France is quickly becoming one of Europe’s leading hubs for artificial intelligence infrastructure. New AI factories, open models and enterprise AI applications are moving from planning to real-world deployment.
Fueled by national investment programs, private sector collaborations and NVIDIA’s technologies, France’s AI ecosystem is emerging as a leading player in Europe’s push for sovereign AI. The country’s strategy involves developing domestic compute capacity and fostering open AI development. Furthermore, it assists companies in deploying AI systems that align with European demands for transparency, security, and compliance.
AI Factories Strengthen France’s Compute Capacity
A major part of France’s AI strategy is the development of AI factories. These are large-scale computing facilities designed to train, deploy, and operate advanced AI models.
Mistral AI is playing a central role in this effort. The French AI company is building a new 44-megawatt data center in Bruyères-le-Châtel. Its first deployment is already running on 18,000 NVIDIA GB200 systems. This facility is part of Mistral’s broader plan to expand AI compute capacity across Europe.
France is also supporting larger AI infrastructure projects, including Campus AI, a planned network of AI factories anchored by a 1.4-gigawatt facility. The project involves Mistral, Bpifrance, MGX, and NVIDIA. It could become one of Europe’s largest AI campuses.
These developments show France moving beyond pronouncements and investing in the physical infrastructure needed to power next-generation AI systems.
NVIDIA Blackwell Powers More Efficient AI Infrastructure
France’s AI buildout is poised to receive a major boost from NVIDIA’s latest AI computing platforms. The NVIDIA Blackwell platform is engineered to provide performance enhancements while enhancing energy efficiency. This is a particularly crucial factor for AI factories operating under strict power budgets.
European cloud provider Scaleway is also offering instances of the new NVIDIA Blackwell B300-SXM. This opens up accelerated AI computing on demand for developers and companies. As a result, startups, enterprises, and public institutions can build and deploy AI applications without needing to operate their own large-scale infrastructure.
Meanwhile, Bull and Foxconn are preparing to produce NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 systems in Europe. These systems will be tested in the Czech Republic and assembled, integrated, and validated at Bull’s facility in Angers, France.
Open Models Support Europe’s Sovereign AI Goals
France’s AI future is not only about hardware. Open models are becoming a major part of the country’s AI strategy. This is especially true as European companies and governments look for systems that can be inspected, customized, and deployed under local rules.
French AI organizations are developing models and datasets that reflect local languages, cultural context, and European regulatory expectations. This is particularly important as businesses start to adopt AI agents and model systems for specialized tasks.
Several organizations are contributing to this open AI ecosystem:
Mistral is working with the NVIDIA Nemotron Coalition to support open frontier model development.
LINAGORA is developing multilingual large language models with a strong focus on French through its Luciole model family.
H Company is building Holotron, a family of AI agents based on open NVIDIA Nemotron models.
Pleias is developing privacy-preserving synthetic datasets grounded in French and Belgian demographics and cultural context.
Together, these efforts support Europe’s goal of building AI systems that are powerful, transparent, and aligned with local needs.
French Companies Are Moving AI Into Production
France’s AI momentum is also being seen across major industries. Companies are moving beyond testing AI pilots to deploying AI systems in production to improve speed, efficiency and decision-making.
Sanofi is deploying AI agents in research, manufacturing, commercial operations, procurement and IT. The company is also collaborating with startups like Owkin and Biolevate to investigate autonomous agents for drug discovery and development.
Orange Business has deployed its Live Intelligence GenAI platform internally to more than 100,000 active users. Now it is offering the platform to businesses and public sector organizations as a trusted AI solution with regional data hosting.
Stellantis is increasing the use of AI-powered digital twins throughout its manufacturing operations. It is applying real-time data, simulation and AI to improve factory performance and decision-making.
Dassault Systèmes is combining virtual twins, AI infrastructure and open models through its agentic 3DEXPERIENCE platform.
TotalEnergies is building Pangea 5, a next-generation supercomputer with Dell Technologies and NVIDIA. It will be used for seismic imaging, simulation and AI-driven energy research.
L’Oréal is deploying generative AI and 3D digital twins via its CreAltech platform to scale the production of creative content. At the same time, it ensures brand consistency and responsible AI practices.
France Becomes a Key Player in Europe’s AI Race
France’s AI strategy is now entering a more practical phase. The country is building AI factories and expanding sovereign compute capacity. It is also supporting open model development and helping major companies move AI into daily operations.
This momentum could make France one of the top hubs for AI infrastructure in Europe. As the demand for local, secure and compliant AI systems increases, France’s combination of public spending, startup innovation, enterprise adoption and NVIDIA-powered infrastructure could give it a bigger role in shaping Europe’s AI future.
The next stage will be defined by what developers, startups, public institutions and enterprises build on top of this growing AI foundation.

