Unilever has sold off its Russian operations to a local manufacturing group after pressure from campaigners who claimed that the presence of the Dove and Ben & Jerryâs owner in the country was supporting the war in Ukraine.
Arnest Group, a Russian manufacturer of perfume, cosmetics and household products will take control of Unilever Rus, which includes four factories, as well as the groupâs interests in Belarus. Arnest is owned by the businessman Alexey Sagal and bought the brewer Heinekenâs business in the country last summer.
Unilever Rus, which employs about 3,000 people, owns the local rights to brands including Knorr stock cubes, Dove washing and beauty products, Domestos cleaning fluids and Axe â which is known as Lynx in the UK.
Unilever has faced sustained pressure to sell the subsidiary since Russiaâs full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, after it failed to follow an initial stampede of British multinationals out of the country.
The terms of the deal, which must be approved by the Russian government, were not disclosed. However, it has been reported that the sale could be worth more than â¬500 million ($547 million) to Unilever.
âOver the past year, we have been carefully preparing the Unilever Russia business for a potential sale. This work has been very complex, and has involved separating IT platforms and supply chains, as well as migrating brands to Cyrillic,â Hein Schumacher, the chief executive of Unilever, said in a statement. âThe completion of the sale ends Unilever Russiaâs presence in the country.â
Unilever ceased all imports and exports of its products into and out of Russia in March 2022 and has said it stopped all media and advertising spend and capital flows. It said last summer it had been unable to find a way to sell the business that âavoids the Russian state potentially gaining further benefit, and which safeguards our peopleâ.
However, the group has come under consistent pressure to exit Russia, where it continues to make and sell âessentialâ products from shampoo to ice-cream, after evidence emerged that it paid Moscow $331 million in taxes in 2022.
In July last year, the Marmite maker was labelled âan international sponsor of warâ by the Ukrainian government after it became subject to a law in Russia obliging all large companies operating in the country to contribute directly to its war effort.
A group of activists, the Ukraine Solidarity Project, erected a billboard outside the Anglo-Dutch consumer groupâs London headquarters featuring pictures of wounded Ukrainian soldiers â posing in the style of the Dove beauty brandâs advertisements â and the slogan: âHelping to fund Russiaâs war in Ukraine.â
âItâs about time Unilever chose to stand on the right side of history, but letâs not forget it took them more than two years â and millions in Russian taxes paid into Putinâs war machine. Closing operations now doesnât erase the past,â Valeriia Voshchevska of the USP said. âTo show genuine accountability, weâre calling on Unilever to donate their Russian profits to aid Ukraineâs rebuild and recovery. Actions, not headlines, will tell us if theyâre serious.â
Many western brand owners including Diageo and Leviâs have paused exports to Russia since the invasion of Ukraine, and some, including McDonaldâs, Heineken and the beauty brand Lush, have sold their operations in Russia to local operators. The brewer Carlsberg was in the process of selling its Baltika Breweries subsidiary there when it was taken over by the state last year.
Schumacher promised to look at Unileverâs presence in Russia with âfresh eyesâ when he took over as chief executive last year.
A year ago, Unilever said it âcontinued to look at out optionsâ after ârecent regulatory developments in Russia.â
Schumacher said this summer that Unileverâs goal was to âminimise economic contributionâ to the Russian state, adding that it continued to monitor operations in the country âvery closely. This is a very tough situation and very much on my mind.â
By Sarah Butler
Learn more:
Unilever Prestige Appoints Mary Carmen Gasco-Buisson As CEO
On November 1, Gasco-Buisson will succeed Vasiliki Petrou, who departed the business in July.