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8 Feb 2023

Report traces links between major car brands' supply chains & companies linked to alleged abuses in Uyghur region

The report "Driving Force - Automotive Supply Chains and Forced Labor in the Uyghur Region" published by Sheffield Hallam University and NomoGaia traces the supply chains of major car manufacturers and documents the automotive industry’s reliance on the alleged exploitation in the Uyghur Region. It contains documentation of labour transfers, profiles of individual companies, and explanations of the development of relevant industries in the Uyghur Region.

The authors conclude that the vast supply chains of the automotive industry are widely tainted with forced labour and make several recommendations to car companies, including carrying out full supply chain tracing. They urge governments to enact mandatory human rights due diligence laws that require companies to address human rights risks beyond first-tier suppliers. An interactive online supply chain map accompanies the report.

The authors of "Driving Force" gave all companies named in the report the opportunity to contribute to the report findings. Bosch, Aston Martin, Mercedes Benz, ORA, Rio Tinto, Nissan, Pirelli, General Motors, Volvo, Honda, Kohler, BMW, and Trafigura provided statements; their responses can be found in Annex B of the report.

Business and Human Rights Resource Centre also reached out to the parent companies of car brands with more than one documented link to companies sourcing from the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region or accepting labour transfers of Uyghurs outside Uyghur Region, and who hadn't previously commented. Mitsubishi Motors, Stellantis (Opel, Peugeot, Fiat, Jeep and Chrysler), Volkswagen (Volkswagen, Bentley, SEAT, Audi and FAW-Volkswagen), and NIO provided responses; available below. BAIC Motor (Beijing Mercedes Benz), China FAW Group (China FAW Group and FAW-Volkswagen), Dongfeng Motor, Ford, Guangzhou Automobile Group, Hyundai (Hyundai and KIA), Isuzu, Lucid Motors, Mazda, Mitsubishi Group, Porsche, Renault, SAIC Motor (SAIC Motor, SAIC-General Motors), Suzuki, Tata (Jaguar Land Rover), Tesla and Toyota did not or declined to respond.

Company Responses

Stellantis View Response
Volkswagen View Response
BAIC Motor Corporation

No Response

Dongfeng Motor

No Response

SAIC Motor

No Response

Nio Inc. View Response
China FAW Group (First Automobile Works)

No Response

Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC Motor)

No Response

Mazda

No Response

Toyota

No Response

Mitsubishi Group

No Response

Isuzu

No Response

Suzuki

No Response

Hyundai Group

No Response

Renault

No Response

Lucid Motors

No Response

Ford

No Response

Tesla

No Response

Porsche

No Response

Tata Group

No Response

Mitsubishi Motors View Response

Timeline