Plant & Hire Aid Alliance plans third convoy to Ukraine

The Plant and Hire Aid Alliance has announced it will carry out further aid convoys in October this year.

Aid being delivered by the Plant and Hire Aid Alliance Photo: Plant and Hire Aid Alliance

Founded in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Alliance is made up of 60 plant and hire companies who have joined together to support the humanitarian effort in Ukraine.

As part of its annual report of its activities, the Plant and Hire Aid Alliance has said it will organise another convoy of vehicles to take humanitarian aid to Kosice in East Slovakia in October.

Jeremy Fish, Plant & Hire Aid Alliance founding member, said, “There are too few, doing too little, when so many need so much more. We need more help and support.

“If any Alliance members are interested in organising events, fundraisers or are willing to lobby their contacts for donations then please get in touch. Every penny we raise goes to Ukraine; we have no overheads and everything we do is on a voluntary basis.”

The convoy will be the third to be organised by the Alliance. In its first convoy in March last year, the Alliance, with the help of donations from the public and a number of companies, delivered 250 boxes, while in October it delivered a further 1,500.

The aid deliver so far includes mattresses, blankets, suitcases, 60 tonnes of food and medical products, 135 generators and 30,000 Christmas presents.

A full review of the work of the Alliance in Ukraine can be found on the Plant and Hire Aid Alliance website, along with details on how to donate.

Latest News
PartnerLift expands into Austria
Austria-based Flott Arbeitsbühnen joins German cooperative with its fleet of truck mounts 
Strabag orders pass €25 billion mark despite ‘challenging’ European market
Austrian construction contractor Strabag’s order book has passed €25 billion for the first time
UK government pledges to unblock hundreds of stalled housing construction projects
The UK’s Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner has announced plans to get construction work restarted on hundreds of sites across England.