I. The Rise of Heavy Industry and Abuses Against Uyghur People in the XUAR
The automotive sector is massive in the global economy, with 22 car companies on the Fortune 500 list.Footnote 1 The main materials comprising cars include steel, aluminium, glass and plastics. China is the world’s largest producer and exporter of all of these, as well as the world’s largest producer of synthetic rubber, used for car tyres.Footnote 2 Electric vehicles (EV) are also heavily reliant on copper, nickel, cobalt and lithium which, although not largely mined in China, are shipped to China for processing and EV battery parts manufacturing. As of 2020, China hosts 76 per cent of the world’s EV battery cell manufacturing, and Chinese companies own and operate many of the manufacturing facilities outside its borders.Footnote 3 In short, China currently dominates every aspect of car parts production, including in the EV sector, and exports 10 per cent of the world’s car parts to global markets.Footnote 4
In recent years, China has pushed heavy industry westward, into the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR), where culturally distinct peoples are under existential threat. ‘Xinjiang’, which simply means ‘the new territory’ in Mandarin, is a 643,000 square mile (1.66‑million square kilometre) region claimed by China under post-World War II settlements. While China has been colonizing the region for decades, it began a more vicious social crackdown in 2017, which has been characterized by the mass incarceration of Uyghurs and other ethnic Turkic peoples, as well as mass sterilizations, family separations, ubiquitous surveillance, and cultural indoctrination.Footnote 5 The United Nations (UN) has identified these conditions as potentially rising to the level of ‘crimes against humanity’.Footnote 6
The industrial shift serves to consolidate the colonization of the XUAR, relying on conscription of working-age Uyghurs into forced labour in conditions of surveillance and social isolation. Uyghurs and other Turkic peoples who resist job placements or indoctrination are subjected to incarceration in a vast network of prisons and re-education camps spread across the region, where an estimated one million ethnic Uyghurs and other native inhabitants are being detained.Footnote 7 Often, ‘satellite factories’ are built adjacent to these camps, with detainees forced to work for industry as a form of social rehabilitation. The industrial expansion and large-scale abuse and exploitation occurring in the XUAR aim at the eradication of cultures that do not resemble the majority, Han, culture in China. This threat is globally important because China’s decision to shift global industry into the region links global companies and consumers to the abuses.
II. Abuses to Uyghurs Embedded in the Global Automotive Sector
Because of the place the XUAR now occupies in the global automotive supply chain, human rights abuses against Uyghur people are now embedded and pervasive in the automotive sector. Every major car maker is linked to abuses in the XUAR today, through parts or materials sourcing (or both). Recent research undertaken by scholars at Sheffield Hallam University and NomoGaia has confirmed many of the atrocities committed against Uyghurs described above, and has linked them to the automotive supply chains of global brands.Footnote 8 This section gives examples of some of these findings.
Mined Ore
Copper, zinc, polysilicon and other mined materials are critical alloying materials and inputs for passenger cars. Two of the largest mine operators in the XUAR are Xinjiang Nonferrous Metals Company (XNMC) and Zijin Mining, which mine and refine these metals.
XNMC is deeply entrenched in Uyghur abuses. Supporting government ‘poverty alleviation’ programs, its XUAR subsidiary has transferred the lands of local households to other firms, marking the newly landless farmers as ‘surplus labour’. It has also forced Uyghurs to share their homes with Han officials who surveil and indoctrinate them from within their own homes.Footnote 9 XNMC has also moved Uyghurs into involuntary work at satellite factories and remote mine sites for anti-extremism ‘training’.Footnote 10 XNMC’s clients include global shipping giant Trafigura, as well as an array of car parts manufacturers, motor manufacturers, automotive electronic components manufacturers, and cable and wiring makers.Footnote 11 In a direct link to the western automotive industry, XNMC sells metal to Xinjiang Zhonghe (‘Joinworld’), which supplies aluminium alloys to Minth group, the manufacturer of car decals and decorative pieces for every major car maker in the world.Footnote 12
Zijin, a global mining company with operations across several continents, holds 75 per cent of China’s domestic copper reserves and operates, among other assets, the Ashele Copper Mine in Altay, northern XUAR. Ashele has ‘absorbed’ over 800 Uyghurs into forced labour to ‘effectively change the traditional ideology of farmers and herdsmen’.Footnote 13 Zijin sells its copper to global traders including Transamine Trading, Trafigura, Gerald Metals and IXM, who sell it forward to electronics makers (and automotive electronics makers) worldwide.Footnote 14
Processed Material
The world’s largest steel producer, Baowu Steel, operates in XUAR through its subsidiary Xinjiang Bayi Iron and Steel Co. Ltd (Bayi). Bayi is deeply entrenched in forced labour in XUAR, both in its smelters and in satellite factories it has erected in rural villages. In 2022, Bayi claimed to have ‘paired’ 4,581 Uyghurs with Han employees to ‘Hanify’ the homes of local people.Footnote 15 Bayi directly ‘absorbs’ forced labourers into its workforce across its XUAR operations through an array of government programs. During the COVID-19 lockdowns, it housed thousands of Uyghur workers in tents to maintain production in its Ürümchi factory, in the capital of the XUAR. In 2021, Bayi announced that 57 southern Uyghurs were ‘transferred’ to steel working jobs in Ürümchi, hundreds of miles from their homes.Footnote 16 One of Bayi’s prominent products is ‘ultra low-carbon steel’, produced in its Ürümchi facility and marketed to carmakers worldwide. Baowu Steel, on its part, exports steel to Toyota, GM, Mitsubishi supplier Metal One, and an array of US and Canadian coil manufacturers.Footnote 17
The largest aluminium smelters in the XUAR are co-owned by the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps (XPCC), an entity sanctioned by the US government for its involvement in Uyghur abuses. One of these smelters, Xinfa Group Xinjiang Branch,Footnote 18 produces everything from sheet and foil to finished car parts and has vast reach into global supply chains. A Xinfa Group subsidiary is partnered with Nanjing Yunhai Special Metals Co., whose products are exported to automotive manufacturers worldwide, including Tesla.Footnote 19
Abuses are not limited to metals producers. PetroChina’s XUAR subsidiary Dushanzi Petrochemical established a satellite factory in southern XUAR and coerced villagers into industrial work.Footnote 20 Dushanzi rubber is used in Bridgestone, Michelin and Pirelli tyres.Footnote 21
Manufacturing
Guanghui Group, one of XUAR’s largest companies, produces cars’ interior floor mats and seat covers. In 2017, Guanghui Group ‘received’ and ‘resettled’ 100 ‘surplus rural laborers’ from Hotan and Kashgar, during one of the early government initiatives to transfer 100,000 minoritized citizens out of the southern XUAR and into work and receive ‘discipline-related’ training.Footnote 22 In 2020, Guanghui announced that it had ‘driven 386 rural women in the village to find employment’ in the company’s poverty alleviation industrial park.Footnote 23 The Guanghui operations in southern XUAR include at least one facility that has been documented to be directly engaging with forced, detained workers.Footnote 24 Guanghui is one of China’s largest BMW dealers.Footnote 25
Lead-acid battery manufacturing has also shifted into the XUAR, carrying environmental and health risks alongside forced labour concerns. Lead emissions affect air, soil and water, and carry serious risks to health when breathed, ingested or consumed, for example, through affected crops. The World Health Organization holds the position that there is ‘no safe threshold of lead exposure’.Footnote 26 Camel Group, the first car battery manufacturer to set up operations in the XUAR,Footnote 27 has faced sanctions for ‘frequent blood lead incidents’ at its facilities.Footnote 28 These put both Uyghur workers handed over by the Government and the nearby Uyghur communities at risk. Although Camel has acknowledged that no residential areas should be within a 1 km radius of its facility, Camel has worker dormitories directly on the smelter property.Footnote 29 Camel’s XUAR operation has never produced credible health monitoring data, so the risks to workers and local communities are not known. Camel Group lists Volkswagen, Ford, Audi, General Motors, Honda, Nissan, Jeep, Hyundai, Kia, Peugeot, Citroen and Volvo among its clients.Footnote 30
III. Methodologies for Linking Global Supply Chains to Uyghur Human Rights Abuses
Because car companies do not make their supply chains public, researchers began their investigation of supply chain risks from the geographies of risk, tracing the links from suppliers to brands, rather than from brands to successive tiers of suppliers.
The process began with commodity selection. As cars are 60 per cent steel and 10 per cent aluminium by weight, these were natural commodities for focus. To narrow the scope, researchers examined only the largest companies producing these commodities worldwide and in the XUAR. Researching the companies required translation of company names into Mandarin. Google Translate can often identify or approximate the Mandarin version of Chinese companies’ English names, and Chinese financial reporting websites Sina Finance (finance.sina.com.cn) and SSE (sse.info) provide heightened clarity on company names, subsidiaries, and, often, corporate websites.
Next, the company and subsidiary names can be word-searched in Mandarin alongside the characters for XUAR (新疆). This extremely basic search continues to be effective for many companies with links to the region. Additional useful search terms include ‘surplus labour’ (剩余劳动力), ‘labour transfer’ (劳动力转移), and ‘poverty alleviation’ (扶贫).
These word searches typed into Google can also be run on corporate websites, market reporting websites where corporate financial documents are posted (e.g., Sina Finance), state media sites and environmental agency websites where environmental monitoring reports are listed. State media and corporate reports are the dominant sources linking companies to harms committed against Uyghurs, because for years government authorities and companies proudly touted their roles in ‘poverty alleviation’ and ‘deradicalization’ of Muslims in the XUAR. They often show images, videos and other depictions that, with interpretive support from ethnic minorities who have fled China, can reveal many human rights violations.Footnote 31 Satellite imagery can confirm proximity of satellite factories to prison and detention facilities, indicating a likelihood of forced labour usage.
Verifying linkages to western brands may involve additional steps. First, cross-checking shipping records for suppliers and buyers, accessible through Panjiva Market Intelligence or other shipping log subscription services, can reveal links. Often suppliers will give specific descriptions of their products that directly match the descriptions on purchasing companies’ procurement logs. Additionally, suppliers frequently name their largest buyers in financial filings for publicly traded companies on US, Chinese (including Hong Kong) and other stock exchanges. Supplier and buyer marketing materials can also often confirm the links. Joinworld, for example, names Minth (mentioned above) as a direct buyer in its online advertising.Footnote 32 Minth, on its website,Footnote 33 confirms Joinworld is one of its largest suppliers.Footnote 34
IV. What Needs to Change
Current approaches to supply chain due diligence in the automotive sector are deficient. Companies currently use software to track supplier questionnaires across their Tier 1 suppliers. They sometimes supplement this with desk-based screening processes, focusing again on direct purchases without generally capturing the full supply chains. The effort is predominantly undertaken in the language of the parent company or English. The business community has often expressed scepticism that more serious supply chain due diligence is possible or desirable.Footnote 35
For car companies (and companies in general) to meet their human rights responsibilities in supply chain due diligence, new approaches are needed.Footnote 36 Procurement departments that source from China need Mandarin language support in their supply chain due diligence efforts; they need resources to visit high-risk suppliers and validate the claims in supplier questionnaires. Supply chain due diligence needs to cover the full production chain of inputs, including processing and mining. When those chains have links to XUAR, the links need to be eliminated. There is no ability to undertake adequate supply chain due diligence in XUAR, and the risks are too great to rely on the promises and attestations made to procurement officers. This level of seriousness necessitates mandates from the C-Suite to prioritize human rights risks in selecting trusted suppliers. Procurement has historically been a department focused on efficiency and cost-cutting; the Uyghur genocide mandates that this corporate function (as all other corporate functions) become embedded in the business and human rights agenda.
Competing interest
The author declares none.