Equipment Makers Provide Tsunami Clean-Up Help

Industry manufacturers including Caterpillar, John Deere and JBC are donating millions of dollars in machinery and monetary gifts to help relief efforts in the wake of December's disaster.

Makers of heavy equipment have begun to provide help to areas of southern and Southeast Asia stricken by the late December earthquake and tsunamis that have claimed as many as 140,000 lives.

 

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Caterpillar, Peoria, Ill., says its dealers in the Asia Pacific region “have made equipment, personnel and other resources available to aid in recovery and cleanup efforts. At the corporate level, Caterpillar is working with its dealers to make additional equipment available to government agencies and non-governmental agencies working in the region.”

 

In a news release, the company noted that it knew of no casualties among Caterpillar or dealership employees or their families in the region.

 

The Caterpillar Foundation has committed $1 million to ongoing relief and recovery efforts in the region. The contribution from the foundation will be divided between The International Committee of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, Oxfam, and The Salvation Army

 

Additionally, the company also announced that donations to relief efforts by Caterpillar employees, retirees, Caterpillar directors and employees of Caterpillar dealers will be matched by the company up to $2,000 per person.

 

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U.K.-based JCB, with U.S. offices in Savannah, Ga., has announced it will send an initial $1 million worth of machines to help disaster relief efforts in the wake of the tsunami.

 

Five JCB backhoe loaders have been airlifted to Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and other machines have been donated to Tamil Nadu, India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand.

 

Sir Anthony Bamford, JCB chairman, says that earth moving equipment will be of paramount importance in the early stages of the relief effort in helping to remove debris. “The scale of the disaster is even bigger than we first anticipated,” Bamford says. “We are doing everything we can to get the job done.”

 

A charitable foundation affiliated with John Deere Construction & Forestry Co., Moline, Ill, has also announced a tsunami relief donation.

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The John Deere Foundation, the philanthropic organization of Deere & Co., will provide $1 million to support ongoing relief and restoration efforts related to the Asian earthquake and tsunami disaster.

 

Foundation officials say the money will be provided for international relief efforts through the American Red Cross. “This disaster has touched all of us deeply as individuals,” says Deere & Co. chairman and CEO Robert Lane. “Our heartfelt thoughts and prayers go out to all who have been affected by this unimaginable disaster.” Lane also serves as vice president and a director of the John Deere Foundation.

 

Deere also has communicated to company employees information on how they can individually contribute to agencies working on the international effort to respond to the tragedy, including the American Red Cross and dozens of other organizations.

 

Deere & Co. officials have also noted that its business operations and employees in India – a joint venture manufacturing facility in Pune – were not harmed by the earthquake and tsunami.

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The most powerful earthquake in 40 years erupted under the Indian Ocean near Sumatra on Dec. 26, 2004. It caused giant, deadly waves to crash ashore in nearly a dozen countries, killing as many as 140,000 people. Source: NPR

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