Moscow's invasion of Ukraine continues to hurt the Russian economy as new car sales in the country nosedive by almost 63% in March compared to the same month in 2021, according to the data revealed on Wednesday, amid parts shortages and company withdrawals prompted by Western sanctions.
The massive drop in the car and light commercial vehicle segment comes after Russian troops entered Ukraine on Feb. 24, prompting severe Western sanctions, including a ban on the export of spare parts to Russia.
The Russian operation also caused the ruble to plummet in value, making Russians less likely to buy imported cars.
Only 55,129 units were sold last month, a 62.9% drop from the same period last year, according to the Association of European Businesses (AEB).
The association did not explain why the figures fell, as it would usually.
Sales of the country’s most popular and affordable brand, Lada, whose Avtovaz manufacturer is majority-owned by the Nissan-Renault group, fell even more sharply by 64%.
Renault is under intense pressure to boycott Russia over Ukraine and considering whether to withdraw from Avtovaz.
It owns Avtovaz in partnership with Rostec, a state-owned defense conglomerate run by Sergei Chemezov, a sanctioned close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Nissan-Renault group has tens of thousands of workers in Russia and spent billions updating Avtovaz.
Western carmakers have ventured into Russia to assemble cars over the past two decades as the country's economy expanded.
Renault said in late March that it was suspending production at its Moscow plant for Renault and Nissan models.
Numerous car makers have stopped sales of their cars or parts to Russia – including Audi, Honda, Jaguar and Porsche. Makes that have halted Russian production include BMW, Ford, Hyundai, Mercedes, Volkswagen and Volvo.
Russia’s year-over-year car sales for February were down 4.3%.