France is betting €655 million that sovereign AI infrastructure can deliver what foreign platforms cannot: a unified chatbot for every state service.
France is betting €655 million that sovereign AI infrastructure can deliver what foreign platforms cannot: a unified chatbot for every state service.

French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu on Tuesday announced a €655 million ($758 million) government investment in artificial intelligence, including a common chatbot for all state services, as Paris positions itself as Europe's AI hub during the G7 summit.
"We can either be subjected to this revolution, or we can lead it," Lecornu said in a post on X. "The question is not whether the state will use artificial intelligence anymore, but the question is how fast will it transform."
The investment covers a public health chatbot for the state-owned Ameli health insurance agency and a new platform to make public data more accessible. Lecornu said France cannot rely on tools developed by foreign powers and must build its own. The announcement coincided with the opening of the Viva Tech conference in Paris.
The €655 million is a fraction of the capital flowing into France's AI ecosystem. SoftBank last month committed up to €75 billion to develop 5 gigawatts of AI data-center capacity in the country, with a first phase of roughly €45 billion delivering 3.1 GW in Hauts-de-France. The Choose France summit drew €93 billion in pledges across 71 projects, with the government estimating 15,600 jobs.
Sovereign AI Meets Nuclear Power
France's pitch rests on a structural advantage few European nations can match: abundant nuclear-generated electricity. The country produces the bulk of its power from nuclear reactors, giving data-center operators a low-carbon story at a time when grid capacity is the binding constraint on AI infrastructure buildouts globally. Brookfield, the Canadian asset manager, is expanding its French data-center spending, and Gulf sovereign funds have been circling the same sector.
The gap between pledge and construction, however, is where AI infrastructure promises often thin out. SoftBank's €75 billion commitment is multi-year and conditional on power connections, planning approvals, and the shifting economics of the AI build-out. Macron's claim that the projects would make France "by far the leading country hosting data centers" in Europe depends on converting announced capital into delivered megawatts — a process that has slowed similar ambitions in the US and UK.
What It Means for Investors
For companies supplying AI infrastructure — Nvidia, Schneider Electric, and data-center operators active in France — the sovereign push creates a demand floor independent of corporate cloud spending. French-listed tech names and European data-center REITs stand to benefit from the procurement pipeline the unified chatbot and public data platform will generate. The government's insistence on domestic tools also favors French AI startups such as Mistral AI, which could win state contracts against US-based providers like OpenAI and Google.
Nvidia shares, trading at 35 times forward earnings, have priced in data-center demand growth through 2027, but sovereign AI programs in France and elsewhere represent an incremental demand pool not fully captured in consensus estimates. If France's build-out proceeds on schedule, the country could absorb an additional 3 GW to 5 GW of GPU capacity by 2030, according to industry estimates.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.