Why Surrey stratas need this report now
Surrey sits inside the Metro Vancouver Regional District, which means the Strata Property Act compliance deadline for Electrical Planning Reports is December 31, 2026 — the earliest of the two BC deadlines under Strata Property Regulation 5.10. Every strata corporation in Surrey with five or more lots is required to have a current EPR on file by that date. The report is referenced on the strata's Form B Information Certificate and treated as a permanent record disclosed to buyers, lenders, and insurers.
The EPR isn't optional and it isn't a quick desktop exercise. Strata Property Regulation 5.11 lays out specific content: an inspection of electrical and mechanical infrastructure, BC Hydro consumption data analysis, peak-demand and spare-capacity calculations under Canadian Electrical Code rules 8-200 to 8-210, future-electrification scenarios, and capacity-freeing recommendations. Done right, it gives Surrey councils a clear roadmap. Done wrong, it leaves a strata exposed.
What CF Electrical delivers in Surrey
What Surrey councils receive is a complete EPR built to satisfy every requirement in Strata Property Regulation 5.11: a physical inspection of every electrical room, switchgear, transformer, and panel; a 12-month BC Hydro consumption data analysis; peak demand, spare capacity, and load diversity calculations under CEC 8-200 to 8-210; modelled future-electrification scenarios for EV adoption, heat pumps, and gas-to-electric conversion; and recommendations with the estimated capacity each upgrade would free.
Every CF Electrical report is signed and sealed by our P.Eng (Professional Engineer) registered with Engineers and Geoscientists British Columbia. Under BC OIC 497-2025, a P.Eng is a Qualified Person to prepare these reports for both Part 3 (complex) and Part 9 (simple) buildings — concrete highrises, mid-rises, low-rise wood-frame, and townhouse complexes alike. Surrey stratas don't need to worry about whether their building type is in scope. It is.
About strata buildings in Surrey
Townhouse-dominant strata stock plus newer concrete highrises in Surrey Central and along the SkyTrain corridor. Older 1980s wood-frame walk-ups still common in Whalley and Newton.
What Surrey councils tend to run into: Older concrete highrises in the city often hit service-capacity limits long before owners notice — original 1970s switchgear was sized for a different era of demand. EV charging, heat-pump conversion, and in-suite electric appliance upgrades all stack onto the same building service. 1980s wood-frame walk-ups carry their own pattern: aluminum branch wiring in some buildings, undersized panel boards almost universally, and original 100A or 200A services that don't leave room for meaningful EV adoption without an upgrade. Townhouse complexes pose a different challenge — individual unit metering, shared outdoor parking, and questions about whether upgrades happen at the unit panel, the cluster transformer, or the BC Hydro service.