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Mazda Climbs to 6th Place in Russian Car Sales after Scrappage Fee Change

March 4 (Reuters) - Japan's Mazda, which exited Russia in 2022, is seeing a revival as one of the country's best-selling ​car brands thanks to new Russian scrappage charges that ‌have shifted import patterns via third countries.

Data from Russian analytical agency Autostat shows Mazda climbing to sixth place with 4,871 vehicles ​sold in January–February, up from 338 in the same ​period of 2025.

Its CX-5 model was the top ⁠seller among imported cars with smaller, lower-output engines that ​qualify for much lower scrappage fees than those imposed on larger ​vehicles.

Mazda pulled out of Russia in 2022 after Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, and last year lost its right to buy back its 50% stake ​in a manufacturing joint venture in Vladivostok.

Reuters has requested ​comment from the company, which has previously said third-party sales are ‌outside ⁠its control.

Tens of thousands of cars made by foreign companies that quit Russia are still entering via third countries - mainly China - without the manufacturers' consent.

Import trends have shifted since ​December 1 when ​the scrappage ⁠fee for powerful and expensive cars, imported by individuals for personal use, rose by hundreds ​of percent. The change has sharply boosted ​the appeal ⁠of smaller cars, which were not similarly affected.

Autostat said on Wednesday that car sales in Russia rose 2.5% year-on-year in ⁠February to ​80,027 vehicles. Toyota, in ninth ​place, is the only other top-10 brand not from China, Russia or Belarus.

Reporting ​by Gleb Stolyarov. Editing by Mark Trevelyan and Mark Potter

Source: Reuters


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