Luckily, we've never had a case in Canada. In West Africa, in Guinea, there's an outbreak currently. It's very small. I think there are about nine or 10 cases. There are three cases in Liberia. This is a little worrisome in that it's not totally eliminated, but I think a lot of experts predicted that we'd have this sort of new reality in terms of Ebola.
As for what we did with regard to Ebola, these are reprofiled dollars. We got some money for this a couple of years ago, and we're looking at two things. One is supporting vaccination with our vaccine, which is doing very well. That's what's being used in both Liberia and Guinea right now to control this. I think Canadians should be very proud of the Canadian Ebola vaccine.
We're also looking at a new technology called “monoclonal antibodies”. These are synthetic antibodies. The antibodies that your body would produce are synthesized and given to people who are sick with Ebola, once they're infected. This is the so-called cocktail of the ZMapp. We had two lines of investment in that, including looking at plant-based monoclonal antibodies—ZMapp—which we do have some of at the agency in the lab in an experimental status. We're also looking at trying to build capacity in Canada to produce it on an animal model. You need an animal model to produce larger quantities of this.
That's being rolled over from previous years until the current fiscal year. The rationale for this is that it took a lot longer to negotiate and to try to find the capacity in Canada, because it just didn't exist. We're using that resource to try to build that capacity, and again, to try to keep some of those in our stores in Winnipeg at the lab.