Mass General Brigham Welcomes Healthcare DER at Boston Rehab & Research Hospital

The distributed energy and efficiency upgrades by RENEW will allow the healthcare entity to preserve its capital to focus on new patient initiatives while saving energy costs compared with past systems.

The largest hospital-based healthcare research group in the United States contracted Boston-based developer RENEW Energy Partners to deploy a new and upgraded distributed energy system directly powering and decarbonizing its top rehabilitation and treatment facility in the same city.

Non-profit Mass General Brigham and RENEW Energy Partners collaborated to deliver a thermal energy upgrade for the Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston in the past year. The project required no upfront investment from Mass General Brigham—thus offering a variation of the “energy as a service” model in which the developer owns, operates and maintains the distributed energy system through a long-term power purchase agreement with the customer.

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Mass General Brigham was founded through the combination of two historic healthcare facilities, Massachusetts General Hospital and the Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The entire system treats about 2.5 million patients annually, while allocating about $2 billion toward medical research funding.

The distributed energy and efficiency upgrades by RENEW will allow the healthcare entity to preserve its capital to focus on new patient initiatives while saving energy costs compared with past systems.

"By reducing our operating costs with an energy-efficient upgrade and asset management services from RENEW, we can continue focusing on delivering the highest standards of patient care," said Jason D’Antona, director of engineering & utilities, Real Estate & Facilities at Mass General Brigham, in a statement. "RENEW’s initial engineering combined with its continued asset management provides the expertise, creativity, and flexibility we needed to ensure reliable power and optimized costs—helping us free up capital and invest in sustainable solutions that support our long-term goals."

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, built on land adjacent to the former Charleston Navy Yard in Boston’s Inner Harbor, is a 132-bed teaching hospital and opened in 2013.

RENEW Energy Partners did not detail the power generation particulars of the distributed energy system at Spaulding—the company has used multiple distributed energy resources in past projects—but predicted the upgrade will increase efficiency by about 10%. Renew says its system will maximize usable thermal output to more than meet building load requirements.

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"Our work with Mass General Brigham demonstrates how customized energy solutions can unlock capital, enhance system reliability and directly support a client’s long-term sustainability vision," said Charlie Lord, Managing Principal at RENEW Energy Partners. “It’s been a privilege to collaborate with an organization so deeply committed to both patient care and environmental responsibility. We look forward to continuing our long-term partnership as MGB scales its clean energy initiatives."

Renew Energy Partners’ financial backing includes investment from major clean energy backers such as Mitsubishi HC Capital America and Greenbacker Capital. Among its recent projects include the MACOM microgrid in Lowell, Massachusetts, and the Isla Frio cold storage efficiency project in Puerto Rico.

Earlier this year, RENEW Energy Partners announced it was joining with on-site power developer Kinsley Energy Systems to deploy battery energy storage systems across $100 million worth of projects in the northeastern U.S. The partnerships focus on distributed energy systems installed on-site for commercial and industrial customers.

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About the Author

Rod Walton, Microgrid Knowledge Managing Editor

Managing Editor

For Microgrid Knowledge editorial inquiries, please contact Managing Editor Rod Walton at [email protected].

I’ve spent the last 15 years covering the energy industry as a newspaper and trade journalist. I was an energy writer and business editor at the Tulsa World before moving to business-to-business media at PennWell Publishing, which later became Clarion Events, where I covered the electric power industry. I joined Endeavor Business Media in November 2021 to help launch EnergyTech, one of the company’s newest media brands. I joined Microgrid Knowledge in July 2023. 

I earned my Bachelors degree in journalism from the University of Oklahoma. My career stops include the Moore American, Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise, Wagoner Tribune and Tulsa World, all in Oklahoma . I have been married to Laura for the past 33-plus years and we have four children and one adorable granddaughter. We want the energy transition to make their lives better in the future. 

Microgrid Knowledge and EnergyTech are focused on the mission critical and large-scale energy users and their sustainability and resiliency goals. These include the commercial and industrial sectors, as well as the military, universities, data centers and microgrids. The C&I sectors together account for close to 30 percent of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.

Many large-scale energy users such as Fortune 500 companies, and mission-critical users such as military bases, universities, healthcare facilities, public safety and data centers, shifting their energy priorities to reach net-zero carbon goals within the coming decades. These include plans for renewable energy power purchase agreements, but also on-site resiliency projects such as microgrids, combined heat and power, rooftop solar, energy storage, digitalization and building efficiency upgrades.

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