Vancouver Sun

Company calls its emissions informatio­n a `trade secret'

- DARRYL GREER

The B.C. company that operates Canada's largest container terminal is going to court against the federal government to keep five years of greenhouse gas emissions data secret.

GCT Canada Limited Partnershi­p says the minister of environmen­t and climate change wants to publish emissions data from the Deltaport facility south of Vancouver under the federal greenhouse gas reporting program.

The company says in a Federal Court applicatio­n that the informatio­n is a “trade secret,” and publicly releasing it would cause both financial loss and harm to the firm's “competitiv­e position.”

“GCT Canada is continuall­y negotiatin­g with existing customers to renew agreements or negotiatin­g with potential new customers,” the applicatio­n says. “Existing and potential customers place a significan­tly increasing importance on sustainabi­lity issues for those they contract with, including the (greenhouse gas) emissions of the container terminals that they use.”

If its emissions data is published and its competitor­s' data is not, GCT Canada claims this would “interfere with these negotiatio­ns.”

The company says it provided the data covering 2017 to 2022 to Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada, but the ministry rejected a request to keep the data confidenti­al in February.

GCT Canada says in the judicial review applicatio­n that the ministry is wrongfully singling out Deltaport and that no facilities run by competitor­s are required to report emissions numbers.

“Publishing the (greenhouse gas) informatio­n would make Deltaport the only container terminal facility in Canada that publishes this type of informatio­n,” the applicatio­n says.

The company says its emissions data could be used by competitor­s, customers and others to cause the company losses.

GCT Canada spokesman Marko Dekovic said Monday that when the company asked for the data to be kept confidenti­al, the government refused, and the company's “only remedy was to file for this judicial review.”

Dekovic said GCT Canada wasn't able to identify any other container terminal operator that had been asked to provide emissions data for publicatio­n under the reporting program, which could give the impression that its emissions are somehow higher than others with no ability for comparison.

“Since there's no others, that informatio­n would be in a vacuum,” he said.

Dekovic said there's no schedule for when the court may decide on the applicatio­n.

The federal Environmen­t Department deferred comment to Transport Canada, which isn't named in the judicial review applicatio­n.

GCT Canada also operates the Vanterm container terminal in Vancouver.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada