Just a minor naming correction, the Emu Point Giant should just be Emu Point as they are just a location grow seed until someone added the extra word. Somewhere around the forums there is more info about the addition. They are like the Coal Mine Beach ones, a location data Ceph that could likely be many clones with the same name.
Something around Ceph. Location Emu Point would be much better, unless there is reason you believe you have a "giant" seed grown location data plant from that area. The ones origination from BigBella, Dennis Hastings, Myself, or Leilani Nepenthes are very likely the same clone and while one of the best growers for me have never shown any "giant" tendencies.
Here is one reference on the this one, more info is on the forums somewhere about it.
Cephalotus follicularis location Emu Point, Albany AU (Also know as Emu Point and/or Emu Point Giant) -
"Quote Originally Posted by BigBella View Post
The three "Emu Point" plants that I had provided Dennis Hastings, originated from leaf pulls that had either been grown on compost; or else, developed in vitro from that same tissue, from a single, wild-collected plant, taken legally (for the benefit of the inquisition that occasionally rears its head on TF) from the border of a parkland and cattle-grazing area. Some seed had also been collected; but those plants were never part of that initial shipment. Apparently, there had been some confusion there.
Many of my plants have produced larger than "average" pitchers; though I have still had "typical" plants, from time to time, produce 2.5-3" leaves -- more a function of age and health, in my opinion, than the provenance of any particular cultivar or clone . . ."
From Dennis Hastings old Website.
"I have added this plant as an unusual clone because of the history it was given. This plant was seed grown from a mother plant originating in the Emu point region of southern Australia. It has been said the parent plant produced pitchers as large as three inches. Since this has been seed grown, there in no way to emphatically state this plant will grow up to be a giant also. I will keep this plant updated in a set of images to let you know how it does.
I have since learned from the person I received the plant from, that the pitchers on the seed grown plants get to about 2.5 inches tall." Source
http://thecephalotus.info/html/unusual__clones_.html"
The website is no longer being maintained, but I transcribed all the information in this thread,
http://www.terraforums.com/forums/showthread.php/134965-Cephalotus-consolidated/page4.