Russian industry forced to switch to system D

by time news
In energy, a strategic sector if ever there was one, the sanctions cut it off from its suppliers of advanced equipment. Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

In the air, aeronautics, automotive industry, Russian companies have had to put in place emergency strategies to survive.

Russian companies hit by European sanctions or by the stoppage of imports risk, month after month, finding themselves bloodless. Many are indeed very dependent on Western technologies in fields as varied and strategic as nuclear power, civil aviation or equipment for heavy industry. “It is difficult to imagine how Russian companies will be able to develop without certain critical componentsobserves Olivier Dorgans, a lawyer specializing in sanctions at Ashurst. Russia risks finding itself thrown back thirty years.”

In the air, aeronautics, automobile industry, Russian companies have set up a system D economy to survive. The small galaxy of airlines, gathered around Aeroflot, has lost a large part of its activity. Aeroflot was deprived of almost 60% of its international traffic.

To maintain certain flights, Russian companies must now sacrifice aircraft…

This article is for subscribers only. You have 78% left to discover.

Cultivating your freedom is cultivating your curiosity.

Keep reading your article for €0.99 for the first month

Already subscribed? Login

You may also like

Leave a Comment