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PRIVACY
Opinion

What businesses are doing to support Ukraine

Firms like Caerphilly-based AefFin are providing much need support to the Ukraine following Russia's invasion

AerFin image by Huw John.

Since the day Russian tanks rolled across the border into Ukraine, nations across the world have been going the extra mile to support the people of that resilient nation.

Whilst governments and politicians have imposed sanctions and cut diplomatic ties, the private sector has also responded to the ongoing situation mainly through the withdrawal of major global businesses from Russia. As a result, the Institute of International Finance estimated that the Russia’s economy will shrink 15% this year and 3% in 2023, wiping out fifteen years of economic gains.

Whether that will eventually have any effect on the current situation is anyone’s guess, but with over a thousand Western businesses having left, or are in the process of leaving, all sectors of the Russian economy have been hit hard by those large corporations ending their links with the country.

In energy, BP is divesting its multi-billion pound stake in Russian oil firm Rosneft and Shell is ending its partnership with Russian energy Gazprom. In the food retail sector, global firms including Burger King, McDonald’s and Starbucks have closed their restaurants and in financial services, major players such Deloitte, Ernst & Young, Goldman Sachs, KPMG and PWC and have shut down their offices

American Express, Mastercard and Visa have suspended their credit availability to the Russian economy and luxury fashions brands such as Gucci and Chanel, as well as retailers such as Nike, Levis and Boohoo, no longer trade in Russia.

There have also been small gestures made within the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ that may not be important in the larger scheme of things but are symbolically critical. For example, not only has supermarket giant Sainsbury’s removed Russian vodka from its shelves, but it has changed the name of chicken Kiev product to chicken Kyiv, reflecting the Ukrainian spelling of the capital city.

To support Ukraine itself, many private sector businesses have begun to donate to the Red Cross whilst others have made direct contributions to support the people suffering the most from the conflict.

For example, Epic Games raised £115m for Ukraine relief efforts by donating two weeks of income from its video game Fortnite, L’Oreal announced a donation of £90m and 300,000 products to support the growing number of refugees, and the LEGO Foundation announced an emergency donation of £12m to support Ukrainian children and families.