Resilience Roadmap | UKGBC /our-work/topics/resilience-roadmap/ The voice of our sustainable built environment Tue, 02 Jun 2026 15:23:53 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2023/02/cropped-UKGBC-favicon-1.png Resilience Roadmap | UKGBC /our-work/topics/resilience-roadmap/ 32 32 CCS x UKGBC Partnership & Relationship Building Summer Drinks /events/ccs-partnership-relationship-building-summer-drinks/ Tue, 02 Jun 2026 15:23:51 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=70506 Join us this July for an exclusive summer networking evening in collaboration with our new strategic partner, Considerate Constructors Scheme

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Bringing together contractor, client, strategic and public sector partners, alongside prospective partners, the evening will offer an opportunity to network, build new relationships and explore shared priorities and connections across the built environment.

Hosted at CCS London office, the evening will combine short talks from CCS and theҵwith drinks and informal networking on our rooftop terrace in a relaxed setting overlooking the city.

Ģֱ a collaborative, industry-led network driving the transformation of the built environment towards sustainability. This collaborative event aims to connect professionals across the industry working towards a more sustainable built environment. Speakers from UKGBC will share insights and practical resources to support the industry, including UKGBC’s Whole Life Carbon Framework.

Expect summer drinks, conversation and networking with peers from across the built environment for a well-deserved get together at our new office.

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Climate Resilience in Action: One Year on from the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap /events/climate-resilience-in-action/ Fri, 22 May 2026 10:46:51 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=70425 This event will showcase the progress since the launch of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap last summer, highlighting where the industry is acting on the recommendations, and it will include the launch of new guidance on Adaptation for Climate Resilience: Non-domestic Buildings.

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One year on from the launch of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap,this event willshowcasehow we are supporting industryto translate climate resilience ambition into action.Thiswebinarwill focus on the tools and guidance available totake actionnowand will include the launch ofthenew guidance,Adaptation for climate resilience:non-domestic buildings,whichhighlights key adaptation measures for a non-domestic building in two different hazard scenarios, responding tostage three of thefour-stagemodel from the Roadmap.

A panel of expert speakers will share insights from their involvement in our climate resilience and adaptation work, their experience of embedding the principles and key challenges and opportunities to be addressed to facilitate further progress.   

Why Attend?

Celebrate one year since the launch of the climate resilience roadmap

highlighting progress made on implementing the roadmap

Launch Adaptation for Climate Resilience: Non-domestic Buildings guide

which talks through some of the practical aspects of the four-stage process of the Climate Resilience Roadmap, helping to pilot and enable organisations to translate resilience ambitions from the Roadmap into practical action on projects.

Share what our upcoming work is

to help organisations translate resilience ambition into practical project action through stakeholder plans and estates-level adaptation.

Who Should Attend?

This event is open to everyone but it might be especially insightful for:

  • Developers, Asset Owners and occupiers
  • Asset/facilities managers and operators
  • Designers, architects, urban planners, consultants, and other professionals part of a project team

UKGBC Cancellation and Refund Policy

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/

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UKGBC responds to the CCC’s ‘A Well Adapted UK’ report /news/ukgbc-responds-to-the-cccs-a-well-adapted-uk-report/ Wed, 20 May 2026 08:58:02 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=70392 UKGBC's Policy Team analyses the Climate Change Committee's latest report on climate adaptation in the UK and what it means for the built environment.

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Joanne Wheeler, Co-Head of Policy & Places at UKGBC, said:

The CCC has made the challenge plain: the UK must adapt faster or face mounting threats to people, places and the economy. UKGBC’s Climate Resilience Roadmap shows how that shift can be made in practice, with joined-up action across the built environment and government. The challenge is serious, but it is not beyond us if we choose to act now.”

The Climate Change Committee’s (CCC) latest assessment of climate risk is a clear and urgent signal that the UK must accelerate adaptation now. Climate impacts are already being felt across the country, and the report makes plain that higher temperatures, flooding, drought and cascading infrastructure risks will intensify unless government, business and communities act at pace. UKGBC strongly welcomes the CCC’s focus on practical, evidence-based action, and the emphasis on clear targets, delivery plans and accountability.

This message echoes what UKGBC has been saying through our Climate Resilience Roadmap, which sets out how the built environment can move from awareness of climate risk to assessment, prioritisation and implementation. We have long argued that resilience cannot sit in isolation: it must be integrated with decarbonisation, nature, health and wellbeing, and long-term value. The CCC’s report reinforces that approach, particularly in relation to homes, infrastructure, public services, and the need to protect the most vulnerable.

On the built environment, the CCC highlights the need for new buildings to be fit for a changing climate, for existing homes and assets to be retrofitted and upgraded, for better preparedness, and for cooling and water resilience to be addressed at scale. UKGBC’s Climate Resilience Roadmap supports exactly this shift: from broad ambition to the practical, site, portfolio, and community-level decisions needed to reduce risk and deliver more resilient places.

For industry, the message is straightforward. Climate resilience needs to become a core part of investment, design, planning, procurement and asset management. That means acting now on heat risk, flood risk, water scarcity and infrastructure interdependencies, and using the tools, standards and methods already available to make adaptation routine rather than exceptional.


For government, the priority is equally clear. The CCC sets out the case for stronger objectives, measurable targets, delivery plans and monitoring, backed by regulation, standards and investment. UKGBC support this direction and would add that policy must enable joined-up action across departments and sectors, so that resilience measures are not delivered piecemeal. Planning policy, building standards, infrastructure development, and funding programmes all need to reflect the climate risks we already face, and the more severe future risks that are now unavoidable.

There is a strong case for greater emphasis on nature-based solutions, passive cooling, flood risk management and long-term asset maintenance, all of which can deliver resilience and wider co-benefits. The CCC’s analysis shows that many adaptation actions are cost-effective today, and that delay only increases cost and harm. UKGBC believes this should galvanise a shift in both mindset and delivery: adaptation is no longer a future issue, but an immediate investment in safety, wellbeing and economic stability.

The CCC’s report and UKGBC’s Climate Resilience Roadmap both make the same case: adaptation needs to move from principle to practical delivery. The UK needs clear leadership, practical delivery and sustained investment to create a well-adapted built environment. The opportunity here is to reduce harm, protect lives and livelihoods, and create places that resilient, inclusive and fit for the climate reality we are already entering.

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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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Climate Resilience and Adaptation /get-involved/climate-resilience-and-adaptation-forum/ Wed, 25 Mar 2026 15:34:54 +0000 /?post_type=get-involved&p=69703 The Climate Resilience and Adaptation Forum brings together industry professionals who are actively working on the adaptation of built assets.

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This forum will explore themes around climate resilience and adaptation to cope with climate hazards. Building on work from the climate resilience roadmap this forum will provide members with the opportunity for peer-learning on ways to adapt built assets to cope with climate hazards and increase their climate resilience. Key themes will be on nature, supply chain engagement, insurance and value.

The first session will shape the programme for the remaining five sessions, identifying priority topics to explore in depth and giving members the opportunity to become a chair for the upcoming ones.

The forum will start 19th June and run every 6 weeks, finishing next spring. By signing up to this first session, members will be enrolling for the whole duration of the forum.

We will host three special sessions on financial value, supply chain engagement and nature. Other members will be able to join these sessions as one-offs, depending on which topic is most interesting to them. Specific dates will be announced soon.

Who Should Apply?

The UKGBC Climate Resilience and Adaptation Forum is open to individuals from UKGBC member organisations who have demonstrable knowledge or practical experience in climate resilience and adaptation. Participants are expected to actively contribute to discussions by sharing insights, challenges and best practices, while also representing their organisation’s work and perspective on the topic.

This forum will be particularly appealing to Building Developers, Building Owners, Building Systems Engineers (M+E), Architects, Occupiers, Asset Managers, Building Surveyors, Insurers and Project Managers.

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To succeed, the Warm Homes Plan must put resilience centre-stage /news/to-succeed-the-warm-homes-plan-must-put-resilience-centre-stage/ Thu, 22 Jan 2026 09:40:09 +0000 /?post_type=news&p=68896 Emma Howard Boyd CBE and David Steen discuss the importance of including resilience measures in the Warm Homes Plan.

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This week, the Government set out its Warm Homes Plan, representing the most significant investment in our housing for a generation. Its primary aim is clear: cut energy bills and carbon emissions by retrofitting the UK’s notoriously draughty homes. It also, encouragingly, acknowledges that upgrades must deliver ‘year-round comfort’ and begin to address overheating through low-cost, practical interventions. This signals a welcome recognition that Britain’s homes must work for people in every season and not only be cheaper to heat in winter. The challenge and opportunity now lie in ensuring these ambitions translate into tangible, resilient outcomes alongside deep decarbonisation.

With Met Office figures showing 2025 as the UK’s warmest year on record,the evidence could not be clearer that the climate crisis is accelerating. Homes across the country are overheating in summer, flooding in winter, and suffering damp and mould all year round. These are not isolated issues, but parts of the escalating climate crisis.

As Emma Howard Boyd CBE, who led the London Climate Resilience Review, puts it:

Making our homes energy-efficient and low-carbon is a vital step toward a better future. By integrating climate resilience – like flood protection and cooling – directly into the Warm Homes Plan, we create a win-win scenario: homes that are safe and comfortable to live in while being more affordable to run.”

The risks are stark. The Climate Change Committee’s 2025 Adaptation Report projects that heat-related deaths could triple by mid-century without urgent action. Poorly ventilated airtight homes will trap heat. Inadequate moisture management will exacerbate damp and mould. And flooding will cause devastating disruption if we do not adapt homes to withstand it. These failures would undermine the very purpose of the retrofit programme: to improve comfort, health and security for households.

The solutions are well within reach. Practical, low-regret measures can be integrated seamlessly into retrofit: shading and ventilation to manage heat, flood resistance for homes in at-risk areas, and water efficiency to prepare for drought. It is heartening that the Warm Homes Plan outlines the inclusion of passive cooling measures, such as internal blinds, shutters, reflective window films, and effective building materials, especially within low-income and social housing schemes. This provides a foundation we can build on together, while also integrating nature-based solutions such as green roofs, rain gardens and street trees that reduce both flood and heat risks while boosting biodiversity and wellbeing. As Howard Boyd says: “Resilience is not an add-on. It’s about creating homes that actually work for people all year round, being cool in summer, warm in winter, and dry when it floods.”

The Government’s commitment to exploring overheating metrics within Energy Performance Certificates marks constructive progress. The next step is to embed adaptation considerations systematically within retrofit programmes so that every funded upgrade supports adaptation as well as efficiency. Doing so would unlock far more than energy savings. It would cut NHS costs, protect the most vulnerable, and help communities withstand the physical shocks that climate change will continue to bring. It would also deliver wider social benefits including cleaner air, greener streets, and stronger, healthier communities.

Delivering on this shared ambition will require government, local authorities, industry and civil society to work together.

In implementing the commitments of the Warm Homes Plan, we urge the Government to:

Set

standards that demand retrofit delivers resilience alongside energy efficiency.

Align

climate, health and housing policy, recognising the shared benefits.

Invest

in skills and innovation so the workforce can deliver resilient retrofit at scale.

Back

place-based and nature-based approaches that strengthen communities as well as homes.

Work

collaboratively with partners to test and scale no-regret adaptation measures across housing types, ensuring no household is left behind.

What’s needed now is coordinated action and sustained collaboration.”

We know the risks, and we know the solutions. What’s needed now is coordinated action and sustained collaboration. The Warm Homes Plan provides the right foundation to future-proof Britain’s housing and safeguard people’s lives and livelihoods. By working together to integrate resilience fully into delivery, we can ensure that the retrofit revolution creates homes that are not only low carbon, but truly climate-ready.

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Climate Resilience Roadmap: Stakeholder Action Plans for All Stakeholders /events/climate-resilience-roadmap-stakeholder-action-plans-for-all-stakeholders/ Mon, 20 Oct 2025 16:08:36 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=68217 Following the success of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap, UKGBC invites members to shape the UK’s progress towards a resilient built environment through a series of Stakeholder Action Plan workshops.

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Help shape the UK’s path to a climate-resilient built environment

Following the launch of UKGBC’s ground-breaking UK Climate Resilience Roadmap in June 2025, we’re inviting members to turn ambition into action through a dynamic series of Stakeholder Action Plan workshops.

This face to face session will help connect the dots across sectors – identifying where shared priorities, challenges, and opportunities can unlock system-wide transformation and accelerate resilience across the built environment. A huge thank you to for generously hosting us for this session.

Together, we’ll have discussions to identify the actions that can best support mobilisation of climate resilience across stakeholders; actions that can be taken now, by 2030, and by 2050.

Why attend?

Be part of something industry-defining

Shape the next phase of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap.

Collaborate across boundaries

Connect with peers and pioneers from every part of the built environment value chain.

Turn insight into collective impact

Use the findings from all workshops to co-create actions that strengthen collaboration, enhance adaptive capacity, and reduce systemic risk.

Who should attend

  • Developers and/or building owners – across commercial, residential, health, education, and local authority sectors.
  • Occupiers – including commercial, public sector, healthcare, education, and residential.
  • Infrastructure – those involved in planning, operation, or delivery of energy, water, and other essential systems that support the built environment.
  • Financial organisations – such as banks, lenders, funds, and investors.
  • Insurers and underwriters – including risk modelling, assessment, brokers and advisors.
  • Contractors, material suppliers and product manufacturers.

How the Workshop works

This in-person session will bring together all stakeholder groups from across the built environment to discuss the insights gathered from the previous workshops. ogether, we will:

Reflect

on the key themes and findings from each stakeholder group

Identify

interlinkages, shared challenges, and collaborative opportunities.

Co-create

a cross-sector roadmap of coordinated actions to strengthen resilience across the built environment

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/

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Climate Resilience Roadmap: Stakeholder Action Plans for Product Manufacturers and Contractors /events/climate-resilience-roadmap-stakeholder-action-plans-for-product-manufacturers-and-contractors/ Thu, 16 Oct 2025 16:23:14 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=68182 Following the success of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap, UKGBC invites members to shape the UK’s progress towards a resilient built environment through a series of Stakeholder Action Plan workshops.

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Help shape the UK’s path to a climate-resilient built environment

Following the launch of UKGBC’s ground-breaking UK Climate Resilience Roadmap in June 2025, we’re inviting members to turn ambition into action through a dynamic series of Stakeholder Action Plan workshops.

The workshop will bring together UKGBC members from across the built environment to co-create sector-specific action plans that drive the Roadmap forward.

This workshop will focus on contractors, material suppliers, and product manufacturers coming together to understand the impacts of climate hazards on sites and supply chain and to understand which actions can be taken to build climate resilience

Together, we’ll define bold yet realistic actions your stakeholder group can take now, by 2030 and by 2050, to accelerate climate resilience across the industry.

Why attend?

Be part of something industry-defining

Shape the next phase of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap.

Collaborate with your peers

Connect with other leading the change on resilience in your sector.

Turn insight into impact

Move from strategy to implementation and determine practical steps to future proof assets and reduce the long term risk from climate hazards.

Who should attend

  • Financial organisations such as banks, lenders, funds and investors.
  • Insurers and underwriters, risk modelling and assessment, brokers and advisors.

How the Workshop works

The workshop combines plenary sessions with interactive roundtable discussions, designed to spark collaboration and drive action. These sessions are designed to go beyond talk – they’re about aligning expertise, building consensus, and shaping sector-specific solutions that stick. Together, we will:

Explore

the four-stage framework of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap.

Share

insights, challenges, and best practices from across your sub-sector.

Co-create

a bold yet practical set of actions to advance climate resilience in the built environment.

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/

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Climate Resilience Roadmap: Stakeholder Action Plans for Financial and Insurance Organisations /events/sap-financial-insurance-organisations/ Thu, 16 Oct 2025 16:17:38 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=68179 Following the success of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap, UKGBC invites members to shape the UK’s progress towards a resilient built environment through a series of Stakeholder Action Plan workshops.

The post Climate Resilience Roadmap: Stakeholder Action Plans for Financial and Insurance Organisations appeared first on UKGBC.

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Help shape the UK’s path to a climate-resilient built environment

Following the launch of UKGBC’s ground-breaking UK Climate Resilience Roadmap in June 2025, we’re inviting members to turn ambition into action through a dynamic series of Stakeholder Action Plan workshops.

The workshop will bring together UKGBC members from across the built environment to co-create sector-specific action plans that drive the Roadmap forward.

This workshop will focus on financial and insurance organisations coming together to understand the actions needed to strengthen the climate resilience of the built environment.

Together, we’ll define bold yet realistic actions your stakeholder group can take now, by 2030 and by 2050, to accelerate climate resilience across the industry.

Why attend?

Be part of something industry-defining

Shape the next phase of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap.

Collaborate with your peers

Connect with other leading the change on resilience in your sector.

Turn insight into impact

Move from strategy to implementation and determine practical steps to future proof assets and reduce the long term risk from climate hazards.

Who should attend

  • Financial organisations such as banks, lenders, funds and investors.
  • Insurers and underwriters, risk modelling and assessment, brokers and advisors.

How the Workshop works

The workshop combines plenary sessions with interactive roundtable discussions, designed to spark collaboration and drive action. These sessions are designed to go beyond talk – they’re about aligning expertise, building consensus, and shaping sector-specific solutions that stick. Together, we will:

Explore

the four-stage framework of the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap.

Share

insights, challenges, and best practices from across your sub-sector.

Co-create

a bold yet practical set of actions to advance climate resilience in the built environment.

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds: /ukgbc-cancellation-and-refund-policy/

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UKGBC Regional Members Social in Bristol /events/ukgbc-regional-members-social-in-bristol/ Wed, 08 Oct 2025 10:13:47 +0000 /?post_type=event&p=68125 Join this informal networking session to hear more about the recently released UK Climate Resilience Roadmap – and to connect locally with UKGBC members to share ideas, hear insights, and grow your network.

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About this event

One of the many benefits of UKGBC membership is the opportunity to connect with other professionals who are working towards a more sustainable and resilient built environment. Our new Regional Member Social in Bristol offers the chance to meet with fellow members and innovators across the country in a relaxed and informal setting.

This series of socials will be on the theme of resilience in the built environment, and will showcase the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap.

Kicking off with a short talk on the Roadmap and discussion featuring a local speaker, each event will open the floor to questions before moving into an informal networking session over drinks and nibbles.  

With four events planned across four UK cities, this series provides a fantastic opportunity to explore local priorities, share your experiences, and strengthen regional connections within the UKGBC community.

When: Thursday 19th February 2026, 4:00 pm–7:00 pm
Speaker: Lise Benningen, Arup

Who should attend

Any UKGBC member interested in connecting with local peers, learning from innovative voices in the region, and contributing to sustainability conversations across the built environment.

Why attend

Connect with fellow members across the value chain, share ideas, and explore new solutions in a welcoming and collaborative atmosphere.

UKGBC cancellation and refund policy

Please see our website for more details on our cancellations and refunds.

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