Madam Chair, I'd like to very quickly put this in three parts.
The first part is the supply forecast. There is a supply forecast that is given to Health Canada and I believe passed on to the rest of the country on a weekly basis. The supply forecast on June 18.... Technetium-99m, molybdenum, will be running at 100%. Lantheus, to their direct customers, i.e., the hospitals that rely on Lantheus for a generator, 70%. Lantheus radiopharmacies, 50% today and tomorrow and going forward. So this is on June 18. That will increase to 100% next week. Thallium is not produced in reactors; thallium is produced in cyclotrons. That is 100%. Iodine-131, we've heard, is low this week. It is our belief that by a combination of the use of SAP, the special access program, and the supplier coming online again, that will be resolved in the next couple of weeks. Key to the long-term resolution of that, obviously, is bringing on South Africa and Australia to provide us with their supply. That's item one.
Item two, the provinces will have, I'm sure, their own internal assessment of where the generators are coming from. Certainly I would regard it as not inappropriate for me to try to collate information as it was available, and clearly that will be part of this role in my communications.
Finally, I think it's very important to understand the production schedules of the major reactors over the coming year. That was the focus of yesterday's and today's meeting that the NEA started.