Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds continue to add to COVID-19 supply stores to meet future demand

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2020 07:10 PM
  • Feds continue to add to COVID-19 supply stores to meet future demand

Planes and boats loaded with personal protective equipment and other COVID-19 supplies continue to arrive in Canada as the federal government moves to increase the domestic stockpile of crucial gear.

Procurement Minister Anita Anand said Tuesday that supply chains for essential equipment have stabilized but Canada continues to press to ensure reliable international sources of goods, while increasing domestic production efforts at the same time.

Canada is in the market for hundreds of millions of pieces of equipment, including gowns, gloves, masks, face shields and hand sanitizer.

Anand said the focus continues to be two-fold: meet short-term needs and be ready for a potential increase in future demand.

"As demand goes up, Canada is keeping up," Anand said.

Anand said Tuesday the government is also looking ahead to the day a vaccine becomes available, ordering 37 million syringes. It has not yet been determined when they will arrive.

The numbers for most goods on hand are ticking steadily up, though not for ventilators — as of May 26, only 203 had arrived out of the nearly 40,000 ordered.

Severe forms of COVID-19 often require the use of the assisted-breathing device, and concerns about potential shortages dominated discussions around gear in the early days of the pandemic in Canada.

Anand said the contracts for the ventilators are largely with Canadian companies, and as some companies are retooling to make them, it will be another month before they start arriving.

In their regular procurement updates, the Liberal government has highlighted some of the Canadian companies engaged in production of supplies.

On Tuesday, they singled out The Canadian Shield, from Kitchener, Ont., that has produced 1.2 million face shields so far.

But many of the deals being signed aren't being made public, signed instead under national security provisions that keep the details — including costs — under wraps.

A spokesperson for Anand's department said that if the national security exemption wasn't used, the tenders for the goods would have to remain open for weeks and that just wouldn't be feasible in the current environment.

Making public all the information around what Canada is buying and from who could also risk the supply of the goods, spokesperson Stefanie Hamel said in an email.

"Considering the fierce global competition for the same products, if we were to disclose information about specific contracts or suppliers, we could jeopardize Canada's supply chains for these life-saving products, putting our delivery to Canada and into the hands of front-line health-care workers at risk," Hamel said.

The department said when the risk has passed, the government does intend to provide more information.

MORE National ARTICLES

Students At Several Colleges And Universities Asked To Vacate Dorms Over COVID-19

Students At Several Colleges And Universities Asked To Vacate Dorms Over COVID-19
Students at several post-secondary institutions are being asked or told to move out of their dorms in response to COVID-19.

Students At Several Colleges And Universities Asked To Vacate Dorms Over COVID-19

Canadian Transit Agencies Adjust Services Amid COVID-19 Pandemic

TORONTO - Transit agencies across Canada are adjusting their operations as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic — in some cases by suspending fare collection altogether.    

Canadian Transit Agencies Adjust Services Amid COVID-19 Pandemic

Health Systems Ramping Up To Deal With Potential Influx Of COVID-19 Cases

Health Systems Ramping Up To Deal With Potential Influx Of COVID-19 Cases
OTTAWA - While Canadians stay home in an effort to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus, officials are working behind the scenes to try to increase the health care system's capacity to fight the virus.    

Health Systems Ramping Up To Deal With Potential Influx Of COVID-19 Cases

WestJet Warning Recent Passengers Of Possible Exposure To COVID-19

WestJet Warning Recent Passengers Of Possible Exposure To COVID-19
CALGARY - WestJet Airlines says some of its passengers may have been exposed to people infected with the novel coronavirus on recent flights.    

WestJet Warning Recent Passengers Of Possible Exposure To COVID-19

Trump Confirms Canada-U.S. Border To Be Closed To Non-essential Travel

Trump Confirms Canada-U.S. Border To Be Closed To Non-essential Travel
The Canada-U.S. border will be closed to non-essential traffic in both directions "by mutual consent," the leaders of both countries confirmed Wednesday as efforts across the continent to contain the widening COVID-19 pandemic continued to upend daily life.    

Trump Confirms Canada-U.S. Border To Be Closed To Non-essential Travel

Trudeau Unveils $82B Covid-19 Emergency Response Package For Canadians, Businesses

The federal government will deploy up to $82 billion in direct spending and deferred taxes to help every Canadian get through the COVID-19 pandemic, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday.

Trudeau Unveils $82B Covid-19 Emergency Response Package For Canadians, Businesses