The luxury carmaker Ferrari is facing a reputational storm over its new all-electric Luce model, not because of performance issues but due to the uncomfortable truth of where its batteries come from. Sources confirm that the Luce’s battery pack is sourced from a Chinese manufacturer, a decision that has sparked heated protests from UK car industry executives and politicians alike.
Documents uncovered by this newsroom reveal that Ferrari’s supply chain is heavily reliant on Chinese lithium-ion battery producers, a dependency that mirrors the broader vulnerability of the European automotive sector. The backlash has been swift. Industry insiders describe the situation as a wake-up call, with one senior executive calling it “a sovereign risk we can no longer ignore.”
“We are sleepwalking into a crisis,” said a source with direct knowledge of the UK government’s industrial strategy talks. “If China decides to pull the plug on battery exports, the entire EV transition in Europe grinds to a halt. Ferrari’s problem is just the tip of the iceberg.”
The UK car industry, already struggling with Brexit-related trade friction and a sluggish domestic battery production pipeline, is now demanding a sovereign battery strategy. The call comes after years of underinvestment in gigafactories and raw material processing. While the government has pledged support for a domestic battery supply chain, progress has been glacial. The Ferrari Luce controversy has acted as a catalyst, forcing ministers to confront the hard reality that the UK’s net-zero ambitions are tethered to a foreign power.
“The Chinese have a monopoly on the processing of lithium, cobalt, and graphite,” an industry analyst explained. “Without domestic refining capacity, we are at the mercy of Beijing. It’s a matter of national security, not just economics.”
The idea of a sovereign battery strategy is gaining traction, but it carries a hefty price tag. Building a fully integrated supply chain from mining to recycling would require billions in public and private investment. And even then, experts warn it could take a decade to reduce dependency significantly.
Ferrari has defended its decision, arguing that Chinese batteries meet its performance and quality standards. But the reputational damage is already done. The image of Italian craftsmanship tainted by Chinese industrial policy is a bitter pill for a brand built on exclusivity and national pride.
The fallout is spreading. Other European carmakers, including BMW and Volkswagen, are now under pressure to disclose their battery sourcing. Unconfirmed reports suggest that at least two major German manufacturers are renegotiating contracts with Chinese suppliers. The optics of reliance on a geopolitical rival are becoming untenable.
“The Ferrari Luce backlash is not an isolated incident,” said a former Whitehall official. “It is a symptom of a systemic failure. The UK must act now or face a future where our cars are built with Chinese permission.”
Meanwhile, China watchers note that Beijing is fully aware of its leverage. The Chinese government has already used export controls on rare earth minerals as a diplomatic weapon. Battery materials are likely next.
For now, the Ferrari Luce remains on schedule for its 2025 launch, but the questions about Britain’s industrial sovereignty are burning hotter than ever. The UK car industry’s call for a sovereign battery strategy is no longer a niche policy debate. It is an urgent demand for survival.








