From Amazon to Tata, industry steps up to combat India’s coronavirus crisis

Amazon.com Inc. founder, Jeff Bezos, whose company pledged to send 100 ICU ventilator units to India during the country's ongoing battle against COVID-19. (File/AFP)
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Updated 28 April 2021
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From Amazon to Tata, industry steps up to combat India’s coronavirus crisis

  • Hospitals struggling with a massive second wave of infections are turning away patients as beds and oxygen supplies run out
  • A record increase in deaths over the prior 24 hours carried India’s toll past 200,000 on Wednesday

BENGALURU: Global and Indian firms are flexing their industrial muscle to help the world’s second biggest population battle coronavirus, coming to the rescue of a public health system buckling under the weight of surging infections and deaths.

Amazon.com, Intel and Google, as well as Indian firms Tata Sons, Reliance Industries and JSW Steel have pitched in with everything from airlifts of medical equipment and funding pledges to making medical oxygen.

“What we need is better planning with the recognition that government’s capacity is limited and therefore requires private participation,” said economist Madhura Swaminathan of the Indian Statistical Institute in Bengaluru.

Hospitals struggling with a massive second wave of infections are turning away patients as beds and oxygen supplies run out, and social media brim with desperate calls for help in finding supplies of oxygen and drugs such as remdesivir.

A record increase in deaths over the prior 24 hours carried India’s toll past 200,000 on Wednesday, a situation that experts blame on lack of oxygen supplies and infrastructure challenges.

On Tuesday Amazon said it would ship 100 ICU ventilator units to India from the United States.

It had earlier worked with partners to airlift more than 8,000 oxygen concentrators and 500 ventilators from Singapore, relying on its massive global logistics network to hasten procurement, a spokeswoman said.

Google promised $18 million in new funding for India, including advertising support for public health campaigns.

India’s largest steel maker by market value, JSW, has stopped making some of the construction raw material as it diverts resources to turning out liquid oxygen instead.

From April 21 to 23, JSW supplied 898 tons of oxygen each day from its plants, equivalent to about 13% of the combined daily demand for 6,785 tons of the life-saving gas in India’s 20 worst-hit states.

JSW said it was building large COVID patient centers around its plants, so that they can be serviced via a pipeline.

Billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries tweaked manufacturing at its oil refineries to produce hundreds of tons of oxygen for hard-hit areas such as Maharashtra, India’s richest and worst-hit state.

Tata Group, one of India’s oldest conglomerates, imported 24 cryogenic containers to transport liquid oxygen, while its Tata Steel unit ramped up oxygen supply.

“The government single-handedly cannot deal with this crisis any more, it is very important that the corporate sector gets into motion,” said Kunal Kundu, India economist at Societe Generale in Bengaluru.

“We need all the help we can get.”

Economist Swaminathan called for the scope of private sector contribution to be widened beyond the merely voluntary.

“Anybody who has surplus funds and equipment should step in to help,” she added. “In terms of logistics, beds, oxygen, hospitals, the private sector has to be asked to do its task as part of policy.”


France’s Macron accepts resignation of Louvre museum chief after jewel theft

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France’s Macron accepts resignation of Louvre museum chief after jewel theft

  • Des Cars has faced intense criticism since ⁠burglars made off in October with jewels worth an estimated $102m
  • Strikes over pay and conditions since December have also led to regular closures

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron accepted the resignation on Tuesday of the head of Paris’ Louvre museum, which has been grappling with the fallout from a high-profile jewel heist and rolling strikes.
Laurence des Cars tendered her resignation, which Macron accepted, “praising an act of responsibility at a time when ⁠the world’s largest museum ⁠needs calm and a strong new impetus to successfully carry out major projects involving security and modernization,” his office said.
Des Cars has faced intense criticism since ⁠burglars made off in October with jewels worth an estimated $102 million that are still missing, exposing glaring security gaps at the world’s most-visited museum.
Strikes over pay and conditions since December have also led to regular closures and added to a list of woes that included two water leaks ⁠as ⁠well as a massive ticket fraud investigation.
Critics including the state auditors’ office have questioned the museum’s low spending on security and infrastructure maintenance while it made lavish purchases of new artwork, only a quarter of which is open to the public, and spent heavily on post-pandemic relaunch projects.