Coalition
for
Ukraine
I'm a tech entrepreneur and concerned citizen trying to support Ukraine. I hope to rally suppport for companies pulling out of Russia, and add pressure on those that still remain, by providing you info to share in social media. Thank you for your support! - Alex Algard
The brutal Russian invasion of Ukraine is being fought on many fronts, including the economic front. Corporations have made various announcements regarding Ukraine and Russia, but what are their actual actions to help prevent more bloodshed? As of January 7, we are tracking 1217 companies, of which 953 are pulling out of Russia, and 264 holdouts (highlighted in red) are mostly continuing to do business as usual in Russia. Review the list, take action (here and directly), tweet and share!
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Company | Headquarters | Action | |
---|---|---|---|
Akrapovič HQ: SloveniaAutomotive Manufacturing | March 10: Continues to sell its exhausts in Russia | ||
AL-KO Vehicle Technology HQ: GermanyAutomotive | April 8: Stopped all deliveries to Russia | ||
Aston Martin HQ: UKAutomotive Luxury | March 1: Paused Russian deliveries and sales over sanctions | ||
Audi (Volkswagen) HQ: GermanyAutomotive | May 12: Suspended production at the Kaluga plant. (Produced 2477 vehicles in 2020) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
AVL HQ: AustriaAutomotive | January 1: Ceased all business activities in Russia and initiated divestitures | ||
Bajaj Auto HQ: IndiaAutomotive | March 2: Continues to operate in Russia- "The direct impact of the ongoing war between Ukraine and Russia is absolutely minimal." Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Bentley HQ: UKAutomotive Luxury | March 3: Stop the production of vehicles in and exports to Russia | ||
BMW HQ: GermanyAutomotive | March 1: Halted production in Russian plant in Kaliningrad Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Bosch HQ: GermanyConglomerate Automotive | June 14: Continues to sell off Russian assets. Suspended operations Listed on: World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Bridgestone HQ: JapanAutomotive Tires | June 5: Making progress on sale of Russian business. Stopping production in Russia (5M tires/yr and over 1,000 employees in Ulyanovsk factory) and exports into Russia Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Bucher Industries HQ: SwitzerlandAutomotive Industrial Services | |||
Cie Automotive HQ: SpainAutomotive Manufacturing | |||
Continental HQ: GermanyAutomotive Tires | May 22: Divested the majority of its activities in Russia, Sold its plant in Kaluga (3M tires/yr) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Daimler AG HQ: GermanyAutomotive | March 1: Froze its business activities and cooperation with Kamazin in Russia immediately. Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Denso HQ: JapanAutomotive Manufacturing | |||
Faurecia HQ: FranceAutomotive | March 21: Left the Russian market (six production sites in the country: three in Tolyatti, one each in St. Petersburg, Kaluga and Luga) | ||
FAW Group HQ: ChinaAutomotive Manufacturing | |||
Ferrari HQ: ItalyAutomotive Luxury | |||
Ford HQ: USAAutomotive | October 26: Exited its Russian joint venture, Sollers Ford. Closed its 3 plants in Russia indefinitely Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
General Motors (GM) HQ: USAAutomotive | April 28: Withdrew from Russian operations. Stopped any deliveries of its cars to Russian customers Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) World's Most Ethical Companies (Ethisphere) | ||
Gestamp HQ: SpainAutomotive Manufacturing | March 7: Stopped production at its four plants in Russia (Russia represents 1.3% of total revenues) | ||
Honda HQ: JapanAutomotive | March 2: Suspending shipments to Russia across its motoring and motorcycle division Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Hyundai HQ: South KoreaAutomotive | August 31: Attempts to sell Russian assets have not been successful. Suspended operations of the Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Russia- St Petersburg (200,000 vehicles/year) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Jaguar HQ: UKAutomotive Luxury | March 1: Jaguar and Aston Martin paused vehicle shipments to Russia | ||
Magna HQ: CanadaAutomotive | March 3: Idling its Russian operations Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Ethical Companies (Ethisphere) | ||
Mazda HQ: JapanAutomotive | November 10: Transferred all of its equity interest in the Russian business to its joint venture partner Sollers Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Mercedes-Benz (Daimler) HQ: GermanyAutomotive Luxury | April 26: Completed its exit from Russia, selling shares in its Russian subsidiaries to local investor Avtodom Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Michelin HQ: FranceAutomotive Tires | May 26: Sold its Russian subsidiaries to Power International Tires LLC Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Nemak HQ: MexicoAutomotive | March 3: Halted production at its manufactoring facility in Russia in Ulyanovsk | ||
Nissan HQ: JapanAutomotive | October 11: Sold its Russian operations to NAMI (manufacturing and R&D facilities in St. Petersburg, and Sales & Marketing centre in Moscow) | ||
Nokian Tyres HQ: FinlandAutomotive | March 16: Sold its Russian operations to PJSC Tatneft | ||
Pirelli Tyre HQ: ItalyAutomotive Tires | March 9: Winding down production at Kirov and Voronezh factories, halted new investments in the country (7M tires/yr and 2,500 employees) | ||
Porsche (Volkswagen) HQ: GermanyAutomotive | March 3: Deliveries to Russia suspended (26 Porsche Centres, 6,262 vehicles were delivered to Russia in 2021) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Rába HQ: HungaryAutomotive Manufacturing | |||
Renault HQ: FranceAutomotive | May 16: Sold 100% of Renault Group's shares in Renault Russia to Moscow City entity and its 67.69% interest in AVTOVAZ to NAMI (10% of revenue generated in Russia, 45,000 employees) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Rolls Royce HQ: UKAutomotive Luxury | |||
SAIC Motor HQ: ChinaManufacturing Automotive | April 15: No statement regarding Russian operations. Exports its vehicles to Russia Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Skoda HQ: CzechiaAutomotive | March 16: Entered the final stages of quitting Russia. after ceasing production | ||
Stellantis HQ: NetherlandsAutomotive | April 14: Suspended imports and exports of vehicles to/from Russia Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Subaru HQ: JapanAutomotive | |||
Suzuki HQ: JapanAutomotive | May 12: According to Irina Zelentsova, chief operating officer of Suzuki Motor Rus LLC, the company is determined to maintain the brand in the markets of Russia. Suspended car exports from its Hungarian factory (10,000 cars a year to Russia and Ukraine) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 | ||
Tenneco HQ: USAAutomotive Manufacturing | March 1: No statement regarding Russian operations. Operates 5 manufacturing plants in Russia (Corporate office in Moscow, Russia contributed $100 million in revenues) Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Ethical Companies (Ethisphere) | ||
Tesla HQ: USAAutomotive Tech | March 14: Continues to buy aluminum from Russian company Rusal, a company founded by sanctioned Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Titan International HQ: USAAutomotive Tires | March 9: Continues production at Volgograd factory (2M tires/yr, 1,900 employees) | ||
Toyota HQ: JapanAutomotive | March 31: Handed St Petersburg plant over to Russian state after stopping production Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Volkswagen HQ: GermanyAutomotive | May 19: Completed the sale of its shares in Volkswagen Group Rus LLC, including its local subsidiaries, to Art-Finance LLC Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Volvo HQ: SwedenAutomotive | June 26: In process of winding down its Russian subsidiary. Suspended its operations in Russia in February 2022 Listed on: Forbes Global 2000 World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) | ||
Yokohama HQ: JapanAutomotive Tires | September 6: Continued production at Lipetsk facility (1.6M tires/yr, 600 employees) | ||
ZF Friedrichshafen HQ: GermanyAutomotive | June 10: Sold Russian subsidiaries Wabco Rus LLC and Wabco Vostok LLC to local management Listed on: World's Most Admired Companies (Fortune) |
COALITION
FOR
UKRAINE
HOW YOU CAN HELP
REPORT
Do you know a company still operating in Russia?
Anonymously (or not) provide us the details.
VOLUNTEER
Can you donate some time to the cause?
Please fill out the form below with how you can help.
FAQ
Why does it matter whether or not companies pull out of Russia?
These companies want to be on the right side of history in the eyes of their customers, employees, and shareholders. Their actions absolutely matter and will make a difference. The Kremlin cannot win this economic war, and the oligarchs of Russia are now starting to openly speak up against Putin.
What are your data sources?
We rely on the most authoritative sources available online, including public announcements by corporations and online media sources as attributed in the "source" column.
How do you define "pulling out of Russia"? If a company is not shutting down 100% of Russian operations, what threshold do you use?
Most companies that are withdrawing from the Russian market are not shutting down 100% of their Russian operations. We try to ascertain how material the pullback is relative to the company's overall business within Russia, and if it is a significant reduction, then we will give the company credit for it. Conversely, if a company has announced that it is shutting a portion of its Russian business, but we have determined that the affected businesses is in fact a relatively small portion of the overall business, then we will still call attention to the company needing to do more.
Am I hurting the average Russian citizen by encouraging businesses to leave?
Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine can be repulsed on the ground and through economic pressure. In fact, if the ground war slows to a stalemate, the economic war is increasingly important. We believe the most helpful way for us to take action is to urgently encourage major businesses to cease business ties with Russia. This economic pressure will help expedite an end to the war.
Who created this website and why?
Alex Algard, a tech entrepreneur, created this website, and he provides ongoing support for a professional team of web development, research, and data entry staff. As a concerned citizen, he felt compelled to do something in support of Ukraine.
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