Thank you, MP Cannings. We are very proud to have you as an alumnus of UBC.
Let me briefly recap two stories that are related to the biomanufacturing and life sciences sectors. One is the company that I mentioned earlier, AbCellera, started by Carl Hansen at UBC for antibody therapies. An interesting aspect of Carl's work is that he incubated the technology at UBC for an extended period of time as he built AbCellera. It was a real case of where the Canada Foundation for Innovation infrastructure was used for both research and innovation. He was able to use that equipment to help further company ideas before they were ready to spawn off. They had a tremendous impact in the recent pandemic as well.
If we look at the lipid nanoparticle work of Dr. Cullis, that was simply stupendous. In large part, it's the reason we were able to deliver those mRNA vaccines into people—hundreds of millions of people worldwide as a society. One of the interesting aspects of his work is how long it took to get to a place where it could be commercialized. He recently cited, at the launch of our bio-hub, that it was a 25-year journey funded by the federal government that allowed the technology to develop to the point where it was ready, in this instance, to really accelerate the therapeutics that could be delivered out to not only Canadians but also the world.
I think you see that need for incubation within the university for both research and innovation, and also the need to really fund fundamental research, because we never know where the next discovery that's going to significantly impact the world is going to come from.