Skip to main content

JCB loans machine fleet to aid British flood disaster relief work

JCB is reacting to the British flood disaster by deploying a €908,760 (£750,000) fleet of machines complete with operators to help stricken families. The company today announced that four of its high-speed, high ground clearance Fastrac tractors equipped with trailers and two of its iconic backhoe loaders were being despatched to the worst affected areas. The Fastrac tractors will be deployed in areas where people and livestock need moving from advancing flood waters. The JCB backhoe, with its ability t
February 13, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
JCB’s flood relief machines leave the company’s World HQ in Staffordshire, England
255 JCB is reacting to the British flood disaster by deploying a €908,760 (£750,000) fleet of machines complete with operators to help stricken families.

The company today announced that four of its high-speed, high ground clearance Fastrac tractors equipped with trailers and two of its iconic backhoe loaders were being despatched to the worst affected areas. The Fastrac tractors will be deployed in areas where people and livestock need moving from advancing flood waters. The JCB backhoe, with its ability to both load and dig, will play vital role in shoring up flood defences and eventually in clearing debris left by the flood waters.

JCB has already supplied a 541-70 Loadall telescopic handler to support farmers who have been left without feed and bedding for livestock evacuated to dry land from flood hit areas. The machine is being used to load donated forage on to trucks at Sedgemore Cattle Auction in Somerset, southwest England where the distribution is being co-ordinated.

Lord Bamford, JCB’s chairman, said, “The scale of the floods and the anguish being caused is devastating for all concerned. As Britain’s biggest manufacturer of construction equipment we are in a position to provide machinery quickly to help families and farmers who are suffering so dreadfully through the floods. It’s my hope that the JCB machines we’re providing will help alleviate that suffering.”

The machines are being shipped from JCB’s World Headquarters in Rocester, Staffordshire, central England today. They will be operated by drivers provided by the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB). JCB machines are already at the forefront of efforts to assist in the flood zones thanks to the company’s plant hire customers who are deploying their fleets to help.

JCB has a long history of helping countries affected by major natural disasters and recently provided €367,207 worth of machines and generators to the Philippines when Typhoon Haiyan struck.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A new transportation project for Northern Southeast Asia
    March 2, 2022
    Transport in Northern Southeast Asia is to benefit from a new US$145 million project
  • Maybe Hire takes on Whorlton Bridge
    March 14, 2025
    For refurbishment of the old English bridge, a temporary cable crane structure - designed by CaSE Civil & Structural Engineering - used a range of Mabey Hire’s propping equipment, including the Mass 50, System 160 and Mat 125 products.
  • New innovations are being developed in diesel engines and drive technologies
    April 24, 2013
    Innovative new engine emissions control technology is coming to market - Mike Woof reports. The diesel engine sector has been one of the most active and innovative areas for technological development in the past 10 years. Engine firms have invested enormous sums in developing new, low emissions technologies that reduce the quantities of nitrous oxide and particulates from the tailpipe. All the firms have taken a different approach in this regard, using various combinations of the technologies available such
  • Innovative formwork solution to bridge construction
    February 20, 2012
    Innovative solutions are being applied to the construction of bridge structures as Patrick Smith reports. RMD Kwikform Iberica has engineered and supplied specialist formwork and falsework for construction of the much-needed Monteporreiro Viaduct in northern Spain. The viaduct will connect Monteporreiro with the Benedictine Monastery of San Bieito Lérez on the other side of the river, and in the process will ease congestion in the nearby town of Pontevedra, diverting some 5,000 vehicles/day.