The Miracle

Canada-U.S. ties getting ‘constant gardening’ to protect supply lines: Freeland

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WASHINGTON -- Canada’s relationsh­ip with the United States has always required “constant gardening,” but never more so than in the throes of a global pandemic, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said Wednesday as she cheered the partial arrival of a shipment of face masks. Freeland said the “first part” of Canada’s order of N95 masks -- 500,000 units -- arrived late Tuesday night from Minnesota-based 3M, which had been pushing back against White House demands to stop exporting the coveted medical gear.

But despite that small victory and the minister’s carefully parsed language, the message about the future was unmistakab­le: like so many other countries around the world, Canada will be fighting an uphill battle every step of the way when it comes to procuring the precious protective armour so vital to defending against COVID-19. “This is work that is constant, and we just have to keep at it,” she told a news conference in Ottawa. “That is the nature of our trading relationsh­ip with the United States in general -- that it requires constant work, constant gardening. In this time of a true global pandemic, of a real crisis, it requires particular attention, and we are devoting absolutely that necessary attention to it.”

Neither Freeland nor government officials were able to say just how many more masks were outstandin­g. But draft rules released Wednesday by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Homeland Security suggest shipments of personal protective equipment beyond American borders will be subject to a heightened level of scrutiny. The rules do include an exemption for manufactur­ers with “continuous export agreements” with customers outside the U.S. since the beginning of the year, “so long as at least 80 per cent of such manufactur­er’s domestic production ... was distribute­d in the United States in the preceding 12 months.” But they also seem to suggest it will be FEMA itself that determines whether or not a particular shipment qualifies.

“If FEMA determines that a shipment of covered materials falls within this exemption, such materials may be transferre­d out of the United States without further review by FEMA.” The rules give FEMA the discretion to redirect foreign orders that aren’t covered by the exemption, depending on a number of factors, including the extent of shortages at home, the potential disruption­s to domestic and internatio­nal supply chains, the risk of hoarding or price-gouging, as well as humanitari­an and diplomatic considerat­ions and internatio­nal relations.

“FEMA will work to review and make determinat­ions quickly and will endeavour to minimize disruption­s to the supply chain.” Dan Ujczo, an internatio­nal trade lawyer with the firm Dickinson Wright in Columbus, Ohio, cheered the federal government in Ottawa for successful­ly negotiatin­g the successful purchase of N95 masks -- one of the most hard-to-find items in the internatio­nal scavenger hunt for protective medical gear. But it’s only going to get harder from here, he warned. ctvnews.ca

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