

SIEMENS
Additional Details
Siemens AG is a German multinational company. It is focused on industrial automation, building automation, rail transport and health technology. Siemens is the largest engineering company in Europe, and holds the position of global market leader in industrial AI, automation, and industrial software . Siemens entered the Israeli market in the 1960s and significantly increased its presence there in the 1990s. In 1998, the company established an international procurement office in Israel, to increase sourcing for Siemens’ global operations from Israeli companies. Over the decades, Siemens acquired or invested in multiple Israeli energy and high-tech companies and projects, including Ornet, Solel Solar, Alvarion, Radvision, and others. In 2023, responding to allegations that Siemens had engaged in a boycott of Israel, the company stated: “We have been active in Israel for around 60 years in various business areas and are deeply rooted there.” Siemens Mobility provides cars for the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem train line, which illegally cuts through the occupied Palestinian territory. The train tracks are partially built on privately-owned Palestinian land in two locations in the occupied West Bank, “for an Israeli transportation project aimed exclusively for Israelis,” according to Who Profits. In the past, Siemens provided traffic control systems to Israeli roads, including multiple roads in and leading to illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, as documented by Who Profits. In 2022, Siemens sold this division, Intelligent Traffic Systems, which now operates as Yunex Traffic, a subsidiary of Italian infrastructure firm Mundys. The Israeli military and arms industry use Siemens’ product lifecycle management (PLM) software to optimize their weapon production lines. The Israeli military uses Siemens’ flagship PLM software Teamcenter, its computer-aided design (CAD) software Solid Edge, and FLOEFD, a Siemens CAD add-on that simulates fluid flow and heat transfer. The company designs these products specifically for military applications. Siemens licenses these software in Israel through McKit Systems, a subsidiary of Israeli defense-tech firm Malam Team. Since 2013, McKit has listed among its clients the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD) and all major Israeli weapons manufacturers: Elbit Systems, Israel Aerospace Industries, and RAFAEL. In 2012, McKit sponsored an Israeli military technology conference, where it introduced Siemens’ PLM software to hundreds of Israeli military officers and soldiers. The conference included representatives from Siemens. The Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD) acquired or renewed licenses for Siemens software in multiple contracts totaling at least $1 million between November 2023 and June 2024, during the Gaza genocide. Some of these contracts specify that they are for Teamcenter, Solid Edge, or FLOEFD licenses. Some are for “modifications and enhancements for Siemens software,” without naming the specific product. These contracts were listed in an IMOD database that discloses only recent and unclassified contracts that were issued without a public tender process. Therefore, they represent only part of the full extent of IMOD procurement of Siemens products. Siemens is a leading contractor for the Great Sea Interconnector, formerly known as the EuroAsia Interconnector. Partially funded by the European Union (EU), this underwater “electric highway” is designed to connect Europe to the Israeli power grid. Siemens was selected as the “preferred contractor for constructing the converter stations” along the connector. The Interconnector is bidirectional, so it would allow Israel to export energy to the EU as well as to “consume power from Europe during emergencies,” according to the Israeli Ministry of Energy. Given the structure of the Israeli power grid, this would deliver EU-generated electricity to the entire area under Israel’s control, including Israeli illegal settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory, in violation of international humanitarian law and EU guidelines. -- Listed on XETRA (SIE) and NYSE (SI), Siemens AG is backed by leading sovereign wealth funds, most notably NBIM and QIA.
Listing type
Company that provides economic or military support to Israel
Type of involvement
Partnership & cooperation
Product category
Software and digital services and Hightech
Action needed
- Boycott the company's products and refuse to cooperate with it.
- Boycott the company and its securities listed on the stock exchange.
- Pressure sovereign wealth funds to withdraw their investments from the company.
- Organize collective activities and events at the company's headquarters to disrupt its operations; to pressure it to stop dealing with Israel.
- Document the company's violations and illegal attacks; to submit them to international and humanitarian organizations.
Sources
- https://press.siemens.com/global/en/feature/siemens-and-israel-railways-sign-contract-60-double-decker-regional-trains
- https://www.whoprofits.org/publications/report/37
- https://press.siemens.com/global/en/pressrelease/siemens-mobility-completes-yunex-traffic-divestment
- https://www.mundys.com/en/sustainable-mobility/our-businesses/mobility-services/yunex
- https://www.israeldefense.co.il/node/19109#google_vignette
- https://www.plm.automation.siemens.com/ko_kr/Images/Guidebook-Siemens_PLM_for_aerospace_and_defense_tcm72-95168.pdf
- https://www.mckitprod.co.il/en/about-us-en-menu
- https://www.scooper.co.il/pr/1025427/
- https://investigate.info/company/siemens
- https://www.great-sea-interconnector.com/en
