Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
It's clear to most people that we need to do more to limit the release of potentially harmful and toxic chemicals like per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, that go into our environment, particularly as they are biomagnifying in our bodies and bloodstreams. This has been described.
Human beings almost waited too long to act on chlorofluorocarbons. Our ozone is finally starting to repair itself, but we've definitely waited too long to fully appreciate the warming impacts of excessive carbon dioxide emissions. We need to do more, not less, to limit the manufacture, use, import, export and release of these harmful chemicals.
There are a lot of stakeholders asking for PFAS to be fully classed as a toxic chemical under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, which we'll tie to our study. However, at the same time, big plastic, which is a large group of multinational oil and gas companies that convert oil and gas to plastic in order to produce items like single-use plastic bags, straws and packaging, much of which contain harmful PFAS, seems to have gotten to some Conservative members.
Conservative MP from Saskatchewan Corey Tochor has used his private member's bill to try to amend the Canadian Environmental Protection Act to remove all plastic manufactured items from the list of toxic substances in schedule 1 of that act. Conservative MP Tochor trivializes the importance of having a comprehensive list of class A toxic chemicals, saying that he's bringing back the plastic straw.
My question is for Mr. Bureau.
It's clear to me that the Conservatives opposite are also supportive of this legislation, and they'd love to see more PFAS and more plastic pollution in our waterways and in our bodies. That's great. It's not limited to straws, but anyway.
Mr. Bureau, would eliminating the legislative basis for underpinning the regulatory ability to prevent plastic and PFAS pollution undermine action to prevent further contamination of our waterways, environments and bodies?