Thank you, Mr. Chair.
On Mike's point, we're seen as a high regulatory cost area by companies applying for drug approvals. We're not a big market. We like to think we are, but Canada as a whole, compared to the United States, is not. That's just to point out that I think certainly most of us around this committee feel that the cost should be kept very low, that we can't be a higher cost regime than our competitors or it's difficult for our producers.
I want to make one point as well on emergency approvals, based on Lloyd's question. I don't want to leave the impression, at least from my own point of view, that we're opposed to that, because sometimes it is necessary. I've made requests myself for the horticultural industry, where there is a pest and there is a product in the United States that may be approved by their system and not in ours. I think there was a product in Mike's area in aquaculture that we had to approve one time under emergency approval. So that system is important to us and is necessary, as long as the proper guidelines are in place.
You'd mentioned in your opening remarks that a number of companies have decided not to file their submissions here, implying probably the high cost of doing so. I'm not sure why. Is it because there's a backlog? Is it because there's a high-cost regime?
When we get over this backlog, does Health Canada have any strategy to inform industry that we are a place for R and D, that they should be asking for approvals under our system parallel to the United States? That's important. We have to have access to the same kinds of drugs as they do.
I'll tell you how serious this is from a producer point of view. A producer in my riding couldn't use a feed additive for pork for five years. It got approval last year. He went broke on December 19, just before Christmas, as a hog producer. The cost, according to his calculation, of not being able to use that feed additive on his production base over that five-year period was $470,000. It had made that much difference, and he might still have been in business today.
So that's why I think you see us raising the concerns on the cost end. That is an example of how our cost regime and our lack of quick access to the same products as are available everywhere else has an economic impact on rural Canada.
Anyway, my question is on your backlog and the reason for submissions not being done here. Do you have a strategy?