Ecolab has been a busy behind-the-scenes player in many of the most powerful health care scenes since COVID-19 hit the U.S., from COVID-19 units to N95 mask sterilization.
It has helped factories with sanitization needs in this new era.
As the U.S. death toll from COVID-19 surpassed 100,000 last week, the $15 billion St. Paul-based giant is also helping hotels and restaurants safely reopen as it continues its work in hospitals.
Examples include helping New York City's Mount Sinai Hospital set up its COVID units and update other areas by installing 2,000 hand-sanitizing stations in one weekend. Ecolab helped the nearby Four Seasons Hotel improve its sanitization so it could become a temporary home for worn-out EMTs and hospital workers tending to coronavirus victims.
"We have been in situations where we had to redo hospitals because they wanted to overprotect," said Ecolab CEO Doug Baker. "We have huge spikes in demand in all antimicrobial products. It's monstrous."
Because Ecolab has helped sanitize hospitals for 50 years, hospitals turned to it during the pandemic — causing sales for disinfectants and other necessary products to spike, even as revenue from cruises, hotel, restaurants and concert halls sagged amid coronavirus stay-at-home orders.
In weeks, hand-sanitizer sales jumped fifteenfold, the company said. Surface-disinfectant sales are five times higher as Target, grocers and factory customers began sterilizing shopping carts, counters, machines and doors nonstop.
Ecolab has added extra shifts, reallocated workers from its slower restaurant chemicals business and doubled the number of plants to 35 where its alcohol-based hand sanitizers are now made.