CBSA says it acted in ‘good faith’ detaining solar panels in forced labour probe
VANCOUVER — The Canada Border Services Agency says it acted lawfully and in “good faith” when it detained nearly 50 containers of solar panels belonging to a Victoria, B.C., company over concerns they were made using forced labour.
Charge Solar Renewables Inc. sued the border agency in Federal Court in November 2024, alleging the detention of solar panels from China worth more than $5-million caused it to lose its “dominant market share.”
The company’s lawsuit says border guards detained the shipments that came through ports in Vancouver, Calgary and Toronto between February and April 2024, but later lifted the detentions after determining the panels weren’t prohibited under rules that came into force in 2020.
The border agency’s statement of defence filed last month in Federal Court says the company “made the economic decision” to purchase and import the panels knowing they were subject to examination and possible detention.