Can you move into the battery industry from a supplier background?
Yes, and it is one of the most direct routes in. Supplier and component professionals already understand manufacturing tolerances, quality systems, cost engineering and OEM relationships. What you need to add is battery-specific knowledge: chemistries, cell and pack architecture, and where your skills now sit in the value chain.
Battery manufacturing is, at its core, high-precision component production at enormous scale. The disciplines you already practise (process control, yield, supplier quality, industrialisation) are exactly what gigafactories are desperate for. The German supplier belt and the UK gigafactory clusters are hiring manufacturing and industrialisation engineers as fast as they can find them.
What battery roles suit a supplier or components background?
Manufacturing and process engineering, supplier quality and industrialisation, procurement and sourcing, and project or commercial roles in battery storage. These map almost one-to-one onto supplier experience.
- Manufacturing & process engineering, cell and pack assembly, automation, yield. The single largest hiring category at new plants.
- Supplier quality & industrialisation, bringing new lines and suppliers up to standard, your existing job applied to cells.
- Procurement & sourcing, cell, material and equipment sourcing, where supplier-side relationships are an asset.
- BESS project & integration, system integration and delivery for grid-scale storage, where component and thermal experience transfers directly.
Why BESS is a strong entry point
Battery energy storage is scaling faster than almost any segment of the industry, and it needs exactly the integration, component and project skills a supplier background builds.
Global BESS additions are forecast above 450 GWh in 2026, up from roughly 315 GWh in 2025. The market was worth around $81 billion in 2026 and is heading toward nearly $195 billion by 2036. A storage system is, in practice, a large integration and components problem: cells, power conversion, thermal management, fire safety and software, packaged and delivered as a project. If you have spent your career making components fit, perform and pass quality, that experience transfers straight across.
What knowledge gap do you actually need to close?
The gap is not your engineering or commercial ability. It is battery-specific fluency: chemistries, cell and pack architecture, the economics of storage, and the regulation shaping the industry.
Concretely, you want to be able to discuss LFP versus NMC trade-offs and why they change a production line, read a pack architecture, understand state-of-health and safety, and follow the regulatory frame (EU Battery Regulation, the battery passport) that increasingly drives sourcing and design decisions. That is the translation layer between your current expertise and a battery offer, and it is learnable in weeks, not years.
Informational and educational content only. Not professional, financial, legal, or engineering advice.