Europe’s Cumulative EV Investment Passes €200bn
May 11, 2026 – 10:31 am
New AutoMotive’s data tracker, reported by Reuters on Sunday, marks a significant milestone: Europe has invested cumulatively €200bn into its electric-vehicle supply chain, according to Reuters.
This figure highlights the region’s efforts over the past decade to restructure its industrial base around battery cell production, e-axle manufacturing, charging infrastructure, and related mining, refining, and recycling capacities.
However, as New AutoMotive notes, the headline number raises questions about the execution of this transition, given that roughly 600 GWh of announced European battery capacity has already faced delays or cancellations.
The Investment Landscape
The €200bn includes private and public investments across various segments of the European automotive value chain since 2020:
- OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers) capex announcements
- Gigafactory project sponsors
- EV charging operators
- High-voltage and power electronics suppliers
The Challenge: Conversion and Capacity
While the cumulative investment is impressive, it masks a crucial gap: only a fraction of this money has translated into operational capacity.
The earlier €47bn benchmark for gigafactory investment, aimed at delivering European-made batteries by 2027, proved challenging to meet. The current estimated gap in operational European gigafactory capacity is around 600 GWh, with many projects facing cancellations or delays.
A Case Study: Northvolt’s Fall
The collapse of Northvolt, once the flagship of EU industrial policy for batteries, symbolises these challenges. Its bankruptcy, announced in 2022, removed approximately 100 GWh of planned 2030 capacity from Europe’s pipeline, impacting major automotive clients like Volkswagen and BMW.
The struggle to deliver on ambitious EV investment targets underscores the complexities of transitioning to electric mobility at scale.