Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to continue in the same vein as my colleague from the Bloc in relation to domestic vaccine production. I think many Canadians, when the pandemic hit, were asking the question, where were Canada's vaccines? It's a question we haven't returned to in many ways, in light of the traumatic experience that many Canadians had.
We were able to sustain ourselves with the kinds of purchasing agreements we had from the private sector. However, I want to mention the risks of that and the issues some Canadians may have with them, particularly in light of the wasted vaccines. I think there's evidence to suggest that wasted vaccines are a waste of taxpayer dollars. When considering these agreements that Canadians have been in many ways forced into, not by any kind of prejudice of public service, of course, but because of our needs as a country, I believe it has allowed for a disservice in Canada.
Each authorized vaccine came with an obligation to purchase a specific quantity of doses, and for all but one agreement, options to purchase additional doses. That's what I understand from procurement's point of view.
The problem is that we are reliant on Pfizer's or Moderna's purchasing agreements, rather than Canada's public health needs. This, I think, is a really important part to note. When it comes to the needs of Canadians and the needs of these companies, they are different. This leads to sending billions of taxpayer dollars in some ways—whether by wasted vaccines or not—to big pharmaceutical companies, which we're now bound to having minimum purchase agreements with. That is a tough pill to swallow for many Canadians.
My question would be—procurement could maybe start and then the Public Health Agency—whether they have any other comments in relation to whether or not a Crown corporation that would produce domestically produced vaccines would be better able to deliver on actual public health needs, rather than a private company that would require a minimum purchase.