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Private-sector alliance aims to be first responders should disaster strike region

SINGAPORE — A coalition of private-sector firms — comprising aircraft, healthcare, water purification, civil engineering and media assets — will be able to respond immediately to help victims in neighbouring countries in the event of a regional disaster, in the form of the Corporate Citizen Foundation (CCF).

Typhoon Haiyan survivors queue up to get into any evacuation flight at the airport in Tacloban, Philippines. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced by Typhoon Haiyan, which tore across several islands in the eastern Philippines. AP file photo

Typhoon Haiyan survivors queue up to get into any evacuation flight at the airport in Tacloban, Philippines. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced by Typhoon Haiyan, which tore across several islands in the eastern Philippines. AP file photo

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SINGAPORE — A coalition of private-sector firms — comprising aircraft, healthcare, water purification, civil engineering and media assets — will be able to respond immediately to help victims in neighbouring countries in the event of a regional disaster, in the form of the Corporate Citizen Foundation (CCF).

One of the functions of the foundation, launched yesterday (Oct 31) by Singapore Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, will be to respond more swiftly to regional crises through its Swift Emergency Evaluation Deployment (SEED) platform — a new private-sector driven initiative which is understood to be the first of its kind in the region.

“The CCF seeks to catalyse corporate collaboration to exercise collective corporate citizenry towards a better, safer and friendlier Asia,” it said in a press statement. “It is probably the first private sector initiative and alliance focusing on capacity building for vulnerable communities in the areas of sustainable development and disaster management.”

The CCF noted that 70 per cent of the world’s natural disasters occur in Asia, including the 2004 tsunami, Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar in 2008, and Typhoon Haiyan hitting the Philippines last year.

Under SEED, a few private firms will pool together their resources and assets to help out while a crisis unfolds. The idea was mooted early this year by engineering firm HSL Constructor, which as the initiator of the CCF has also put in seed founding of S$1 million.

The following companies have committed their assets and expertise on board the SEED platform:

Civil engineering: HSL Constructor

Healthcare: Thomson Medical

Water filtration systems: Golden Season

Fixed-wing aircraft: Pacific Flight Services of ST Aerospace

Disaster reporting: MediaCorp, which will send reporters to ground zero to broadcast updates first-hand

FIRST IN TO GATHER DATA

The aim of SEED is not to provide relief items such as food or shelter. Instead, it wants to be the first to reach disaster zones — to gather data.

“The most important thing in a major disaster, during the acute phase, is actually the intelligence,” said Mr Hassan Ahmad, HSL Constructor’s Philanthropy & Sustainability Director. “Early, first-hand information that can go out so that responders like the NGOs or the national organisations can make informed decisions as to what to bring in, how much to bring in and who they need to send in, so that we can avoid the duplication of effort.”

In the event of a disaster in the region, the CCF will be alerted, while its SEED members will be put on standby. The foundation will then get in touch with the ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on disaster management (AHA), as well as the country’s coordinating agencies.

After getting air traffic clearance to fly in to ground zero, the team of doctors, water purification equipment, civil engineers and reporters will fly in via private jets.

The water purification systems owned by Golden Season — the only one known to be able to churn out 1,200 litres of drinking water per hour — could be a vital resource to disaster victims. CHANNEL NEWSASIA

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