Generated by GPT-5-mini| Companies based in Tula Oblast | |
|---|---|
| Name | Tula Oblast |
| Established | 1937 |
| Region | Tula Oblast, Russia |
Companies based in Tula Oblast.
Tula Oblast hosts a concentration of industrial firms, heavy manufacturers, and technology-oriented enterprises centered in Tula, Novomoskovsk, Klintsy, Donskoy, and Shchekino. The oblast's corporate landscape includes firms tied to historic manufacturers such as Tula Arms Plant, chemical producers like Shchekinoazot, metallurgical works such as Novomoskovsk Steel Mill, energy companies linked to Rosneft infrastructure, and machine-building concerns supplying Roscosmos, United Aircraft Corporation, United Shipbuilding Corporation, and Russian Railways.
Tula Oblast's corporate sector spans legacy firms founded in the era of Russian Empire industrialization, enterprises modernized during the Soviet Union period, and recent private companies operating alongside subsidiaries of Gazprom, Rosneft, Sberbank, Vnesheconombank, and VEB. Prominent administrative centers include Tula (city), Yefremov, Shchyokino, Alexin, and Krapivna, where manufacturers, chemical producers, and logistics firms maintain supply chains connected to Moscow Oblast, Ryazan Oblast, Kaluga Oblast, Bryansk Oblast, and transport hubs like Moscow Domodedovo Airport and Moscow Kazansky railway station.
The oblast's industrial profile features arms manufacturing anchored by Tula Arms Plant and complementors to Rosgvardia and Ministry of Defence (Russia), chemical production led by Shchekinoazot and fertilizer firms serving Acron Group customers, metallurgy with operations linked to Severstal and regional foundries, and mechanical engineering supplying Uralvagonzavod, KAMAZ, and Kalashnikov Concern. Additional sectors include food processing connected with Magnit and X5 Retail Group, logistics providers coordinating with Russian Post and TransContainer, construction materials firms operating with SIBUR feedstock, and energy services contracting with Inter RAO and Rosatom projects.
Tula Oblast hosts historic and contemporary companies such as Tula Arms Plant, Tulamashzavod, Shchekinoazot, Azot (Novomoskovsk), Tula Cartridge Plant, Instrument Design Bureau (KBP), Tulachermet, Tula Pipe Plant, Tula Oil Extraction Plant, Tula Confectionery Factory (Konditerskie Fabriki), Krasny Oktyabr (Tula), Novomoskovsk Mineral Fertilizers Plant, Tula Machine-Building Plant, Tula Electrical Devices Plant, Electromashina (Tula), Tulskiye Provoloki, Tulapribor, Tula Telemechanics Plant, Tula Press Factory, Tula Chemical Plant, Tula Motors, Tula Foundry, Tula Glassworks, Yefremov Mechanical Plant, Donskoy Metallurgical Plant, Shchyokino Rubber Plant, Alexin Paper Mill, Tula Logistics Center, Tula Grain Terminal, Novomoskovsk Energy Company, Tula Energy Networks, Tula Agricultural Machinery, Tula Agroholding, Tula Food Group, Tula Dairy Combine, Tula Bakery Combine, Tula Textile Factory, Tula Furniture Factory, Tula Plastics Plant, Tula Construction Materials, Tula Road Machinery, Tula Cleaning Equipment, Tula Medical Instruments, Tula Optics Factory, Tula Software Solutions, Tula IT Park, Tula Venture Fund, Tula Business Incubator, Tula Investment Agency, Tula Chamber of Commerce, Tula State University, Tula Polytechnic University, Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration, Higher School of Economics, Skolkovo collaborators, Russian Export Center, Rosatom State Corporation contractors, Ministry of Industry and Trade (Russia) partners.
Industrial clusters include the Tula Special Economic Zone initiatives, industrial parks in Tula (city), Novomoskovsk, and Shchyokino that host tenants linked to Skolkovo Technopark programs, Russian Venture Company investments, and multinational cooperation with Siemens, Schneider Electric, Bosch, and ABB. Logistics and distribution centers connect to the Moscow Ring Road, M11 Motorway, Moscow–Kasimov railway, and river links to Volga–Don Canal, supporting firms working with DPD, Schenker Russland, Maersk and regional branches of DHL.
Industrial development in Tula traces to pre-Peter the Great ironworks and the establishment of arms manufacturing during the Russian Empire under figures tied to Mikhail Kutuzov era logistics, expanded through Industrialization in the Soviet Union with heavy plant construction during the Five-Year Plans and wartime relocation from Leningrad, Kiev, and Moscow during the Great Patriotic War. Post-Perestroika transformations saw privatizations involving Gazprombank and Sberbank financing, strategic consolidation with Rostec affiliates, and modernization partnerships with Deutsche Bank advisers and European Bank for Reconstruction and Development programs.
Major employers include Tula Arms Plant, Shchekinoazot, Tulamashzavod, Tulachermet, and regional service firms engaging with Russian Railways and Russian Post, contributing to oblast GDP and municipal budgets in Tula (city), Novomoskovsk, Klintsy, and Donskoy. Workforce development involves cooperation with Tula State University, Tula Polytechnic University, Moscow State University satellite programs, vocational colleges tied to Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, and retraining initiatives supported by Rosatom and Rostec.
Investment attraction leverages incentives coordinated by the Tula Oblast Government, Tula Investment Agency, Russian Export Center, and Skolkovo Foundation, targeting sectors aligned with Import substitution strategies and national industrial roadmaps by Ministry of Industry and Trade (Russia). Foreign direct investment pathways have included joint ventures with Siemens, Bosch, Schneider Electric, ABB, and financing from Eurasian Development Bank and Vnesheconombank structures, while corporate governance reforms echo standards promoted by Moscow Exchange and OECD-aligned frameworks.
Category:Companies of Russia