NZIPL Global Atlas research artifact
China-HQ green FDI readiness / Battery + Solar + EV

Where China-HQ green FDI lands.

China-HQ green FDI is not a single mechanism. The same investment can occupy very different supply-chain positions depending on the country and technology where it lands. What matters is not the announcement, but the function the country performs in the chain.

466
Battery, solar, and EV country-technology pairs scored
15
Featured cases examined in depth
5
Supply-chain roles surfaced
1/24
FDI-first cases became specialized factory exporters by 2024
The one crossing is Cambodia solar, a US-tariff transshipment route, not homegrown capability · same 1/24 under the stricter HQ audit · solar + battery scope
The competitive backdrop

The incumbents are losing third markets.

Before asking where China-HQ capital lands, see the stakes. Across most clean-tech products, China gained share of third-market exports from 2012 to 2024 while the 2010 leaders lost it. Each dot is one product; the upper-left zone is where China gained share and the incumbents lost it. Third markets exclude China and the incumbent bloc as buyers, so this is the contest for neutral markets.

Three scattersOne per technology
Dot colors: the four supply-chain stages Finished product the sellable end good: cells, modules, vehicles Component parts and factory-stage inputs built into the finished good Process equipment the machines and tools that make it Processed material refined feedstocks one step up from raw ore
Scatter of China versus Japan-Korea-US third-market share change for battery products
Third markets / Battery

Battery: the cell incumbents collapse

37 of 54 battery products shifted China's way. In lithium-ion cells, China rose to 54% of third-market exports while the Japan-Korea-US bloc fell from 32% to 10%: Japan, the original commercial cell producer, shed almost 12 points, Korea almost 9.

Open the battery competition chart
Scatter of China versus Germany-Japan-US third-market share change for solar products
Third markets / Solar

Solar: a value-chain retreat

24 of 34 solar products shifted China's way. In cells and modules, China rose from 39% to 64% of third-market exports while the Germany-Japan-US bloc fell from 27% to 12%, Germany and Japan each shedding about 6 points.

Open the solar competition chart
Scatter of China versus Germany-Japan-Korea-US third-market share change for EV products
Third markets / EV

EV: the fastest shift of the three

69 of 86 EV products shifted China's way, the broadest move of any technology here. In battery-electric vehicles, China rose from about 1% to 26% of third-market exports while the Germany-Japan-Korea-US bloc slipped from 53% to 45%.

Open the EV competition chart
The global picture

Where readiness concentrates.

Every country scored for solar, battery, and EV on the same two questions, mapped. Most of the world is bypassed; a small set of countries carries the story. Each map opens in a simple overview; a view control adds outcome marks and regional lists as you need them. Start here, then read the two diagnostic lenses below.

Three mapsOne per technology
Map colors: the five readiness quadrants Prepared Magnet capability before 2020 and a real China-HQ bet ($100m or more disclosed) FDI-First Experiment the capital arrived without prior measured capability Untapped Candidate capability but no China-HQ FDI Active, below/unknown projects present, capex under $100m or undisclosed Bypassed neither capability nor China-HQ FDI China drawn in gold as the FDI source, not a destination EV joins the scored panel for the first time here: the shared capability model behind solar and battery never covered EV, and a dedicated EV predicted-competitiveness model now does. EV scores under the same floors with a shorter, documented pre-window (2018 to 2019). Full definitions live on each map's key and in the EV capability methods note.
World map of battery FDI readiness colored by quadrant
Readiness map / Battery

Battery readiness, mapped

155 countries colored by battery readiness quadrant. China-HQ battery FDI clusters in Europe and East Asia; optional outcome marks show where the bet has or has not shown up in exports.

Open the battery map
World map of solar FDI readiness colored by quadrant
Readiness map / Solar

Solar readiness, mapped

The same 155 countries scored for solar. A country can sit in a different quadrant for each technology, so the maps rarely match.

Open the solar map
World map of EV FDI readiness colored by quadrant
Readiness map / EV

EV readiness, mapped

156 countries scored for EV, the most FDI-active panel of the three: 37 colored cells against 29 for solar and 27 for battery. Hungary and Mexico carry the largest disclosed China-HQ EV bets, with Thailand, Brazil, and Indonesia next; Thailand carries the largest project count.

Open the EV map
The frame

Two lenses, one diagnostic.

First we ask where China-HQ capital landed. Then we ask what role the country played in exports afterward.

Reader guideWhere, then what

The first lens is the entry map. It sorts every battery, solar, and EV country-technology pair by two questions: did the country already have relevant capability before 2020, and did disclosed China-HQ capital arrive from 2020 to 2024?

The second lens is the role map. It tracks what appears in trade data afterward: finished products, factory tools and parts, processed materials and feedstocks, or a mixed portfolio losing relative share.

The same starting label can hide different jobs in the chain.
Diagnostic visuals

Start broad. Then zoom in.

Use the first chart to see where countries started. Use the second to see what role the featured cases played in the export chain.

Lens 1 readiness quadrant chart preview
Atlas diagnostic / Lens 1

Where capital landed

All 466 battery, solar, and EV country-technology pairs, sorted by pre-2020 capability and disclosed China-HQ investment from 2020 to 2024.

Open Lens 1
Lens 2 supply-chain spectrum figure preview
Atlas diagnostic / Lens 2

What role emerged

The fifteen featured cases grouped by export role: finished goods, equipment and tools, processed materials, vehicles and components, or mixed portfolios.

Open Lens 2
Featured cases

Fifteen examples across the spectrum.

The full panel is broad; these fifteen cases are the close reads. Together they show how the five supply-chain roles differ. The five EV cells all sit on existing auto-industry bases, so their test is finished-vehicle entry, not factory-base creation: three are established vehicle exporters, while Indonesia and Brazil are home-market entries where the capital arrived to serve protected domestic demand.

Case Starting position China-HQ FDI Finished-product share Factory specialization Export role
Hungary / BatteryPrepared Magnet$11.8B94.1%1.36 -> 3.81Finished platform
Poland / BatteryUntapped CandidateAbsent in panel82.8%0.98 -> 2.25Finished platform
Vietnam / SolarPrepared Magnet$4.2B67.7%*0.88 -> 1.31Finished platform
Mexico / BatteryBypassedAbsent in panel13.0%0.37 -> 0.41Equipment integrator
Malaysia / SolarPrepared Magnet$3.3B1.2%*2.78 -> 3.04Equipment platform
USA / SolarFDI-First Experiment$2.16B panel; $1.16B audited screen-4.7%1.27 -> 1.07Equipment platform
Indonesia / BatteryFDI-First Experiment$6.9B2.2%0.21 -> 0.26Midstream platform
Indonesia / SolarFDI-First Experiment$17.6B panel; $6.07B audited screen12.9%0.14 -> 0.18Midstream platform
Saudi Arabia / SolarFDI-First Experiment$2.6B0.0%0.07 -> 0.04Feedstock platform
USA / BatteryFDI-First Experiment$4.38B panel; $3.66B audited screen31.0%1.19 -> 0.94Hybrid case
Hungary / EVPrepared Magnet$4.8B29.9%1.17 -> 1.25Vehicle platform
Mexico / EVFDI-First Experiment$3.8B panel; $2.8B audited screen34.0%1.28 -> 1.25Vehicle platform
Thailand / EVPrepared Magnet$2.1B4.7%1.18 -> 1.16Component base
Indonesia / EVFDI-First Experiment$1.26B0.5%0.28 -> 0.17Midstream platform
Brazil / EVFDI-First Experiment$1.72B0.1%0.19 -> 0.15Home-market producer

Factory specialization is measured with RCA. Values above 1.0 mean the country is specialized in factory-stage exports for that technology.

What the dual lens surfaces

What the roles mean.

The same investment headline can correspond to very different jobs in the chain.

Countries selling the final product

Hungary, Poland, and Vietnam show the clearest finished-product specialization. Hungary and Vietnam combine pre-existing capability with China-HQ capital. Poland reaches a similar export position without disclosed China-HQ FDI in this panel.

Countries selling the machinery and parts

Mexico, Malaysia, and USA/Solar specialize in the machinery, components, and industrial tools used by other green-manufacturing systems. In Mexico, 88.4% of the battery-basket export delta is absorbed by the United States and Canada.

Countries selling processed inputs

All three of Indonesia's cases, together with Saudi/Solar, follow resource and petrochemical pathways into clean-tech supply chains. Even Indonesia's EV-basket growth is mostly alumina and nickel. The export outcome is materials specialization rather than finished-product assembly.

Mixed growth without clear specialization

USA/Battery expands across cells, electrolyte, and equipment, but no single HS segment dominates. Factory-stage RCA falls from 1.19 to 0.94, indicating diversification alongside relative-share decline.

Auto industries adding electric vehicles

Hungary, Mexico, and Thailand enter the EV window as established vehicle exporters with factory-stage specialization above 1.0; the test is finished-vehicle entry, which Hungary (29.9%) and Mexico (34.0%) show and Thailand (4.7%, mostly multi-use integrated circuits) does not yet. Indonesia and Brazil are the home-market contrast: China-HQ assembly capital arrived to serve protected domestic demand, and neither exports finished vehicles at scale.

Did the FDI work?

One country crossed into factory-stage exports. It got there by routing around US tariffs.

By 2024, just one of the low-capability countries that received China-HQ FDI had become a specialized exporter of factory-stage battery or solar goods: the cells, components, and equipment, not the raw or processed materials. That country is Cambodia, and its solar surge is the documented US-tariff circumvention route, not homegrown capability.

Aggregate finding1 of 24, transshipment

The test is whether a country becomes a specialized factory-stage exporter, measured as a relative export advantage (RCA) of 1.0 or more in cells, components, and equipment. Under the panel definition, one of 24 FDI-First cases crossed that line from below; under the stricter audited-HQ definition, the same one of 24 crossed. That case is Cambodia solar, whose factory-stage exports jumped from near zero to over 1.7 billion dollars in the 2022 to 2024 window. Cambodia is the canonical destination for solar transshipment after US antidumping and countervailing duties on mainland Chinese cells and modules, so the crossing reads as final-assembly relocation to route around tariffs, not indigenous capability formation. The other 23 cases did not cross: a few stayed above 1.0 but started there and weakened, and others began just under the line and slipped further below.

That does not mean the investments failed. Large battery and solar projects take years to reach commercial output. Battery plants often need two to four years after announcement. Polysilicon and PV-glass facilities can take three to five. The real test for the largest FDI-First projects comes after 2027, when enough production should appear in trade data, and when a later window can separate durable capability from tariff-driven routing.

Strip out the Cambodia tariff-routing crossing and no FDI-First recipient became a genuine factory-stage exporter by 2024. Indonesia/Battery looks like a success only if processed nickel is counted; excluding materials, it did not cross either.
Case cards

Read the cases.

Each mini-card names the role, the key number, and the caution. Battery, Solar, and EV are separated so the sector stories can be read independently. All fifteen cases carry full methods-register case notes, linked in the Methods rail.

Battery 5 cases

Hungary Battery

Sells the final battery cell. Much of the measured export jump comes from plants already operating before recent China-HQ megaproject output could appear.

94.1% finished / RCA 1.36 -> 3.81

Poland Battery

Reaches the same final-cell role without China-HQ Battery FDI in this panel. Korean and broader European capital matter here.

82.8% finished / RCA 0.98 -> 2.25

USA Battery

Battery cells, electrolyte, and equipment all grow. The United States is a domestic-market platform, the largest net finished-cell importer in the panel at minus 18 billion dollars, so the factory-stage export RCA dip reflects home absorption and faster global export growth, not a failed buildout. Export RCA is the wrong yardstick for a domestic-market recipient.

31.0% finished / RCA 1.19 -> 0.94

Mexico Battery

Supplies equipment and components into the North American battery buildout. The USA and Canada absorb 88.4% of the basket delta.

13.0% finished / RCA 0.37 -> 0.41

Indonesia Battery

Works as a battery-materials supplier. Nickel and cathode precursor exports grow; cell export entry does not.

2.2% finished / RCA 0.21 -> 0.26
Solar 5 cases

Vietnam Solar

Ships finished solar modules. It is the closest Solar parallel to Hungary/Battery, with factory-stage specialization crossing 1.0.

67.7% finished* / RCA 0.88 -> 1.31

Malaysia Solar

Sells solar tooling and intermediates, not more finished modules. The original ASEAN solar incumbent moved toward equipment.

1.2% finished* / RCA 2.78 -> 3.04

USA Solar

Solar equipment and intermediate exports rise while finished-module exports fall. The United States is a domestic-market platform, the largest net finished-module importer in the panel, so finished-export RCA understates the buildout rather than signaling a weak export base. Output serves home demand under the IRA, not export.

-4.7% finished / RCA 1.27 -> 1.07

Indonesia Solar

Growth is alumina and ammonia, both multi-use commodities and not governed by any solar-specific policy. Reads as midstream growth that could feed solar, not demonstrated solar entry. Xinyi-era output is not yet in the trade window.

12.9% finished / RCA 0.14 -> 0.18

Saudi Arabia Solar

A single feedstock, ammonia, drives 72% of the growth. Ammonia is a generic petrochemical, so this reads as commodity export growth adjacent to solar, not solar-specific entry.

0.0% finished / RCA 0.07 -> 0.04
EV 5 cases

Hungary EV

The clearest EV capability-formation case: modeled competitiveness rises from 0.11 before the window to 0.79 by 2024, and finished battery-electric vehicles enter from near zero to 29.9% of the export-growth delta, run 53% into the EU. But the BYD Szeged anchor completed in 2023, so the pre-existing auto base carried most of the measured trade.

29.9% finished / factory RCA 1.17 -> 1.25

Mexico EV

Labelled FDI-First only because the EV window barely predates Mexico's ramp: competitiveness jumps from 0.09 to 0.84. Finished vehicles enter at scale, 81.5% into the United States, but this is the existing North American auto industry electrifying, not the China-HQ EV capital, most of which is announced or just commenced. Under the audited-HQ screen the 3.8 billion dollars falls to 2.8.

34.0% finished / factory RCA 1.28 -> 1.25

Thailand EV

The panel's largest China-HQ EV project count, 12 projects and 2.1 billion dollars disclosed, on an incumbent auto-assembly base. The measured export growth is 54% multi-use integrated circuits shipped to the United States, not vehicles; finished battery-electric vehicles are 4.7% of the delta and run mostly to Japan. Most plants completed in 2022 to 2024, too recent to appear in the trade window.

4.7% finished / factory RCA 1.18 -> 1.16

Indonesia EV

A home-market experiment pulled by an import-now, produce-later incentive scheme: 1.26 billion dollars across 6 projects, led by BYD Subang, landed in a country with no measured EV capability. The trade data reads Indonesia's commodity story a third time, 87% alumina and nickel, while BEV sales grew from 120 units in 2020 to over 100,000 in 2025, four-fifths of them Chinese brands. Every large plant is post-window.

0.5% finished / factory RCA 0.28 -> 0.17

Brazil EV

The cleanest tariff-wall case: a published import-duty ladder rising from 10% in January 2024 to 35% by July 2026 preceded an import surge and then localization, converting BYD's largest overseas export market into its largest plant outside Asia. Both plants began output in mid-2025, after the trade window, so the measured growth is incumbent parts trade to Mercosur plus alumina, with finished-vehicle exports near zero.

0.1% finished / factory RCA 0.19 -> 0.15
What the evidence can and cannot say

Roles, not causes.

The data identify export roles. They do not, by themselves, prove what caused those roles to emerge.

  • The single factory-stage crossing, Cambodia/Solar, is transshipment. Mainland Chinese cell and module makers relocated final assembly to Cambodia to avoid US antidumping and countervailing duties, so the export jump is a tariff-routing artifact rather than evidence that China-HQ FDI built indigenous factory capability. It counts as a crossing under the RCA rule but should be read as the exception that proves the aggregate finding.
  • China-HQ FDI appearing near export growth is not proof that the FDI caused the growth.
  • Many 2022-2024 exports in large incumbent cases come from plants that existed before the FDI window.
  • The China-HQ filter excludes Korean, Japanese, European, and US green-tech investors by construction.
  • Solar finished-product shares marked with an asterisk use HS17 854140, which bundles PV cells/modules with LEDs.
  • Capability is measured before the FDI window, so a country whose technology takeoff comes later reads as low-capability. India/Solar is the clearest case: near zero through 2019, then among the fastest-rising solar exporters after 2021.
  • Midstream-materials growth can be dominated by multi-use commodities. Indonesia/Solar (alumina, ammonia) and Saudi/Solar (ammonia) are not governed by solar-specific policy; Indonesia/Battery (nickel) is the policy-targeted exception.
  • Plant-level output and customer-level demand links are v2 evidence tasks.
Next tests

The next real test is 2027 and after.

The largest FDI-first projects need time to appear in trade data. A later export window is the main follow-up.

The next version should add an adjacent-capability measure for Mexico-type cases, tighten the Solar finished-product proxy with an HS22 cross-walk, and keep panel-rule and audited-HQ magnitudes side by side in the scored table.

The story is not whether FDI arrived. It is which role a country came to play.