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French consortium to bid for EU’s AI datacentre fund

By Thomson Reuters May 20, 2026 | 8:49 AM

(Fixes incorrectly spelled name from Guillochet to Gaillochet in paragraph 4)

By Forrest Crellin and Leo Marchandon

PARIS, May 20 (Reuters) – The AION consortium, which groups some ​of France’s biggest tech and infrastructure companies, will ‌seek EU funding for an expected €10 billion ($11.60 billion) data centre it plans to build in France.

To try to close the gap between Europe and the United States and China, which have invested heavily ‌in ​high-capacity data centres, the European Union’s ⁠executive in December launched ⁠a €20 billion fund to boost investment in AI infrastructure.

The AION consortium, formed last year to respond to EU efforts to become more internationally competitive on AI, comprises ​tech companies Artefact, Bull and Capgemini, telecoms Orange and Iliad including its data centre arm Scaleway, private equity ⁠firm Ardian, and French utility EDF.

Ardian’s ⁠head of infrastructure investment Benoît Gaillochet said ​the French project alone could cost the equivalent of half ​of the EU’s new fund.

He said he expected funding ‌from a combination of private investors, including Ardian, and bank lending, as well as EU fund money.

Iliad said it was ready to deploy €4 billion, notably through its datacentre ⁠arm Scaleway.

Scaleway CEO Damien Lucas said the ultimate aim was for the data centre to have a gigawatt of capacity, effectively ⁠doubling France’s computing ‌capacity, and that the initial phase would ⁠probably be around 100 megawatts.

EDF said last ​year ‌that it was opening calls for tenders ​for several ⁠of its old industrial sites with direct grid connections so data centre operators can speed up the time needed to get linked up to power supplies.

($1 = 0.8623 euros)

(Reporting by Forrest Crellin in Paris and Leo Marchandon in Gdansk; Editing ​by Matt Scuffham)