China Battery Group Plans Patent Pool to Fend Off IP Lawsuits

A Chinese battery industry alliance is building the country’s first large-scale patent pool — a coordinated legal defense mechanism involving over 30 manufacturers and more than 8,500 patents. Launched as Chinese battery makers face a surging wave of international IP disputes, the pool could reshape how battery technology is licensed and litigated globally. This development follows broader signs of industrial momentum in China’s manufacturing sector and comes as foreign investors reassess where to position themselves in the country’s evolving industrial landscape.

Why It Matters

China’s battery industry controls over 60% of global battery production, with CATL and BYD alone commanding a combined 45% market share. But as Chinese battery makers expand into Europe, North America, and Southeast Asia, they face a growing wave of patent infringement claims from foreign competitors. The response is a coordinated IP defense strategy that could reshape competition in the sector.

A newly formed industry alliance — the China Battery Industry Patent Pool — is creating a centralized mechanism for member companies to license patents collectively and defend against infringement lawsuits. The pool, backed by the China National Battery Industry Association and top manufacturers, represents the first organized attempt by a Chinese industrial sector to create a “patent shield” for its global expansion.

For foreign battery makers, including South Korea’s LG Energy Solution, Japan’s Panasonic, and European players like Northvolt and ACC, this changes the IP enforcement landscape. A coordinated Chinese patent pool can countersue more effectively, raise the cost of litigation, and potentially lock foreign competitors out of key technologies.

The Details

The patent pool initiative, first reported by Caixin Global on July 2, 2026, brings together more than 30 Chinese battery manufacturers, material suppliers, and research institutions. Member companies will contribute patents covering battery chemistry, cell design, manufacturing processes, and thermal management systems into a shared portfolio available for licensing.

Industry estimates put the combined patent portfolio at over 8,500 active patents, making it one of the largest battery technology patent collections globally. The pool will operate under a FRAND (Fair, Reasonable, and Non-Discriminatory) licensing framework, though the exact royalty rates remain under negotiation and are expected to be finalized by Q4 2026.

The timing is strategic. Chinese battery makers face at least 14 active patent disputes in the US, EU, and South Korea as of mid-2026, up from just 3 in 2022. The most contentious cases involve solid-state battery technology and LFP (lithium iron phosphate) cell chemistry, where Chinese manufacturers hold significant advantages in both production volume and patent filings.

Not all major players are participating. CATL and BYD — the two largest Chinese battery makers — have not formally joined the pool, though they are reportedly in discussions. Their absence could limit the pool’s effectiveness, since their combined patent portfolio is estimated to include over 4,000 battery-related filings. Industry analysts suggest they may launch separate licensing programs instead.

For context, this is not the first such initiative in China. The country’s LED lighting industry established a patent pool in 2018 that now covers over 3,200 patents and has been used to countersue several foreign LED manufacturers. The battery pool is significantly larger — both in patent count (8,500+) and in the strategic importance of the sector. Battery technology is central to China’s EV dominance, and the government views patent protection as critical to maintaining that lead.

What You Should Do

  • Audit your IP exposure: If your company manufactures or procures batteries in China, review your patent licensing agreements and identify any technologies that overlap with the pool’s expected coverage areas — particularly LFP chemistry, CTP (cell-to-pack) designs, and thermal management.
  • Monitor the pool’s licensing terms: The FRAND rates, expected by Q4 2026, will set the benchmark for battery patent licensing in China. Budget for potential licensing costs of $2–5 per kWh of battery capacity if your products use Chinese-sourced cells.
  • Evaluate cross-licensing opportunities: Foreign battery makers with strong patent portfolios in niche areas (solid-state electrolytes, silicon anode technology) may benefit from cross-licensing rather than paying royalties. Engage patent counsel experienced in China’s IP landscape.
  • Watch CATL and BYD: These two players hold roughly 40% of the industry’s patent firepower. If they opt out and launch rival programs, the patent landscape could fragment into competing pools — complicating compliance for downstream buyers like automakers.

One Data Point

The number to remember: 8,500+ patents — the combined portfolio of the China Battery Industry Patent Pool. To put that in context, it exceeds the entire battery patent portfolio of LG Energy Solution (roughly 5,200 active patents) and positions the pool as a formidable IP counterweight in any global patent dispute.

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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