ASCENT
How did a kid from a small mountain village in Fujian end up building the company that powers one in every three electric vehicles on the planet? This episode explores the rise of CATL (aka the “TSMC of batteries”) and its founder, Robin Zeng. It begins with CATL’s predecessor, ATL, and a risky $1 million bet on a flawed battery patent that nearly destroyed the company — until it unexpectedly led to a breakthrough deal supplying Apple iPods. CATL was later spun out amid government policy shifts and EV subsidies, and scaled into the world’s largest battery maker in just six years. Its first major test came with BMW, where passing an 800-page technical audit proved it could meet strict automotive standards—unlocking global partnerships. Today, CATL continues to push its limits, expanding into grid-scale energy storage, aviation batteries, and next-generation technologies like sodium-ion and solid-state systems to stay ahead in the global energy race. 👉 Subscribe & Follow: ASCENT Podcast on Substack [https://ascentpodcast.substack.com/] 📖 Episode Chapters 00:00:00 The Battery Giant You’ve Never Heard Of 00:02:30 Robin Zeng’s Origins and Early Career at TDK 00:06:26 Robin’s Mentorship Trio and the Birth of ATL 00:18:27 The $1 Million Gamble: Surviving the Bell Labs Patent Crisis 00:25:09 Path Back to the Old Employer TDK 00:35:18 Early Signs of EV’s Rise and the Scientist Who Saw the Future 00:42:42 Birth of CATL: A Spin-off Out of Necessity 00:54:57 The BMW Trial: Decoding the 800-Page German Blueprint 01:00:20 China’s Underdog Strategy: Start With Buses and LFP 01:07:11 CATL’s Breakout Era: Higher Standards, Industry Consolidation and Tesla Deal 01:22:22 The Battery King: Market Dominance and Leverage Over Automakers 01:35:27 Europe’s Failed Attempt at Creating Its Own CATL: Northvolt 01:41:50 Final Thoughts: Why We Think CATL Ascended
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