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'Millions of masks' expected as 3M faces pressure over equipment exports

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada is due to receive a shipment of "millions of masks"in the coming days,as a major medical device manufacturer remainsunder continued pressure from the United States to cease its exports of similar protective equipment.

'We are not looking at retaliatory measures or measures that are punitive,' Trudeau said

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Saturday that he was not seeking punitive measures against the U.S. after Washington ordered that face masks produced in America should not be exported to other countries. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada is due to receive a shipment of "millions of masks"in the coming days,as a major medical device manufacturer remainsunder continued pressure from the United States to cease its exports of similar protective equipment.

"We're working around the clock to get Canada the resources we need," Trudeau said during his daily address to Canadians Saturday. "In the next 48 hours, we will be receiving a shipment of millions of masks by a chartered cargo flight. We are also working with provinces to transport their medical supplies when possible."

A spokesperson for Procurement Minister Anita Anandconfirmed to CBC News that the plane would be travelling from China bearing millions ofsurgical masks, as well as other supplies intended for Quebec-based companies.

Thenews comes asMinnesota-based company 3M revealed Friday that because of the Trump administration's invocation of the Defence Production Act which allows the president to boost industrial production of critically needed goods the manufacturer is under orders not to send U.S.-made N95 masks to other countries, including Canada.

In a statement, 3M said that halting such exports could adversely affect America's own supply if other countries choose to retaliate, prompting President Donald Trump to reveal that his administration was "not at all happy" with the company.

Trudeau addressed the dispute during his Friday briefing, stating that failing to send supplies destined forCanada "could end up hurting Americans as much as it hurts anybody else."

But the prime minister said Saturday that he wasn't seeking retaliatory measures against the U.S. such as blocking Canadian nurses from Windsor, Ont., from travelling across the American border to work in Detroit.

"We are not looking at retaliatory measures or measures that are punitive.We know that it is in both of our interests to continue to work collaboratively and co-operatively," Trudeau said.

He added that his government is "continuing to engage in constructive discussions with different levels within the [Trump] administration" to preserve the flow of goods and services across U.S.-Canada border.

Watch: Trudeau says Canada won't retaliate against the U.S.

'We are not looking at retaliatory measures,' Trudeau says

5 years ago
Duration 0:21
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Saturday that he was not seeking punitive measures against the U.S. after the White House said it would stop exporting face masks outside the country.

Canada setting sights on domesticmanufacturers

Only surgical masks rather than the N95 masks at the centre of the 3M dispute will be on board the plane from China, Anand's office said.

The federal government said earlier this week it had already ordered 65 million N95 masks, which provide a higher degree of protection against COVID-19 than the ones coming from China.

The prime minister said that the federal government has now "leased a warehouse in China" to collect and distribute supplies more efficiently.

"We arealso turning towardsCanadian manufacturers[given] the tremendous effort that Canadian companies are putting in to develop made-in-Canada products, PPE and medical supplies," Trudeau said, mentioning that thosesupplies could also be sent to other countries who need them.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford asked Health Canada Saturday to expedite the approval process that would allow local companies to start producing the necessary supplies.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Saturday that Canada and the U.S. have a relationship reminiscent of "one big family," but said that the White House has "cut out one part of the family now." (Evan Mitsui)

"I can't stand relying on other countries or other leaders when we have the capabilities right here in Ontario," he said."We just need to get these approvals going."

Ford added that Canada's dispute with the U.S. over the export restrictionshad soured his viewof a country he greatly admires.

"It shouldn't come down to this. We have a thousand nurses leaving Ontario that we're in desperate need [of] going to help Americans."

Dispute comes as stark provincial projections released

Concerns over Canada's stock of medical goods and protective equipment come asprojections of COVID-19's spread in the province of Ontario were revealed on Friday.

Provincial health experts predict the virus could take the lives of 3,000 to 15,000 Ontariansover the course of the coronavirus pandemic, which could last for 18 months to two years.

"Had we done nothing, Ontario may have suffered 100,000 deaths," saidDr. Peter Donnelly, who leadsPublic Health Ontario. "Thankfully, that is not the position we are in."

The projections also indicated that in Ontario, COVID-19 has a 16 per cent mortality rate for people over the age of 80 just below global levels of around 20 per cent.

Both Alberta and Quebec are expected to release their projections next week.

Also included in Trudeau's Saturday briefing were additional details about the federal government's plan for vulnerable Canadians, including a previously-announced $40 million for women's shelters and sexual assault centres and $10 million for Indigenous women and children fleeing violence.

The prime minister said that communities set to receive the funding had been identified and will now be receiving aid.

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