Energy Efficiency Measures Implemented
Assesses whether the organization has implemented tangible measures to improve energy efficiency in its facilities, demonstrating a commitment to responsible resource use and reducing its carbon footprint. Includes both capital measures (retrofits) and operational controls (scheduling, setpoints, commissioning) aligned to actual occupancy patterns such as prayer/service timetables. These efforts reflect the Islamic duty of khilafah (stewardship) over the earth by actively avoiding israf (extravagance) in energy consumption, upholding the sacred amanah (trust) of environmental protection.
Maṣlaḥah
The principle of public interest, which prioritizes measures that reduce harms and deliver collective benefit.
Ḥimā
A protected public reserve established to preserve and manage shared resources for the community's benefit.
Sadd al-Dharā'iʿ
The principle of 'blocking the means' to an evil or harmful end. Proactively implementing energy efficiency measures blocks the means to the greater harms (mafsadah) of resource depletion, pollution, and climate change.
La darar wa la dirar
The maxim ‘la darar wa la dirar’ obliges prevention of harm; reducing emissions and pollution via efficiency removes preventable harm (mafsadah).
Al-ghunm bil-ghurm
Benefit comes with liability; whoever benefits from an asset bears responsibility for its costs and harms, supporting the trustee duty to manage energy use responsibly.
Isrāf
The act of wastefulness, extravagance, or exceeding proper limits in consumption.
Khilāfah
The concept of stewardship, where humans are entrusted by God to manage and care for the Earth and its resources.
Amānah
A trust or responsibility that must be fulfilled with integrity and care.
Hifz al‑mal
Efficiency advances hifz al‑mal by lowering operational costs and directing savings to communal benefit (maṣlaḥah).
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Full import from mizan-297.json
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