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Driving Force

Automotive Supply Chains and Forced Labour in the Uyghur Region

Workers in a factory
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Driving Force

Automotive Supply Chains and Forced Labor in the Uyghur Region

What parts of your car were made by Uyghur forced labourers?

If you have bought a car in the last five years, some of its parts were likely made by Uyghurs and others forced to work in China. The Chinese government has deliberately shifted raw materials mining and processing and auto parts manufacturing into the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR or Uyghur Region), essentially making international supply chains captive to repressive programs and systematic forced labour.

In a six-month investigation undertaken by Laura T. Murphy, Kendyl Salcito, Yalkun Uluyol, Mia Rabkin, and a team of anonymous researchers, analysis of publicly available documents revealed massive and expanding links between western car brands and Uyghur abuses, in everything from the hood decals and car frames to engine casings, interiors and electronics.

Forced labour exposure in the auto industry

Consumers do not want cars made through exploitation. But a combination of weak enforcement of forced labour laws and the government’s blind eye to environmental standards in China, paired with convoluted supply chains has left the automotive industry reliant on abusive suppliers. Every major car brand – including Volkswagen, BMW, Honda, Ford, GM, Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, Stellantis brands (like Fiat, Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep), Tesla and NIO - is at high risk of sourcing from companies linked to abuses in the Uyghur region. Some are sourcing electronics from firms that are employing trafficked Uyghurs in factories in other parts of China. Some are unwittingly sourcing metals from the Uyghur region, because metal trading companies own equity in Xinjiang smelters. Some of the greatest exposure comes from the steel and aluminum used to make car frames, axels, bodies, engine casings, wheels and brakes. The world’s largest steel and aluminum producers have shifted into the Uyghur Region under Chinese government subsidies and incentives. But tires, interiors, windshields, batteries and practically every other major part are also implicated.

The auto industry cannot wait another day to trace their supply chains back to the raw materials. To do anything short of full tracing would be an enormous legal, ethical, and reputational risk.

Read the full report (PDF, 3.8MB) to understand how the Uyghur Region has been transformed into the world’s forced labour capitol. 

VISIT OUR INTERACTIVE AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLY CHAIN WEBSITE to search for any car company or sector to see how Uyghur forced labour is linked to international markets.

Evidence Base

Over the course of researching this report, HKC and Nomogaia collected troves of publicly available corporate reports, publicity videos, and other materials related to corporate engagement in the Uyghur Region. We archive the web-based content, but much of the videos and other materials in pdf format cannot be archived as easily. We share all of those materials here for the benefit of researchers and others interested in the evidence base.

Annex B:Corporate Responses (PDF, 1.5MB) 

(Updated: 08 December 2023)

*reflects Hoshine's response on November 14, 2023

 

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Research team

Laura Murphy

Professor Laura Murphy

Professor of Human Rights and Contemporary Slavery

Laura Murphy
Kendyl Salcito

Kendyl Salcito

Executive Director, NomoGaia

Yalkun Uluyol

Yalkun Uluyol

Researcher

Mia Rabkin

Mia Rabkin 

Researcher

Staff profile image

Anonymous researcher team