I can start. My colleague from Health Canada will want to speak.
In Canada, the labelling responsibility with respect to food is a shared responsibility between CFIA and Health Canada. All of the non-health-related and safety-related labelling considerations are managed by CFIA—and, of course, the enforcement of the entire labelling framework—while Health Canada sets the policies with respect to health labelling. On your point in terms of a diabetic having that important information on nutrition on the label, my colleague will speak to it.
There are a number of interests that consumers have in terms of information about products in order to make choices. We distinguish between mandatory label declaration, which includes things like net weight, the health and safety information, what the product is, the mandatory requirement to have a list of the ingredients—all of those things—and then a number of claims that can be made, provided they're truthful and not misleading, that are what we would characterize as information that supports consumer choice. If you're interested in understanding if a product is local or there's a claim with respect to the sustainable production of the product, those claims can be made provided they're truthful and not misleading.
In many cases, in order to have predictability in the marketplace, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency will work with businesses and consumers and elaborate on guidance, but it's not mandatory to make those declarations. This falls into that same category.