Madam Chair, without having the list and knowing exactly which organizations, my response is limited.
I will say that with the chemicals management plan--which was the new approach to looking at chemicals, as a result of the prioritization and responding to the concerns about the environment and human health--the department and the government received significant accolades from around the world, from both industry and non-governmental organizations. They indicated that the plan was world-leading, that it is a first. It has set the new benchmark for both the prioritization of substances and the pace at which those substances are being assessed.
Furthermore, part of the reason it is so widely supported is that there is an onus on the chemicals that have been prioritized. There is a predisposition that they are problematic and they must be proven to be safe. If they cannot be proven to be safe, the government will risk-manage those substances.