Where a public sector body, the Commission, the European Central Bank or a Union body demonstrates an exceptional need, as set out in the Data Act Regulation, to use certain data, including the relevant metadata necessary to interpret and use those data, to carry out its statutory duties in the public interest, data holders that are legal persons, other than public sectors bodies, which hold those data shall make them available upon a duly reasoned request.
Exceptional need to use data
An exceptional need arises when a public sector body, the European Commission, the European Central Bank, or a Union body shall be limited in time and scope and shall be considered to exist only in any of the following circumstances:
a) Where the data requested is necessary to respond to a public emergency and the public sector body, the Commission, the European Central Bank or the Union body is unable to obtain such data by alternative means in a timely and effective manner under equivalent conditions.
b) In circumstances not covered by point (a) and only insofar as non-personal data is concerned, where:
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- a public sector body, the Commission, the European Central Bank or a Union body is acting on the basis of Union or national law and has identified specific data, the lack of which prevents it from fulfilling a specific task carried out in the public interest, that has been explicitly provided for by law, such as the production of official statistics or the mitigation of or recovery from a public emergency; and
- the public sector body, the Commission, the European Central Bank or the Union body has exhausted all other means at its disposal to obtain such data, including purchase of non-personal data on the market by offering market rates, or by relying on existing obligations to make data available or the adoption of new legislative measures which could guarantee the timely availability of the data.
Point (b), shall not apply to microenterprises and small enterprises.
Requests for data to be made available shall be in line with Article 17 of the Data Act Regulation.
When shall the MDIA be notified?
Where the request is made by a public sector body established in Malta, it shall be transmitted to the MDIA as the data coordinator in Malta, who shall make the request publicly available online without undue delay unless the data coordinator considers that such publication would create a risk for public security.
Where a public sector body intends to request data from a data holder established in another Member State, it shall first notify the competent authority designated pursuant to Article 37 in that Member State of that intention. This requirement shall also apply to requests by the Commission, the European Central Bank and Union bodies. The request shall be examined by the competent authority of the Member State where the data holder is established.
To notify the MDIA, kindly complete and submit the notification form detailing a clear justification of the exceptional need through the following link: https://forms.office.com/e/UEZw5j4ESm and provide any supporting documentation to [email protected].
What Is Expected from Data Holders?
A data holder receiving a request to make data available under Chapter V of the Data Act Regulation, shall make the data available without undue delay, taking into account necessary technical, organisational and legal measures.
Where the public sector body, the Commission, the European Central Bank or the Union body wishes to challenge a data holder’s refusal to provide the data requested, or where the data holder wishes to challenge the request and the matter cannot be resolved by an appropriate modification of the request, the matter shall be referred to the MDIA as the competent authority designated pursuant to Article 37, when the data holder is established in Malta.