I will agree with Bill and Scotty that the CAT program is pretty conservative, comes from getting sued more than once or twice. You will find the Cummins sizing program (along with Kohler and Generac) usually comes pretty close to the CAT sizing recommendations for the same reasons. Starting a 500kW motor across the line can vary demand quite a bit depending on what that motor is driving. A sizing program that starts you up high and lets an experienced sales engineer "save you money" is not a bad marketing tool properly used. In reality I don't use anyone's programs much, like Bill and others here on this site I have been doing this for awhile, but I wouldn't give you a firm recommendation with what little info you have provided.
This is really one of those issues with a whole lot of "it depends". When you get up in size to where you are at you are considering a pretty large unit, so some things to consider,
How long on site? A year, two, five or more?
How "remote" is site? is there a concern about being able to transport your generator on and off site?
What kind of fuel is available and it's cost?
Are there any environmental regulations at site?
Who is going to take care of it?
As pointed out above, load profile and duty factor have a big impact on actual selection. You say "motor load", what kind of load is it driving?
Have you considered a rental option? Folks like CAT, Cummins and Aggreko(and others depending on where you are in the world) are pretty good at providing this kind of site power for many applications all over the world. They provide the units, temp cabling, transformers, fuel storage and other equipment, and in most cases also provide the maintenance. In the size range your talking you have a choice at being at the top end of the high speed market or the lower end of a medium speed engine/generator set going with a single unit.
From years of being in the rental business, off the cuff I'd say a you may want to consider a multiple unit setup of modular power units, like three units at 1200-1500 ekw and possibly a housekeeping set of about 300-500 ekW depending on what has to run all the time. Just a quick guess on what you provided, but in reality you need to provide a lot more info to get a good recommendation. There are a number of good controllers available at a reasonable price that continue to make a multiple unit solution more attractive.
Hope that helps, Mike L.