Thank you, Mr. Chair.
We talked about this just last week with one of the witnesses, and I asked a question around how you determine who does what. So, part of a study is whether it is internationally accepted by all parties or not. Right now there isn't that.
In many industries there is an ISO standard, which many of you may well be familiar with, that is acceptable across boundary lines of countries, per se. The auto sector is a prime example of that in North America, where they have ISO standards that say, “If you make the part to this standard, we'll accept it here, and here, and here.”
In this particular type of material, that's not absolutely so, at the moment. The intent is to say to folks, “How do we develop those standards and how do we make sure we have those standards?” If we're literally going to suggest to folks that they use it over there, why can't we have it? Well, the issue is, did they actually test it in the same manner we did? Right now, it's a very loosey-goosey situation. We say, “Well of course they have the standards as us”. Do they really?
A lab in Alabama has the same standards as a lab in New Hampshire. Perhaps. We don't now that because there isn't any recognized acceptable standard. There is no international designation for them. It's simply a private lab run by some individuals who say they do testing to such-and-such a level. Okay. It may well be true, but we don't know that.
The idea of it being acceptable is the whole idea of, what standards do we have? Are they comparable? How do you measure that comparability? How do you do that?
Without a recognized international standard between the parties that's agreed upon in advance, are you sure you're getting what you actually said you wanted? Or, are you simply hoping you get what you thought you might get? That's the dilemma with materials.
That's really where we're trying to drive this piece, so it ends up being a safety piece, and we don't end up bringing in material and then finding out after, oops, that lab really wasn't a very good one. We shouldn't have accepted it. Now we're scrambling after the fact to introduce regulations that prohibit because we have to go back to square one.
The whole process of making sure this is an acceptable standard has a whole process to go. Now perhaps Mr. Lemieux will tell me the regulatory framework is going to do all these things for us, and that we're going to actually get to a standard that's acceptable because clearly there are standards that would be and some that would not be. It really is providing a framework, so that everyone is on an acceptable page that says that standard is independently verified.
ISO standards are done by a third party evaluation. It's not just simply somebody putting they're hand up and saying he or she has a certificate. They have to be verified and they have to be verified on a continual basis. You would actually know you really get the stuff that you actually thought you would get in a safe manner. That's really what this is all about.
Then eventually when you say you will accept it, it can actually come across the border, and there isn't any issue. That's really what it's about.