Thank you very much.
One of the changes in culture is the way we view intellectual property and the way we can make investments. The recent investments in biomanufacturing hubs in our country is really to offset the challenges we felt during the pandemic. We had no biomanufacturing capacity in our country. That's a national sovereignty issue.
I think that by working together with the universities and the private sector and bringing companies like Moderna or Sanofi into our country, we can really have a mechanism to take the new vaccines, produce them in Canada and sell them around the globe, creating jobs and prosperity for our own people and protecting the health of animals and people in this country.
The Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan has produced and marketed six or seven vaccines that are the first of their kind in the world. That is emerging as Canada's pandemic centre. We are so thrilled to be partnering with four of the biomanufacturing hubs that were announced in our country.
Again, as I keep requesting of everyone, collaboration is the key for us if we're going to deliver on the promise that Canadians want from us.