Thank you for the question.
This really speaks to the ongoing delivery of PPE. As mentioned or touched on in my opening remarks, the strategy was twofold: order internationally, but also stand up domestic production. We are still seeing orders come in, and many of our orders actually extend into 2021 so we can ensure there's a steady stream of supply. What we've seen to date is also that domestic production has ramped up in a number of areas. We've spoken about that before at this committee.
On face shields, we're very successful in terms of getting our own domestic capacity. We also have the ventilators, which we've just touched on. There's domestic capacity there. I believe this committee will remember that we have had discussions about domestic capacity coming online for surgical masks at the end of July, with one particular deal in N95 masks towards the end of August or early September. That's all ramping up, and I did not mention hand sanitizer, as well as some other things.
Really, the second wave thing is to make sure we still have orders coming in. Obviously, we can place more orders if we need to, but products are still coming in. The warehouse space itself is full. We're actually securing additional warehouse space for our client, the Public Health Agency of Canada, which gives you an indication of the stock that's coming in.
I should have stressed this in my opening remarks and I did not. This is over and above what provinces and territories are ordering, and they are still the primary provider of PPE for the medical system.
Again, we are all very much in a backstop world, but we've continued to order and it's going very well. If you look at what came in during June—one flight a day—big, big numbers started to come in, and you'll see the updated web chart that I mentioned earlier today, but orders will continue to arrive in the coming weeks and coming months.