In 2022, Poland became the world's second-largest producer of lithium-ion batteries after China. One factory in Wrocław — 100 hectares, 9,500 workers, 86 GWh annual capacity — supplies the batteries for Volkswagen, Audi, Porsche, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Jaguar Land Rover. Poland produces 60% of all lithium-ion batteries made in Europe and holds 35% of the continent's battery cell manufacturing capacity. The country that most people associate with rye bread and salt mines is simultaneously the battery capital of Europe. This is the investment story that English-language finance has missed entirely. W 2022 roku Polska stała się drugim co do wielkości producentem baterii litowo-jonowych na świecie po Chinach. Jedna fabryka we Wrocławiu — 100 hektarów, 9 500 pracowników, 86 GWh rocznej zdolności produkcyjnej — dostarcza baterie dla Volkswagena, Audi, Porsche, BMW, Mercedes-Benz i Jaguar Land Rover. Polska produkuje 60% wszystkich baterii litowo-jonowych wytwarzanych w Europie.
If you asked most well-informed Europeans which country produces the most EV batteries in Europe, the answer you would get most often would be Germany. Germany is the automotive heartland of the continent, home to Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and dozens of Tier 1 suppliers. Germany is where most of Europe's electric vehicles are designed. Surely Germany is where most of the batteries come from.
It is not. In 2022, Poland became the world's second-largest producer of lithium-ion batteries, after China. Poland produces approximately 60% of all lithium-ion batteries manufactured in Europe. A single factory in Wrocław — the LG Energy Solution gigafactory in the Biskupice Podgórne industrial zone — accounts for 35% of all battery cell manufacturing capacity on the entire European continent. The next largest concentrations are in Hungary, where Samsung SDI and SK On operate plants, and Germany, which has capacity that is still ramping up. Poland got here first, got here largest, and is still the dominant position by a significant margin.
The reason almost nobody outside the automotive supply chain knows this is that battery manufacturing is invisible in the way that most deep industrial processes are invisible. The battery inside a Volkswagen ID.4 or a Porsche Taycan has no origin label that a consumer sees. The Korean companies that built the Polish gigafactories are listed on the Seoul Stock Exchange and followed primarily by Korean and institutional investors. And Poland's own financial and investment media narrative has focused on defence spending and agricultural exports while the most consequential advanced manufacturing story in the country's modern economic history was unfolding in Lower Silesia.
The story begins with three South Korean conglomerates — LG, Samsung, and SK — that had developed world-leading expertise in lithium-ion battery technology through their consumer electronics businesses in the 1990s and 2000s. When the EV market began to grow seriously in the 2010s, these companies had a significant head start on any potential European competitors in battery chemistry, manufacturing process, and quality control. European car manufacturers — Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Stellantis — needed battery cells, had no meaningful domestic production, and had to source from the Korean companies. The question was where those cells would be made.
South Korean companies began building gigafactories in Central and Eastern Europe to supply Europe's growing EV market as early as 2016. Poland was chosen first and most heavily, for a combination of reasons that reflect the genuine structural advantages of the country as a manufacturing location. Labour costs in Poland were — and remain — significantly lower than in Germany, France, or Scandinavia, while the Polish workforce is highly educated, technically skilled, and well-connected to European logistics networks. Geographic position was critical: Lower Silesia sits within a few hours' drive of Volkswagen's plants in Wolfsburg and Zwickau, BMW's Munich facilities, and the Czech Republic's automotive hubs. EU membership meant no customs barriers, no regulatory complexity, and access to the same standards framework as the German car plants the batteries would supply. Polish government incentives — including the €95 million in Polish state support that the European Investment Bank acknowledged in its LG documentation — made the economics compelling. The Wrocław plant was built in 2016. Nothing quite like it existed in Europe at the time.
The LG Energy Solution Wrocław plant supplies battery cells to Volkswagen Group — including Audi and Porsche — BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Jaguar Land Rover. This is not a partial list. This single Polish factory is a critical node in the EV supply chain of virtually every major European premium and mass-market automaker simultaneously. When the factory in Wrocław has a problem — a fire, a quality issue, a supply disruption — those automakers have a problem. The dependency runs in one direction only: there is no alternative European source that could replace the Wrocław output at anything approaching the same scale.
The most significant recent supply development confirmed this position clearly. In September 2025, LG Energy Solution signed a $10.8 billion deal with Mercedes-Benz to supply 107 GWh of batteries across US and European markets — described by industry insiders as the largest-ever supply contract for LG Energy Solution's 46-series cylindrical batteries. The European supply volume for this contract is expected to be manufactured at LG Energy Solution's production facility in Wrocław. This is a single supply contract, signed three months ago, worth more than Poland's entire defence procurement budget for a year, and the production it requires is going to happen in Lower Silesia.
The EV market slowdown of 2024–25 — caused by the removal of US tax credits for EV purchases, demand softness in Europe, and Ford and other automakers pulling back from electric vehicle production targets — forced LG Energy Solution to pivot part of the Wrocław capacity toward energy storage systems. This turned out to be a strategic upgrade rather than a fallback. The plant is now launching production lines for LFP (lithium iron phosphate) cells, which are key for grid-scale energy storage, alongside the existing pouch cells for EV applications. A new cylindrical cell line is also being added — the format gaining traction in premium EVs including the new Mercedes platforms the $10.8 billion supply deal will supply.
The plant's own director has noted that once all plans are implemented, the Wrocław facility may become the only factory in the world that produces cells based on all advanced battery technologies available today in one location. Pouch cells. Prismatic cells. Cylindrical cells. LFP chemistry. NMC chemistry. EV applications. Grid storage applications. This is not a single-product gigafactory being slowly made obsolete by changing technology. It is evolving into a battery technology centre of a kind that does not exist elsewhere in Europe and possibly does not exist anywhere outside of Asia.
The battery industry's dominance in Poland does not mean it has been immune to the turbulence affecting the global EV market. In late 2024, LG Energy Solution's Ford battery pack supply deal — which had supplied cells for the Mustang Mach-E and the E-Transit electric van from the Wrocław plant — was terminated after Ford suspended production of certain electric vehicle models due to a prolonged slowdown in EV demand and changes in the policy environment following the removal of US EV tax credits by President Trump. EV exports from Europe to the US dropped by almost 40% in July–September 2025 compared to the same period in 2024. South Korean investment in European battery capacity has slowed as the companies assess demand recovery trajectories.
The Chinese dimension is also significant. In May 2025, CATL — China's largest battery producer and the largest car battery producer worldwide — began construction in Debrecen, Hungary, of what may become Europe's largest battery facility with 100 GWh capacity and €7.3 billion in investment. This moves Hungary closer to Poland's production scale and introduces a cost-competitive Chinese manufacturer into the European supply chain. South Korean companies have so far maintained their relationships with premium European automakers who value supply chain reliability, quality consistency, and the geopolitical comfort of non-Chinese sourcing. But the competitive pressure from CATL is real and it is coming.
Poland's emergence as the world's second-largest lithium-ion battery producer is one of the most significant economic development stories of the past decade — and one of the least reported. A country that most Western investors associate primarily with wheat fields, NATO's eastern flank, and salt mines is simultaneously the battery capital of Europe, supplying the cells that power virtually every major European premium automaker's electric vehicle programme. The LG Energy Solution factory in Wrocław — 100 hectares, 9,500 workers, 86 GWh, 35% of all European battery cell capacity — is a genuinely extraordinary industrial facility, and it contributes approximately 3% of Poland's entire GDP from a single site in Lower Silesia. Pojawienie się Polski jako drugiego co do wielkości producenta baterii litowo-jonowych na świecie jest jedną z najważniejszych historii rozwoju gospodarczego ostatniej dekady — i jedną z najmniej opisywanych. Kraj, który większość zachodnich inwestorów kojarzy przede wszystkim z polami pszenicy, wschodnim skrzydłem NATO i kopalniami soli, jest jednocześnie stolicą baterii Europy.
The headwinds are real — EV demand softness, the Ford supply deal termination, Chinese competition from CATL in Hungary. But the long-term trajectory of electrification in Europe is not seriously in doubt, and Poland's position as the continent's dominant battery manufacturing location is not easily displaced. The Korean companies that chose Poland in 2016 are expanding rather than retreating. LG Energy Solution signed a $10.8 billion Mercedes supply deal in September 2025 with European production centred on Wrocław. The factory is adding LFP, cylindrical, and energy storage capacity simultaneously. For investors constructing a view on Poland's economic future, the battery industry is not a footnote. It is the story that makes Poland's advanced manufacturing ambitions credible and its energy transition commercially interesting at the same time. Długoterminowa trajektoria elektryfikacji w Europie nie jest poważnie kwestionowana, a pozycja Polski jako dominującej lokalizacji produkcji baterii na kontynencie nie jest łatwo do przemieszczenia. Koreańskie firmy, które wybrały Polskę w 2016 roku, rozszerzają działalność zamiast się wycofywać. LG Energy Solution podpisało umowę dostawy dla Mercedes za 10,8 miliarda dolarów we wrześniu 2025 roku z produkcją europejską skoncentrowaną na Wrocławiu.
This article is produced by Fides Polonia Capital Management for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. Battery capacity data from Bruegel European Clean Tech Tracker (September 2025). Production share data from Strategic Perspectives / Zero Carbon Analytics 2024 report cited by Euronews. LG Energy Solution operational data from Automotive Logistics Media and LG Inside official communications. Supply contract data from Korea Herald (September 2025). Energy storage data from Energy Storage News (March 2025). CATL Hungary data from Bruegel (2025). Ford termination from KED Global (December 2025). EV export decline from Bruegel (Q3 2025). Fides Polonia Capital Management has no financial interest in LG Energy Solution, Samsung SDI, SK On, LG Corp, Samsung, or any battery or EV company referenced in this article. Niniejszy artykuł jest produkowany przez Fides Polonia Capital Management wyłącznie w celach informacyjnych. Nie stanowi porady inwestycyjnej. Dane zdolności produkcyjnej baterii z Bruegel European Clean Tech Tracker. Dane udziału produkcyjnego z raportu Strategic Perspectives/Zero Carbon Analytics 2024. Fides Polonia Capital Management nie ma interesu finansowego w LG Energy Solution, Samsung SDI, SK On ani żadnej firmie bateryjnej lub EV wymienionej w tym artykule.