The UK market, with 6.9 GWh of EV battery capacity produced, grew 14% compared to Q2 2023 and 50% compared to Q3 2022. The UK had 4% of the global EV battery market, up from 3% in Q3 2022. France was then the 5th largest EV battery producer in the world, with 4.6 GWh of battery capacity produced.
Production in Europe and the United States reached 110 GWh and 70 GWh of EV batteries in 2023, and 2.5 million and 1.2 million EVs, respectively. In Europe, the largest battery producers are Poland, which accounted for about 60% of all EV batteries produced in the region in 2023, and Hungary (almost 30%).
China undertakes well over half of global raw material processing for lithium and cobalt and has almost 85% of global battery cell production capacity. Europe, the United States and Korea each hold 10% or less of the supply chain for some battery metals and cells today.
China is currently the world’s largest market for batteries and accounts for over half of all battery in use in the energy sector today. The European Union is the next largest market followed by the United States, with smaller markets also in the United Kingdom, Korea and Japan.
Strong government support for the rollout of EVs and incentives for battery storage are expanding markets for batteries around the world. China is currently the world’s largest market for batteries and accounts for over half of all battery in use in the energy sector today.
In China, battery demand for vehicles grew over 70%, while electric car sales increased by 80% in 2022 relative to 2021, with growth in battery demand slightly tempered by an increasing share of PHEVs. Battery demand for vehicles in the United States grew by around 80%, despite electric car sales only increasing by around 55% in 2022.