We'll look forward to that. You know that this committee has some power to make these requests and to expect that the information will be forthcoming.
Let me get back to the issue at hand, which is the lost opportunity for Canada in the development of an AIDS vaccine and for health and justice around the world. In fact, I think every scientist who's come here, who knows the field, has said that the cancellation of this bid is going to set us back years in terms of development of a vaccine and in terms of Canada using its enormous research capacity and innovative discoveries here in Canada and for the benefit of the world.
Ted, you said already that you've made a breakthrough on a particular clinical trial, and you have to go to the States. Can you tell us a bit more about how much more we're going to lose? What would happen, in fact, if we had this facility, whether it's you or Winnipeg or wherever in Canada?
And I want to say again to Mr. Bertozzi and Alan Bernstein and others that this is not a production facility we're talking about. I will refer to the memorandum of understanding between Gates and this government. It is about discovery research. It is about clinical trials. It is about research. It is about making progress on the very thing, Mr. Bernstein, you identified, which is the breakthrough in Thailand and in other places. We have lost this. It's gone.
I want to know how serious this is in terms of setting us back in terms of developing such a vaccine. And why, in fact, are we letting our researchers' good work go south of the border or around the world to be exploited by private sector drug companies who have no interest, really, in developing this vaccine?
This is for Mr. Hewitt. Then I would like Mr. Fowke, in terms of your capacity in Manitoba, to answer. If, in fact, we can't get this back at the lab, if we can't get it back to the consortium, if we can't get something on the table, can you do the work, and can we fight for you to get the money?