News Archives | UKGBC /news-type/news/ The voice of our sustainable built environment Tue, 02 Jun 2026 14:00:04 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2023/02/cropped-UKGBC-favicon-1.png News Archives | UKGBC /news-type/news/ 32 32 UKGBC responds to the Warm Homes Fund’s Call for Evidence /news/ukgbc-responds-to-the-warm-homes-fund-call-for-evidence/ Tue, 02 Jun 2026 13:58:12 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=70499 Read our Policy Team's detailed response to the Warm Homes Fund Call for Evidence.

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The Warm Homes Fund represents a critical opportunity to move beyond short-term, stop start interventions and instead lay the foundations for a long-term, investible retrofit market capable of delivering warmer homes, lower bills and meaningful progress towards the UK’s climate goals.

UKGBC welcomes the opportunity to feed into this Call for Evidence and the breadth of issues it seeks to address across retrofit delivery, local government capability, community energy, and emerging service‑based energy models. The current system is fragmented, administratively burdensome and unable to provide the long‑term certainty required for supply chains, investors and local partners to grow. We therefore welcome the Fund’s focus on repayable finance, area‑based approaches, and the role of energy‑as‑a‑service models — all of which have the potential to unlock new pathways for investment and accelerate the transition to a resilient, low‑carbon housing stock.

Read our full response here

UKGBC Warm Homes Fund Response – Call for Evidence
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UKGBC Launches #BuildingLife Roadmap Ambassadors Campaign /news/ukgbc-launches-buildinglife-roadmap-ambassadors-campaign/ Thu, 14 May 2026 08:47:09 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=70345 Introducing UKGBC’s #BuildingLife Roadmap Ambassadors, uniting industry and policy leaders to accelerate action on whole life carbon and climate resilience across the built environment.

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Ģֱ launching today the Roadmaps Ambassador Campaign,a collective effortfrom industry leaders and policymakersto support the adoption of theNet Zero Whole Life Carbon Roadmapand theUK Climate Resilience Roadmapacross the built environment sector.

UKGBC’s Roadmaps guide thebuilt environmentsector in building a low carbon, resilient and regenerative built environment at the pacerequiredto meet climate targets. Adopting the roadmaps more widely will help deliver a sustainable built environment that protects lives, homes, jobs,communitiesand nature.

Why Now?

Findings from theWhole Life Carbon Roadmap Progress Reportshow that the built environment is dangerouslybehind ondecarbonisation.Since 2018, emissions in the built environment have fallen by just 14% against the 24% needed.The evidence is clear:systemicacceleration isrequired.

This campaign,part ofWorldGBC’s#BuildingLife initiative,isworking across Europe toeliminateemissions across the full lifecycle of buildings and deliver a climate-neutral built environment. It directly supportsWorldGBC’sinitiative which aims to promote a whole life carbon approach across 12 counties and supports the global ambition of making near-zero and resilient buildings the norm by 2030

commercial retrofit

Paul Cahalan, Associate Director of Membership, Marketing and Communications said:

“This campaign comes at a critical time for the sectoramid a rapidly changing climateand bringstogether industry and political voices to take the key messages from the two roadmaps deeper into industry and policy conversations. Though greater adoption,industryand policymakerscanuse the roadmaps to helpcreate a low carbon, resilient and regenerative built environment.”

The following individuals have joined the campaign as Roadmap Ambassadors:

  • Will Arnold, Head of Sustainable Materials, Useful Simple Trust.
  • Ashley Bateson, Director & Head of Sustainability, Hoare Lea.
  • Louise Clarke, Group Head of Sustainability, Berkeley Group PLC.
  • Georgia Elliott-Smith, Founder & Director, Fighting Dirty | Sustainability Director, Elliott Wood.
  • Emma Howard Boyd CBE, Chair, National Heat Risk Commission | Chair – ClientEarth Group Board | Co-Chair, HERA (formerly Climate Resilience for All)
  • Stephen Good, CEO, Built Environment – Smarter Transformation.
  • Douglas Morrison, Deputy CEO, Built Environment – Smarter Transformation.
  • Chinyelu Oranefo, Managing Director, Sustainability Advisory, Real Estate & Housing, Lloyds Corporate & Institutional.
  • Duncan Price, Partner, Sustainability, Buro Happold.
  • Rt Hon Chris Skidmore, OBE, Former UK Energy Minister, Chair of the Climate Action Coalition, Working Group Chair – UK Transition Finance Council.
  • Simon Sturgis, Founder, Targeting Zero
  • Katherine Willis, Baroness Willis of Summertown, Principal, St. Edmund Hall, University of Oxford | Professor of Biodiversity in the Department of Biology, University of Oxford | Cross-Bench Peer, House of Lords | Founder and Director, NatCap Research LTD.

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UKGBC responds to the Future Homes Standard /news/ukgbc-responds-to-the-future-homes-standard/ Tue, 24 Mar 2026 09:54:46 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=69626 Read our Policy Team's detailed analysis of the Government's long-awaited Future Homes and Building Standard (FHS).

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The Government has published the long-awaited Future Homes and Buildings Standard (FHS), a significant step toward more energy-efficient, low-carbon homes.

The Government has gone with the stronger option, accelerating the shift away from gas boilers to heat pumps and making rooftop solar a core feature of most new homes – cutting emissions by around 75%.

Simon McWhirter, Chief Executive of the Ģֱ, said:

We welcome the Government’s decision to adopt the more ambitious Future Homes Standard, putting new homes firmly on a path away from fossil fuels and ensuring rooftop solar and improved levels of energy efficiency are the new norm. This will help lower household energy bills, reduce pressure on the electricity system, and give industry the confidence to invest in skills, supply chains and innovation. 

Making high levels of solar readily available is a clear win for households, the energy system and the climate, particularly at a time when global instability is once again driving up fossil fuel prices and exposing the risks of relying on gas for our homes. It’s a practical, cost-effective measure that will pay back for residents from day one. 

However, this must be the start of the journey, not the end. Government must maintain this momentum and set out a clear timetable for the next iteration of building regulations. Many developers are already building to higher standards, and are eager to help ensure the next update delivers genuinely future-ready homes by the early 2030s – comfortable, affordable to run, climate-resilient and zero-carbon.” 

Read our policy team’s analysis to learn more:

Download our full analysis

Future Homes and Building Standard Analysis
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UKGBC gives evidence on the Warm Homes Plan /news/ukgbc-gives-evidence-on-the-warm-homes-plan/ Thu, 12 Mar 2026 11:58:28 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=69506 Co-head of Policy and Places, Jo Wheeler, gave evidence on behalf of UKGBC at the Energy Security and Net Zero Select Committee session on the effectiveness of the Government’s Warm Homes Plan for delivery.

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Following the publication of the Warm Homes Plan in January, the Committee held a one-off evidence session to scrutinise the plan, and examine the adequacy of measures within it to help address fuel poverty and support the workforce to meet the anticipated growth in demand for clean energy technologies.

Jo gave evidence in the second session around how effective the Warm Homes Plan will be for retrofit and low-carbon heating systems. There were questions around workforce, the Boiler Upgrades Scheme, and the role of a Warm Homes Agency. Jo emphasised the need for immediate and consistent policies to support delivery and build industry confidence for investment, highlighted the importance of taking a whole house approach to ensure retrofit measures are appropriate and support both decarbonisation and bill reduction, and even spoke from personal experience about the difference a heat pump can make to home comfort.

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The Warm Homes and Buildings Plan: UKGBC Policy Team Analysis /news/ukgbc-responds-to-warm-homes-plan/ Wed, 21 Jan 2026 10:04:35 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=68889 The UKGBC policy team give you an overview of the long-awaited Warm Homes Plan, with more insights in our full analysis.

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Simon McWhirter, CEO of UKGBC, said:

This Warm Homes Plan represents a vital and necessary step towards delivering comfortable, affordable and future-proofed homes and buildings across the UK.

UKGBC has long issued a clarion call for a long-term national strategy to tackle the challenge of retrofitting all our homes and commercial buildings at scale, and we are pleased to have worked alongside industry and government to help shape its development.

We welcome the ambition for a solar ‘rooftop revolution’, low interest loans to help households wean themselves off volatile fossil fuels, and the focus on protecting low-income householders. By harnessing abundant solar energy and heat pump technology to both heat and cool buildings, the plan will help future-proof against rising bills and our rapidly warming climate.”

Our Analysis

Key Figures

£15bn of public funding confirmed for home retrofit this Parliament:
£5 bn
£2 bn
£2.7 bn
£1.1 bn
£2.7 bn
£1.5 bn

The government’s Warm Homes Plan marks a significant moment for the UK’s housing stock. With £15billionof public funding committed this Parliament, the Plan sets out an ambitious programme to cut energy bills permanently, tackle fuel poverty,and accelerate the transition to low-carbon homes.

At the heart of the Plan is a strong focus on technologies that can help households reduce their energy costs. Rooftop solar is positioned as a central pillar, with the government estimating that measures in the Plan could support solar installations on up to three millionadditionalhomes by 2030. Combined with falling costs and existing market demand, this could more than double the rate of deployment seen over the last fifteen years.

UKGBC welcomes the focus on clean energy technologies,butwe arealsoclear that building fabric must remain a core part of the solution. The Plan rightly recognises thatinsulation and other fabric measures, when installed withappropriate ventilation, are a cornerstone of energy efficiency, particularly for low-income households, but withthe overall emphasis increasingly leans toward technologies such as solar and batteries as the primary routes to bill reduction.

There was much needed focus on adaptation and resilience, with an extension of Boiler Upgrade Scheme support for air-to-air heat pumps, which can provide cooling as well as heating. As the UK faces hotter summers alongside colder winters, ensuring homes deliver year-round comfort is increasingly important, as demonstrated in UKGBC’s industry-leading Climate Resilience Roadmap.

A major strength of the Warm Homes Plan is its focus on low-income households. £5 billion is allocated to fully funded retrofit packages, with a target to lift up to one million families out of fuel poverty. Delivery will increasingly be led by local authorities and housing associations, with a move toward a single, streamlined low-income scheme. This place-based approach reflects best practice and aligns closely with UKGBC’s Local Area Retrofit Accelerator work. Coordinating upgrades at neighbourhood scale can deliver better outcomes, from lower bills and improved health to local jobs and regeneration. 

The introduction of a government-backed consumer loan offer is another important development. UKGBC has long called for accessible, low-cost finance to support home upgrades, and these low-interest loans will play a valuable role in unlocking private investment and supporting households who want to act. 

The Plan also provides long-awaited clarity on Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards for rented homes. Aligning standards across the private and social rented sectors by 2030 isan important stepin protecting renters from high energy bills and poor living conditions.Additional reform of Energy Performance Certificates,offers an opportunity to provide clearer, moreaccurateinformation about the mostappropriate upgradesfor different homes.

The creation of a new Warm Homes Agency to coordinate delivery, consumer advice and oversight is a welcome move–consumer confidence, quality assurance and clear redress mechanisms are essential for success at scale.The Plan also recognises the importance of skills, supplychainsand UK manufacturing, including continued support for training and an ambition for 70% of heat pumps installed in the UK to be manufactured domestically by 2035.

The challenge now is deliveryand getting the transition from old to new right.UKGBC looks forward to working with government and industry to turn this Plan into action on the ground.

Read our full analysis here

Warm Homes Plan Analysis

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UKGBC signs letter in support of the BNG requirements for small sites /news/ukgbc-signs-letter-in-support-of-the-bng-requirements-for-small-sites/ Mon, 15 Dec 2025 14:20:00 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=68737 BNG is simple in principle and powerful in practice: if you develop land, you must…

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BNG is simple in principle and powerful in practice: if you develop land, you must leave nature in a measurably better state than before. It is one of the most practical tools we have to tackle nature loss while enabling high-quality development. And it has been working. Local authorities have invested in skills. Developers have adapted. Consultants, contractors, ecologists and communities have created new local green spaces that reduce flooding, cut overheating risk and boost health and wellbeing.

Undoing this progress nowby exempting all small siteswould unravel the foundations of the UK’s emerging nature market, undermine local authorities, and erode public trust. Small sites aren’t a rounding error, but the backbone of our housing pipeline. They shape people’s daily experience of place. They provide the pocket parks, street trees and habitat corridors that stitch nature into the places we live. Removing BNG from these sites removes the market driver to protect and enhance the little bits of nature that matter most.

Industry knows this. That is why support for BNG is broad and growing. Morgan Taylor, Director of Nature at Greengage Environmental Ltd., sums up that “it makes good business sense to protect and restore our stock of natural capital. Fundamentally, BNG is a simple mechanism through which we can achieve this. Nature, however, is an easy scapegoat for past and current failings in our systems. Government is therefore at risk of condemning the wrong man by making unevidenced, knee jerk responses which wind back commitments.”

The economic case is equally strong. The Wildlife Trust found that a well-functioning BNG market could generate £250 million a year and support thousands of jobs. The Urban Land Institute has shown that homes with stronger biodiversity features attract higher values, as proof that nature is not a drag on growth but an engine of it. Meanwhile, investor demand for nature-positive portfolios is accelerating, with adoption of TNFD frameworks surging across the sector. Weakening BNG now jeopardises all of this: the investment pipeline, the new skills and jobs, the confidence that is essential for the UK to lead in nature markets rather than fall behind.

We recognise that implementation has been fast and that refinements are needed, particularly around brownfield sites and local delivery. But industry has been clear: improvements are already underway, informed by strong cross-sector collaboration. What we need from government is stability, not a sudden unravelling of policy that businesses have spent years preparing for.

BNG is good for people, good for business and essential for the places we are building.”

The Ģֱ urges Ministers to rethink. Maintaining BNG for small sites is not red tape; it is the bare minimum needed to avoid leaving nature and communities worse off. Retreating now would embed the long-term costs of more flooding, poorer air quality, hotter urban areas, weakened local nature recovery, and forego the economic opportunity of a thriving nature market.

BNG is good for people, good for business and essential for the places we are building. The Government should strengthen it, not abandon it.

Read the full letter here

Small Sites GCB Business Letter

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What the Government’s Carbon Budget Delivery Means for the Built Environment /news/what-the-governments-carbon-budget-delivery-means-for-the-built-environment/ Thu, 13 Nov 2025 15:34:57 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=68476 The post What the Government’s Carbon Budget Delivery Means for the Built Environment appeared first on UKGBC.

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Last month, the UK Government published its new Carbon Budget Delivery Plan (CBDP) – the most detailed attempt yet to map how past, present and future climate policies, combined with rapidly falling clean-tech costs, could close the gap in the UK’s carbon targets for the 2030s. For our sector – which needs policy certainty to unlock investment – the plan reinforces existing focus and hints at action in some areas where faster delivery is now essential.

Heating: Progress on standards, but the hard work still ahead

Heating remains the second-largest source of UK emissions, and the plan reiterates what we already know: we cannot meet our climate targets without phasing out fossil heating and scaling heat pumps. The CBDP shows that the transition away from gas boilers is still moving far too slowly (we need to go from around84,000 heat pumps installed today to2.5 million by 2030 and9.3 million by 2035), but the government has chosen not to pursue a 2035 gas boiler phase-out, instead relying on incentives and consumer choice. They made positive (re)commitments to the boiler upgrade scheme, increased public engagement on heat pumps, and an acknowledgement that the high price of electricity vs gas is a big barrier. The forthcomingWarm Homes Planwill be crucial – it must set out how government will cut electricity costs, build the skilled workforce, and support households and businesses through the transition.

Cutting electricity costs: A major shift in government positioning

For the first time, the government has explicitly recognised that electricity prices must fall if we are to electrify heat, transport, and industry at the pace required. This is a major and welcome shift, and potentially transformative for the built environment: lower electricity prices would make heat pumps, building electrification and clean industrial processes dramatically more attractive. However, it’s now down to effective delivery of this in this parliament to determine whether green heating technologies become mainstream or continue along the incremental growth trajectory.

Whole Life Carbon: A signal that regulation is coming?

The CBDP includes the clearest government commitment yet to tackling the embodied carbon of buildings and materials which signals it will encourage Whole Life Carbon Assessments, develop a Circular Economy Strategy, explore incentives to use existing buildings more efficiently, and integrate circularity into planning and development processes. All encouraging moves for addressing 25% of UK carbon emissions from construction materials, this is long-awaited progress, but the real test will be ensuring this has some impact.

Industry & Resources: Lacking in clarity

Heavy industry can deliver major emissions cuts through electrification, hydrogen, and demand for low-carbon materials, but the plan offers little detail on how government will support this transition. We need to see a circular economy strategy, low-carbon steel strategy, a response to the low carbon products consultation, and indication that the cost of electricity will come down to make industrial decarbonisation feasible.

From plan to delivery

The CBDP demonstrates a seriousness of intention and a more comprehensive understanding of the challenges and opportunities ahead. It rightly frames climate action as an engine of economic growth, job creation, and improved living standards, but the proof will now be in the delivery of this plan at the scale and pace required. To do this requires engagement with industry – through collaboration we can unlock investment, boost innovation, and deliver the warm, affordable, zero-carbon buildings that the UK needs.

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UKGBC announces new Regenerative Places Framework Task Group /news/ukgbc-announces-new-regenerative-places-framework-task-group/ Tue, 04 Nov 2025 10:25:51 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=68262 Meet the group of industry experts leading the regenerative places framework task group.

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What if, every time we built or retrofitted something, the communities and ecosystems around us got better?

‘Regenerative’ principles are being discussed within the built environment at an increasing rate. However, there is a lack of consensus within industry on what we mean by ‘regenerative’, and particularly how, and at what stage principles should be implemented, or outcomes measured.

The Regenerative Places Framework Task Group will explore this crucially important challenge, building the compelling case to industry and policy makers for the benefits of place-based regenerative approaches, and examining the pathways, approaches, and shifts in practice needed to achieve more regenerative outcomes on projects.

The Task Group is considering how regenerative approaches can be applied to the retrofit of existing homes and communities at scale, and additional housing that meets local community needs and aspirations. Informed by UKGBC’s Regenerative Places programme, including the Local Authority Retrofit Accelerator pilot projects delivered by The MCS Foundation, this project aims to develop guidance for industry and policy makers on how to embed regenerative approaches into projects from the earliest design stages, delivering tangible social, environmental and long-term economic value. With nearly 19 million poorly rated homes and interconnected housing and climate challenges, there’s a pressing need for transformative action.

Task Group members:

Lina AlsaffarChapman BDSP
Syreeta BayneMuse
Jaime Blakely-GloverLambert Smith Hampton
Leigh BrownCollaborate CIC
Martin BrownLiving Future Europe
Lee CarterEssex County Council
Joanna ConceicaoSavills Earth
Gabriela CostaExpedition
Josef Davies-CoatesCommunity Energy England
Gillian DickGlasgow City Council
Amber FaheyBe First
Chris FellnerHaworth Tompkins
Andy GrahamWWT
Brendon HarperWestminster City Council
Poppy HarrisDeloitte
Marianne Löwgren Atelier Ten
Ben HolmesElliot Wood
Ellie HylandEight Versa
Martin KempBRE
Sofia KesidouRamboll
Bianca Laura-LantiniBuro Happold
Miles LewisClarion Housing Group
Alexandra MolnarEight Versa
John NordonIgloo
Mary OrdMorgan Sindall
Anna PamphilonPamphilon Architects / Architects Declare
Mark RichardsonTroup Bywaters + Anders
Peter RunacresECDC
Romane SanchezRyder Architecture / Okana
Marie-Louise SchembriHilson Moran
Susie SidleyRidge and Partners LLP
Eike SindlingerArup / Architects Declare
Steve Sze Lloyds Banking Group
Paul ToyneGrimshaw
Carl WalkerHoare Lea
Milly WarnerStride Treglown

Thank you to our Regenerative Places Programme Partners for their ongoing support:

We’re also grateful for the support of the MCS Foundation

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UKGBC responds to Conservative plans to replace the Climate Change Act /news/ukgbc-responds-to-conservative-plans-to-replace-the-climate-change-act/ Thu, 02 Oct 2025 09:17:14 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=68032 This morning, the Conservative Party announced plans to repeal the UK’s landmark climate change law,…

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This morning, the Conservative Party announced plans to repeal the UK’s landmark climate change law, proposing instead a new strategy focused on delivering “cheap and reliable” energy.

Simon McWhirter, Chief Executive at UKGBC, said:

Scrapping the Climate Change Act is an act of self-sabotage and replacing it with a fossil-fuel based strategy to deliver cheap energy and economic growth is pure fantasy.

Communities and households know it is gas that’s driven bills sky-high, and renewables are already the cheapest source of power we have.

The Conservatives should be proud of the foundational legacy they built, helping start the country towards to a safer, fairer, and more secure future, not walking away from it.

This move is regressive politics and rips-up 15 years of progress that has helped to keep bills down, unlock billions in private investment and made Britain a global innovator in clean industries.

The real route to energy security, affordable bills and thousands of skilled jobs lies in insulating homes, scaling up clean power, and building the industries of the future.”

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AGM 2025 Results /news/agm-2025/ Wed, 24 Sep 2025 09:06:45 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=67887 UKGBC’s Annual General Meeting took place on 23 September at 150 Holborn in London, with strong member participation. All proposed resolutions were approved, including the election of new board members Miles Lewis, Eva MacNamara, and Jennifer Waterhouse, as well as the reappointment of Sunand Prasad OBE, Lorna Walker, Victoria Quinlan, Basil Demeroutis, and Judith Everett.

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UKGBC’s Annual General Meeting was held yesterday, 23 September, at 150 Holborn in London, generously hosted by Perkins&Will and Sidara. The event brought members together for an evening of reflection on the past financial year and looking ahead to the next one. With strong participation from our members, the formal part of the gathering concluded with the approval of all the proposed resolutions.

Ordinary Resolutions

Director Appointments

  • The Board of Directors proposed the election of Miles Lewis (Director of Sustainability at Clarion Housing Group) as a director and trustee of the Company pursuant to Article 3.2.1 of the Company’s Articles of Association​. This resolution was approved.
  • The Board of Directors proposed the election of Eva MacNamara (Director at Expedition Engineering) as a director and trustee of the Company pursuant to Article 3.2.1 of the Company’s Articles of Association​. This resolution was approved.
  • The Board of Directors proposed the election of Jennifer Waterhouse (Senior Partnerships Manager at The Crown Estate) as a director and trustee of the Company pursuant to Article 3.2.2 of the Company’s Articles of Association. This resolution was approved.

Director Reappointments

  • The Board of Directors proposed to reappoint Sunand Prasad OBE, who retires by rotation in accordance with the Company’s Articles of Association​. This resolution was approved.
  • The Board of Directors proposed to reappoint Lorna Walker, who retires by rotation in accordance with the Company’s Articles of Association​. This resolution was approved.
  • The Board of Directors proposed to reappoint Victoria Quinlan, who retires by rotation in accordance with the Company’s Articles of Association​. This resolution was approved.
  • The Board of Directors proposed to reappoint Basil Demeroutis, who retires by rotation in accordance with the Company’s Articles of Association​. This resolution was approved.
  • The Board of Directors proposed to reappoint Judith Everett, who retires by rotation in accordance with the Company’s Articles of Association. This resolution was approved.

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