Tech Billionaires Including Tim Cook, Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg Promised 18 Million Masks to Fight COVID-19This weekend saw a flurry in Silicon Valley CEOs promising their companies would donate masks to healthcare workers.

ByIsobel Asher Hamilton

This story originally appeared on商业内幕

Reuters/Nicholas Pfosi via BI
An N95 respiration mask.

Tech billionaires are jostling to donate protective masks.

Over the weekend a flurry of tech CEOs including Apple's Tim Cook, Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, and Tesla's Elon Musk promised to deliver millions of masks to healthcare workers working on the front line to fight against the coronavirus.

Panic buying means masks are in short supply even for hospital staff, so much so tha the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said last week that as a last resorthealthcare workers should use a bandana or scarf.

TheWorld Health Organizationcautions that members of the public do not need to wear masks unless they are caring for someone who has contracted COVID-19, and warns that they are ony effective if put on and removed properly.

Here are the tech billionaires who have promised to donate masks:

REUTERS/Edgar Su
Apple CEO Tim Cook.

Apple — minimum 2 million masks

Apple CEO TIm Cook announced on Saturday that Apple will be donating "millions" of masks to health workers in the US and Europe.

In a press meeting on Saturday Vice President Mike Pence said Apple would be donatingtwo million masks to the US.

It's not clear how many more Apple plans to donate to European healthcare workers.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Facebook — 720,000 with "millions" more on the way

In aFacebook poston Sunday Mark Zuckerberg said that Facebook will be donating it had left over from the California wildfires while it works on sourcing "millions more."

Facebook was not immediately available for comment when asked by Business Insider how many millions of masks it is aiming to provide.

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.
AP Photo/Susan Walsh

Tesla and SpaceX — 250,000 masks and 1,000 ventilators

In an email toCleanTechnicaon Saturday Elon Musk said Tesla and SpaceX have 250,000 N95 masks ready to start sending out. "Aiming to start distributing those to hospitals tomorrow night," Musk added in the email.

Responding to a user on Twitteron Sunday asking for him to send aid to hospitals in Louisiana, Musk seemed to both promise N95 masks and criticize them for being unwieldy.

"We'll try to get & deliver as many as possible. N95 masks are a pain to wear btw [by the way]. Less onerous masks are better most of the time," said Musk.

On Sunday a researcher at the University of Washington Medical Center (UWMC) also received 50,000 masks from Elon Musk,The Seattle Times reports.

Musk has also promised that Tesla and SpaceX will dedicate resources tomanufacturing ventilators for hospitals, although Musk has simultaneouslyshown disbelief that there will be any shortage of the machines.

Musk told CleanTechnica however that the companies: "should have over 1000 ventilators by next week."

REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage

Salesforce — 5 million masks and protective kit

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff tweeted Sunday that Salesforce had already donated 9,000 masks to the University of California Medical Center, and is working on distributing a total of 5 million masks this week plus extra protective equipment.

REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File Photo
Former Alibaba CEO Jack Ma.

Jack Ma — 10.2 million masks

Looking farther afield than Silicon Valley, Chinese tech billionaire Jack Ma has so far promised masks to 90 countries.

Jack Ma joined Twitter earlier this month to make his first announcement that his charitable organisation would bedonating one million masks(alongside 500,000 coronavirus testing kits) to the US.

Since then he has announced that he will beshipping 100,000 masks to every single African country(meaning a total of 5.4 million),

On Saturday he announced1.8 million masks would be distributed among Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Maldives, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka.

He then saida further two millionwould go towards 24 Latin American countries.

Pier Marco Tacca/Getty Images

Microsoft — 15,000 protection goggles and other equipment

微软CEO萨提亚Nadella概述了他的方法company is teaming up with medical and research organizations to provide software tools in the COVID-19 fight.

Company president Brad Smith also outlined how the firm's supply chain has been commandeered to provide protective equipment for medical workers. An initial batch of supplies has been delivered to Seattle, where the firm is headquartered.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

'No Question, We Probably Went Too Far': Delta Airlines CEO Backtracks on Sweeping Changes to SkyMiles Accounts, Sky Club Access

联合国popular changes set to roll out in 2025 were announced earlier this month.

Business News

Jeff Bezos Lost $5 Billion in 1 Day After Amazon FTC Lawsuit News

The lawsuit accuses Amazon of engaging in anticompetitive practices, which has led to a sharp decline in the company's stock value and a substantial reduction in Bezos's net worth.

Business News

Katy Perry Is Fighting the Founder of 1-800-Flowers for a $15 Million California Mansion He Doesn't Want to Sell Her

The eight-bedroom, 11-bathroom estate sits on nearly nine acres in the Santa Ynez foothills in Montecito.

Business News

Why Barbara Corcoran Chose Her Business Partner After Looking Inside Her Purse: 'Best Hire I Ever Made'

Esther Kaplan served as President of the Corcoran Group until 2000.

Growing a Business

So Your Company Is Talking About Transformation — But Is It Ready? Here's How To Tell.

Transformation is one of a company's many choices — but if a team opts to do it, they have to be sure the business is ready, willing and able.