Chinese Battery Companies Are Taking Over the World
Released on 01/20/2026
Chinese battery companies are taking over the world.
What comes to your mind
when you hear something is made in China?
Cheap labor? Knockoffs?
$5 gadgets from Temu?
That's still true to some extent,
but in 2026,
it also means state-of-the-art Chinese technology
that's actually increasingly being assembled
somewhere else in the world.
The best example of that are batteries, the big ones,
that power electric vehicles and electricity grids.
They're really important to tackle climate change.
In 2024, more than 80% of the world's lithium battery cells
were produced in China, and they're not stopping there.
In the past decade, Chinese companies such as CATL, BYD,
Gotion High Tech, and Envision
have built or announced at least 68 factories outside China,
representing an estimated investment
of more than $45 billion,
according to data collected by WIRED and Rhodium Group.
That's a big shift
in what Made in China looks like in reality.
It's a new phase where Chinese EV and battery companies
are spending more money
building factories outside of China than within.
Why? First, China bet on lithium batteries early.
And now, some of the world's best battery research
come from Chinese universities.
Second, local incentives and low shipping costs
make it such that opening a factory overseas
can be more profitable than making them at home.
We're talking about 29% profit margins overseas
versus 23% in China for CATL,
the world's largest lithium battery company.
Many politicians have loudly welcome
Chinese battery manufacturers.
That includes French President Emmanuel Macron,
Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva,
and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker.
But while factory projects
often include promises to hire locally,
sometimes they bring in migrant labor.
Last year, local media reported in Hungary
that after CATL laid off
more than 100 employees at a factory,
most of them Hungarians,
the municipality launched an investigation
and raided the plant.
This situation might sound awfully familiar.
When Apple built its electronics empire
on the backs of Chinese factories,
China was unsure whether it was benefiting
or being exploited.
As Chinese battery companies take over the world,
they're raising the same questions
of who is exploiting whom.
For more stories like this,
you can subscribe to news that I co-write Made in China.
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