A$300,000 Gift For Flood Victims
AUSTRALIA - Queensland farming families rebuilding their livelihoods after flooding received a USD$300,000 boost today from agrochemical and bio-technology company Dow AgroSciences, in a generous donation which doubles the Queensland Farmers Appeal, set up by state farm group AgForce and rural charity Aussie Helpers in January.The Dow AgroSciences donation was made through its philanthropic affiliate The Dow Chemical Company Foundation, with Dow Chemical Asia Pacific President, Pat Dawson, on hand to present the cheque to AgForce president Brent Finlay and Aussie Helpers founder Brian Egan.
Mr Finlay said it was inspiring to see such a commitment from the wider agricultural community to help farmers get back on track after the devastation across Queensland.
“Since January, Aussie Helpers has channelled thousands of dollars of donated goods and services to where it is needed most. In April alone, Aussie Helpers connected more than 90 volunteers who delivered 1800 hours across 18 farms from Moura to Kilcoy to Oakey to Roma,” Mr Finlay said.
“Hundreds of individuals and businesses have donated money and volunteered their time to help repair fences, retrieve displaced livestock, clean flooded houses and, most importantly, provide a supportive ear to producers as they work through the emotional challenges of this natural disaster.
“Dow AgroSciences provides innovative technologies for primary production and agricultural biotechnology to serve the world's growing population. This generous donation is their way to give back to the agricultural sector to rebuild farms and help reinvigorate Queensland’s role in feeding this global population.”
Today’s donation to the Queensland Farmers Appeal follows Dow AgroSciences’ earlier USD$200,000 donation to the Premier’s Flood Appeal. Dow AgroSciences Marketing Manager George Saville said the company wanted to do whatever it could to support the farming sector.
“Many of those affected by the floods are our customers and employees. As we watched the catastrophic weather events unfold we knew we had to do something that could make a difference,” Mr Saville said.
TheCattleSite News Desk