Again, to the best of my knowledge, the answer is no. I've been following the work of the committee for the past while, and I know that this question was posed at one point. I believe the answer was that there was no language to that effect in at least one of the funding agreements that was made.
As I mentioned earlier, this is not typically the way that funding is rolled out in Canada. There is no requirement on recipients of public funds to have some sort of global access licensing or fair access policy in place at the institutional level.
Often, the system works the way that I described it. We have researchers who receive public funding, and university labs and other places do the discovery work, and then promising candidates are sold to the private sector with effectively no strings attached. That should change.