Eduard Volodymyrovych Shifrin (alternative spelling: Shyfrin) ( Ukrainian: Едуа́рд Володи́мирович Шифрі́н; Russian: Эдуа́рд Влади́мирович Шифри́н; born 12 July 1960) is a Ukrainian entrepreneur who is a co-owner of the Midland Group. He is a resident in London. [1]
Shifrin was born in Dnipropetrovsk, Soviet Ukraine, the son of metallurgy professor Vladimir Moiseyevich Shifrin. [1] In 1976–7 he came first in the National Ukrainian Physics Olympiad. From 1977–1983, he attended the Moscow Institute of Steel and Alloys, becoming a metallurgical engineer. He later returned to school and obtained a PhD in metallurgy in 1992. [2]
From 1983 to 1993, Shifrin worked in Zaporizhia at the steel company Dniprospecstal, rising from assistant foreman to manager of the steel plant and then head of marketing. [1] [2] He then rose to prominence as a business oligarch in newly independent Ukraine, taking control of privatized steelmaker Zaporizhstal. He co-founded, with Alexander Shnaider, Midland Group, a holding company headquartered in Guernsey that embraces interests in steel (including Zaporizhstal, Ukraine's fourth largest steel mill), shipping, real estate, agriculture and sports. Together they own a share in The St. Regis Toronto and formerly owned Maccabi Tel Aviv and a Formula One team, Midland F1 Racing. [3]
In the 2006 edition of the Sunday Times Rich List, Shifrin was listed at no. 59 with an estimated wealth of £920 million. [4] In Forbes magazine's ranking of " The World's Billionaires" in 2009, Shifrin was ranked 559th with an estimated fortune of $1.3 billion. [5] In 2013, Focus magazine estimated his net worth at $893.3 million, making him the No. 20 richest person in Ukraine. [1] By 2020 Shifrin completed his pull-out from Russia and by 2022 all his businesses in former-Soviet countries were closed.
In 2006, together with his late father, Shifrin published a book titled The Theory of Metallurgical Processes for which he was awarded the State Prize of Ukraine.
In 2018 Shifrin's book From Infinity to Man: The Fundamental Ideas of Kabbalah Within the Framework of Information Theory and Quantum Physics was published in Russian, with an English edition being released in 2019. [6]
In 2019, his children's book Travels with Sushi in the Land of the Mind was published in English. [7] In 2020 it was named a Distinguished Favorite by the Independent Press Award for Juvenile Fiction. [8]
He is a sponsor of Jewish Book Week. [9]
He regularly writes articles about the Kabbalah of Information for the Jerusalem Post. [10]
In 2003 he financed the reconstruction of the oldest synagogue in Kyiv and Jewish educational center dedicated to his late father. [11] He also co-sponsored the construction of synagogues in Moscow, Volgograd, and Zaporozhye. [2] He sponsors over 60 Chabad educational classes for children. He served as regional vice-president of the World Jewish Congress. [2] [12] Following the outbreak of full-scale hostilities between Russia and Ukraine in 2022, Shifrin decried armed conflict [13] and submitted a request to the Russian embassy in London in which he strongly condemned the aggression against Ukraine [14] and requested the renunciation of his Russian citizenship. [15] He and other family members donated to Ukrainian organizations supporting people within and near warzones [16] including the UK-based World Jewish Relief. [17]
Shifrin and his wife live in London with their three children. [4]
What is easy to get into, but hard to get out of? My answer is Russian citizenship. In 2020 I left Russia because of the harassment by "siloviki". After 24/02/22 I tried to understand the procedure of renunciation of the Russian citizenship. In the beginning of May, 2022, I sent a letter to the embassy of Russian Federation in UK in which I expressed my protest against the aggression against Ukraine and renounced down my and my daughter's citizenship.
Eduard Volodymyrovych Shifrin (alternative spelling: Shyfrin) ( Ukrainian: Едуа́рд Володи́мирович Шифрі́н; Russian: Эдуа́рд Влади́мирович Шифри́н; born 12 July 1960) is a Ukrainian entrepreneur who is a co-owner of the Midland Group. He is a resident in London. [1]
Shifrin was born in Dnipropetrovsk, Soviet Ukraine, the son of metallurgy professor Vladimir Moiseyevich Shifrin. [1] In 1976–7 he came first in the National Ukrainian Physics Olympiad. From 1977–1983, he attended the Moscow Institute of Steel and Alloys, becoming a metallurgical engineer. He later returned to school and obtained a PhD in metallurgy in 1992. [2]
From 1983 to 1993, Shifrin worked in Zaporizhia at the steel company Dniprospecstal, rising from assistant foreman to manager of the steel plant and then head of marketing. [1] [2] He then rose to prominence as a business oligarch in newly independent Ukraine, taking control of privatized steelmaker Zaporizhstal. He co-founded, with Alexander Shnaider, Midland Group, a holding company headquartered in Guernsey that embraces interests in steel (including Zaporizhstal, Ukraine's fourth largest steel mill), shipping, real estate, agriculture and sports. Together they own a share in The St. Regis Toronto and formerly owned Maccabi Tel Aviv and a Formula One team, Midland F1 Racing. [3]
In the 2006 edition of the Sunday Times Rich List, Shifrin was listed at no. 59 with an estimated wealth of £920 million. [4] In Forbes magazine's ranking of " The World's Billionaires" in 2009, Shifrin was ranked 559th with an estimated fortune of $1.3 billion. [5] In 2013, Focus magazine estimated his net worth at $893.3 million, making him the No. 20 richest person in Ukraine. [1] By 2020 Shifrin completed his pull-out from Russia and by 2022 all his businesses in former-Soviet countries were closed.
In 2006, together with his late father, Shifrin published a book titled The Theory of Metallurgical Processes for which he was awarded the State Prize of Ukraine.
In 2018 Shifrin's book From Infinity to Man: The Fundamental Ideas of Kabbalah Within the Framework of Information Theory and Quantum Physics was published in Russian, with an English edition being released in 2019. [6]
In 2019, his children's book Travels with Sushi in the Land of the Mind was published in English. [7] In 2020 it was named a Distinguished Favorite by the Independent Press Award for Juvenile Fiction. [8]
He is a sponsor of Jewish Book Week. [9]
He regularly writes articles about the Kabbalah of Information for the Jerusalem Post. [10]
In 2003 he financed the reconstruction of the oldest synagogue in Kyiv and Jewish educational center dedicated to his late father. [11] He also co-sponsored the construction of synagogues in Moscow, Volgograd, and Zaporozhye. [2] He sponsors over 60 Chabad educational classes for children. He served as regional vice-president of the World Jewish Congress. [2] [12] Following the outbreak of full-scale hostilities between Russia and Ukraine in 2022, Shifrin decried armed conflict [13] and submitted a request to the Russian embassy in London in which he strongly condemned the aggression against Ukraine [14] and requested the renunciation of his Russian citizenship. [15] He and other family members donated to Ukrainian organizations supporting people within and near warzones [16] including the UK-based World Jewish Relief. [17]
Shifrin and his wife live in London with their three children. [4]
What is easy to get into, but hard to get out of? My answer is Russian citizenship. In 2020 I left Russia because of the harassment by "siloviki". After 24/02/22 I tried to understand the procedure of renunciation of the Russian citizenship. In the beginning of May, 2022, I sent a letter to the embassy of Russian Federation in UK in which I expressed my protest against the aggression against Ukraine and renounced down my and my daughter's citizenship.