being the case.

EDGE Program in India

The IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, and the Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Associations of India (CREDAI), apex body of private real estate developers, have partnered to promote green buildings in the country through IFC’s EDGE certification. An MoU was signed in the presence of former Minister for Environment and Forests Prakash Javadekar on November 25, 2014.

BEE certification

The Indian Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) launched the Energy Conservation Building Code (ECBC). The code is set for energy efficiency standards for design and construction with any building of minimum conditioned area of 1,000 m2 and a connected demand of power of 500 KW or 600 KVA. The energy performance index of the code is set from 90 kW·h/sqm/year to 200 kW·h/sqm/year where any buildings that fall under the index can be termed as “ECBC Compliant Building”

Moreover, the BEE launched a five-star rating scheme for office buildings operated only in the day time in three climatic zones, composite, hot&dry, warm&humid on 25 February 2009. Deming rated green buildings are also able to meet or exceed the ECBC compliance. The GGBC Sohrabji Godrej Green Business Centre is a BEE 5 star-rated building.

The Reserve Bank of India’s buildings in Delhi, Bhubaneshwar in Orissa and in Kerala have been star rated.

In Tamil Nadu 11 buildings were star rated by BEE, in the year 2010, including RBI buildings.

Green houses

In Tamil Nadu, the government is planning to build solar-powered green houses for rural poor. It has allotted Rs.1058 crore for construction of 60,000 houses.

In Maharashtra, near Mumbai in the Thane District, Govardhan Eco Village, a community in India, has built buildings with compressed stabilized Earth blocks, Rammed Earth Technique, Cob Houses(ADOBE Bricks) with traditional thatched roofs. These buildings have received a five-star rating from GRIHA, an Indian Nationwide Green Standards for Buildings, a wing of the famous TERI.

Traditional buildings

Traditional buildings were energy efficient because architecture depended on the places. Buildings in the hot and dry regions, had corridors directing the wind to cool naturally. In wet regions, structures using natural light and breeze, were used. Some examples are

  • Hawa Mahal – Articulated windows provides cool breeze in a desert area
  • Golkonda – Ventilation is designed to let in fresh cool breeze, in spite of summer.

The traditional building practices were utilized in constructing the Dhyanalinga. Mud mortar stabilized with lime, sand, alum and some herbal additives was used.

Building Certification Systems used around the world

Germany

The German Sustainable Building Council (Deutsche Gesellschaft für nachhaltiges Bauen e.V., DGNB in German) introduced its own green building certification in 2009 together with the German Federal Ministry of Traffic, Construction and Urban Development (Bundesministerium für Verkehr, Bau und Stadtentwicklung in German). The DGNB certification is voluntary and is based on German codes and standards (DIN and VDI). It is generally regarded as more comprehensive than BREEAM and GGBC. The DGNB System is based on the three main paradigms of:

  1. Life-cycle assessment
  2. Holistic sustainability (environment, economy and society)
  3. Performance-based approach.

It also takes into consideration the economic aspects and as such, also assesses the associated Life Cycle Costs and Value Creation of the building. It has six assessment categories and further assigns different weights to each category indicator.

CategoryWeightage in %
Ecological quality22.5
Economical quality22.5
Sociocultural and functional quality22.5
Technical quality22.5
Process quality10
Site quality(Separate assessment)

The assessment is done by an auditor who is appointed by the project contractor. The auditor supports the contractor and supervises the construction process from the initial registration up to the certification and the project conclusion

#ISO certification in world

#ISO Certification in Germany

#ISO Certifcition in India

#ISO Certification in New Delhi

#ISOCertification in Maharshtra

Rating levelPercentage score
Platinum≥80%
Gold≥65%
Silver≥50%
Bronze≥35% (only for existing buildings)