On Tuesday, CATL's Vice Chairman Pan Jian announced at the World Economic Forum in Davos that CATL will unveil a new EV battery plant joint venture in Europe with a local automaker.
Why are Chinese battery makers rushing into Europe's electric vehicle market?
As Europe embraces electric vehicles, Chinese battery makers are rushing in to raise capital and expand factory production. Chinese battery companies are flocking to Europe's booming electric vehicle (EV) market to profit from the European Union's (EU) ambitious goal to ban all fossil fuel cars by 2035.
Should China invest in battery factories in Europe?
Nuria Gisbert Trejo, director-general of CIC Energigune, a Spanish energy storage research institute, thinks Chinese investment in battery factories in Europe is a problem because they reduce Europe's independence and autonomy in a key sector for the future.
Is CATL launching a new EV battery plant in Europe?
Credit: CarNewsChina On Tuesday, CATL's Vice Chairman Pan Jian announced at the World Economic Forum in Davos that CATL will unveil a new EV battery plant joint venture in Europe with a local automaker. “We expect to announce new joint venture factory projects with other OEMs in Europe this year,” Pan said, according to Interface News.
Can China become the battery workshop of the world?
For more information about how we use your data, please refer to our privacy and cookie policies. For decades, Europe has been a global hub of combustion engine production but as the industry shifts to electric vehicles, China is turning itself into the battery workshop of the world.
Are Chinese batteries coming to the UK?
The UK is eighth with just 20GWh. In addition to battery production that has already been announced, a slew of Chinese brands, from BYD to Great Wall and Nio, plan significant sales growth in Europe. This will, in time, mean vehicle assembly and even more battery plants that are also likely to use Chinese technology.
A Chinese company's plan to build a battery production plant in Hungary is set to make the central European country a leading hub in the sector, with experts saying it will help ease demand from the region's automakers as they accelerate the transition to electric vehicles, or EVs.