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Nvidia’s pitch for sovereign AI resonates with EU leaders | Technology News

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has been pitching the idea of “sovereign AI” since 2023. Europe is now starting to len and act.The concept is based on the idea that the language, knowledge, hory and culture of each region are different, and every nation needs to develop and own its AI. Last week, the CEO of the artificial-intelligence chipmaker toured Europe’s major capitals – London, Paris and Berlin – announcing a slew of projects and partnerships, while highlighting the lack of AI infrastructure in the region. In a place where leaders are increasingly wary of the continent’s dependency on a handful of U.S. tech companies and after drawing ire from the U.S. President Donald Trump, his vision has started to gain traction.
“We are going to invest billions in here … but Europe needs to move into AI quickly,” Huang said on Wednesday in Paris. On Monday of last week, British Prime Miner Keir Starmer announced 1 billion pounds ($1.35 billion) in funding to scale up computing power in a global race “to be an AI maker and not an AI taker.”
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French President Emmanuel Macron called building AI infrastructure “our fight for sovereignty” at VivaTech, one of the largest global tech conferences. After Nvidia laid out plans to build an AI cloud platform in Germany with Deutsche Telekom, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz called it an “important step” for the digital sovereignty and economic future of Europe’s top economy.
Europe lags behind both the U.S. and China as its cloud infrastructure is mostly run Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet’s Google, and it has only a few smaller AI companies such as Mral to rival the U.S. ones.
“There’s no reason why Europe shouldn’t have tech champions,” said 31-year-old Mral CEO Arthur Mensch, sitting beside Huang, who has led Nvidia for more than three decades, at a panel at VivaTech.
“This is a gigantic dream.”
Gigafactory plans unleashed
In France, Mral has partnered with Nvidia to build a data centre to power the AI needs of European companies with a homegrown alternative.Story continues below this ad
It will use 18,000 of the latest Nvidia AI chips in the first phase, with plans to expand across multiple sites in 2026. In February, the European Union announced plans to build four “AI gigafactories” at a cost of $20 billion to lower dependence on U.S. firms.
The European Commission has been in touch with Huang and he had told the EU executive that he was going to allocate some chip production to Europe for these factories, an EU official told Reuters.
Nvidia’s chips known as Graphics Processing Units or GPUs are crucial for building AI data centres from the U.S. to Japan and India to the Middle East.
In Europe, a push for sovereign AI could reshape the tech landscape with domestic cloud providers, AI startups, and chipmakers standing to gain from new government funding and a shift toward in-region data infrastructure.Story continues below this ad
Nvidia also wants to cement demand for its AI chips, ensuring that even as countries seek independence, they still rely on its technology to get there.
Power costs
The push is not without challenges. High electricity costs and rising demand could strain sourcing of electricity for data centres. Data centres account for 3% of EU electricity demand, but their consumption is expected to increase rapidly this decade due to AI.
Mral, which has raised just over $1 billion, is trying to become a European homegrown champion with a fraction of the money U.S. hyperscalers or large data-centre operators spend in a month.
“Hyperscalers are spending $10 billion to $15 billion per quarter in their infrastructure. Who in Europe can afford that exactly?” said Pascal Brier, chief innovation officer at Capgemini, a partner of both Nvidia and Mral.Story continues below this ad
“It doesn’t mean we shouldn’t do anything, but we have to be cognizant about the fact that there will always be a gap.”
Mral has launched several AI models which are used businesses but companies tend to mix them with models from other companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Meta Platforms.
“Most of the time it’s not Mral or the rest, it’s Mral and the rest,” Brier said.

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