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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest yacht maker donates PPE to NHS and care workers

Plymouth's Princess Yachts makes unused safety gear available after suspending production during virus outbreak

Inside Princess Yachts

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest yacht maker has donated all its protective gear to health, care and council workers after shutting down production.

Princess Yachts, which has sent home the majority of its 3,000 workforce in a “controlled shutdown” of its five Plymouth factories, said it has recognised the “challenges” faced by the NHS, and local government in obtaining enough safety equipment during the COVID-19 outbreak.

Antony Sheriff, chief executive of Princess Yachts, met Plymouth City Council leader Tudor Evans to discuss the crisis and offered the firm’s unused Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) to the local authority.

The council will now distribute the gear to those on the frontline in the fight against the virus pandemic.

Princess Yachts' main factory in Stonehouse, Plymouth

Beneficiaries in the South West will range from the NHS, through to those who are “working tirelessly to keep society functioning”, such as care workers and other teams.

Cllr Evans and Mr Sheriff discussed the “critical gap” facing medium-sized business in terms of current support to tackle the COVID-19 crisis, as well as the health secretary’s statement that there have been challenges in the supply of PPE, especially to NHS staff.

The yacht manufacturer said it wanted to help ensure essential services receive much-required protective equipment that is in short supply across the world.

Antony Sheriff, Princess Yachts' executive chairman

Mr Sheriff said: “We hope this donation of our PPE goes some way to helping NHS staff and other such services in these incredibly difficult times.