The care sector stands at a crossroads. With environmental sustainability regulations on the horizon and a planet facing unprecedented challenges, care homes can no longer afford to treat sustainability as an afterthought. Hannah Montgomery, co-founder of Grace Cares, recently shared practical insights on how care providers can embrace environmental responsibility while improving their bottom line.
Why Sustainability Matters More Than Ever
The connection between environmental health and human health has never been clearer. As Hannah points out, we’re living in a world where a child has died from air pollution, forest fires rage globally, and complex health conditions are appearing earlier in life across all age groups. “If we’re on a broken planet, then we’re going to put more strain on health and social care services,” she explains. This creates a compelling case for the care sector to become part of the solution.
Simple Steps to Get Started
Audit Everything First
Before making changes, care homes need to understand their current position. Hannah recommends starting with comprehensive audits:
Key discussion points include:
- Energy usage baseline assessment (many local authorities offer free energy audits)
- Water consumption monitoring
- Food waste measurement
- Single-use plastic inventory
“If you don’t know where you are now, what are you going to do?” Hannah asks. These measurements provide the foundation for setting realistic, measurable targets.
Rethink Single-Use Plastics
One of the most impactful changes involves challenging assumptions about single-use items. Hannah references the Royal College of Nurses’ “Gloves Off” campaign, which demonstrated that reducing glove usage in certain situations actually decreased infection rates while saving money and reducing waste. The key finding: staff washed their hands more frequently when not relying on gloves.
This evidence-based approach can help care homes make informed decisions about when protective equipment is truly necessary versus when it’s used out of habit.
Energy Efficiency Wins
Small changes can yield significant results:
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Turning thermostats down by just one degree makes a substantial difference
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Replacing traditional lighting with LED alternatives
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Taking advantage of local authority match funding for green improvements
The Business Case for Going Green
Sustainability isn’t just about environmental responsibility; it’s smart business. Hannah highlights several compelling reasons:
Recruitment Advantage: Younger generations increasingly prioritize employers with strong environmental policies and work-life balance. Care homes with clear sustainability commitments may find it easier to attract quality staff.
Tender Success: Local authority contracts increasingly include ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) requirements. Care providers with documented sustainability efforts will be better positioned for these opportunities.
Cost Savings: Many green initiatives reduce operational costs while providing upfront funding support from local authorities.
Thinking Planet as Stakeholder
Perhaps the most transformative suggestion Hannah offers is conceptual: “Think of the planet as a stakeholder.” In every meeting and decision, asking “What would the planet think about this?” can shift organizational culture toward more sustainable practices.
This approach, combined with alignment to the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals, provides a framework that regulators will recognize and respect.
Moving Beyond Compliance
While regulatory requirements may be delayed, care homes shouldn’t wait for mandates to act. The environmental challenges we face require immediate action, and the care sector has both the opportunity and responsibility to lead.
As Hannah concludes, this represents a fundamental culture change. Success requires making sustainability engaging and integrated into core operations rather than treating it as an add-on requirement.
The path forward is clear: start with measurement, implement evidence-based changes, and embrace the planet as a key stakeholder in every decision. The result will be care homes that are not only more sustainable but also more attractive to staff, more competitive in tenders, and better positioned for long-term success.
About Caring Conversations
Caring Conversations is a collaborative series created in partnership with The Care Show and produced by Five on a Bike. Designed to spotlight the voices shaping social care, the series features candid interviews and conversations with care providers, sector leaders, suppliers, and decision-makers across the industry.
Whether you’re a manager, innovator, front-line caregiver, or supplier, Caring Conversations offers a platform to share insights, spark ideas, and connect with the wider care community.
Interested in joining the conversation or sharing your perspective? We’d love to hear from you.
Presented by The Care Show | Produced by Five on a Bike

