The Italian luxury automaker Ferrari has found itself at the centre of a geopolitical storm after its decision to source electric vehicle (EV) batteries from China provoked a sharp backlash from Western policymakers and industry leaders. This development comes as the UK car industry intensifies its push for sovereign supply chains, a move that underscores the growing tension between globalisation and national security in the automotive sector.
Ferrari, long a symbol of Italian engineering and design, announced plans to use Chinese-made batteries in its first fully electric model, the Purosangue EV, due in 2025. The decision was driven by cost and performance considerations: Chinese manufacturers currently dominate the global battery market, producing around 70% of lithium-ion cells. However, the move has stirred criticism from European and American officials who fear it could undermine the region’s strategic autonomy in key technologies. “We cannot rely on a single supplier, especially one that is subject to geopolitical risks,” said a spokesperson for the European Battery Alliance.
Meanwhile, the UK’s automotive sector is charting a different course. In a recent industry white paper, the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) called for a “radical acceleration” of domestic battery production, citing the need to insulate the supply chain from external shocks. The UK currently has only one major gigafactory under construction, in Sunderland, and plans for additional facilities have been slow to materialise. “Sovereign capability is not a luxury; it is an existential necessity for our industry,” said Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, in a statement.
The divergence between Ferrari’s approach and the UK’s strategic vision highlights a fundamental dilemma facing the automotive world. On one hand, Chinese batteries offer immediate cost and performance advantages. On the other, Western governments are increasingly viewing battery supply chains through a national security lens. This mirrors the semiconductor crisis, where reliance on a single geographic region led to severe disruptions. The analogy is apt: just as a monolithic silicon supply chain choked global industry, a monolithic battery supply chain could do the same.
The physics of energy storage may offer a way out. Solid-state batteries, which promise higher energy density and safety, are under development by companies like QuantumScape and Toyota. If these technologies mature, they could reduce dependence on Chinese lithium-ion production. However, commercialisation remains years away. In the interim, the UK must decide whether to subsidise domestic production aggressively or risk falling behind in the race for EV dominance.
Ferrari’s backlash may serve as a cautionary tale. The company’s brand, built on a legacy of independence and innovation, now faces accusations of trading sovereignty for cost efficiency. The UK industry, by championing sovereign supply chains, is placing a bet on resilience over short-term financial gain. Only time will tell which strategy drives the future. But as the planet warms and the transition to electric mobility accelerates, the urgency of fixing these supply chains has never been more acute. The biosphere does not wait for geopolitical squabbles.
The data is clear: global CO2 emissions from transport must fall by 50% by 2030 to meet Paris Agreement targets. Every delay in electrification costs the planet precious time. The Ferrari controversy may seem like a corporate footnote, but it echoes a larger reality: the green transition is inseparable from the geopolitics of technology. The UK’s sovereign supply chain push is a step in the right direction, but it must be matched with investment, innovation, and international cooperation. The alternative is a fragmented world where private cars remain tethered to a single, vulnerable artery of battery materials.









