A strategic alliance at the heart of digital sovereignty
At VivaTech 2025, Mistral AI unveiled a new high-performance computing infrastructure developed in partnership with Nvidia. The announcement marks a turning point in Europe’s strategy for technological independence, particularly in the field of generative artificial intelligence, where Europe has struggled to compete with American and Chinese giants.
The announced infrastructure is based on several hundred Nvidia H100 and Blackwell B200 GPUs, enabling Mistral AI to train and deploy foundation models at a very large scale, with minimal latency and enhanced data sovereignty.
According to Mistral AI CEO Arthur Mensch, “The real challenge isn’t just performance, but the ability to control the entire value chain, from data to infrastructure.”
The Rise of Sovereign Computing
The infrastructure unveiled is based on three pillars:
- High-performance hardware: clusters composed of the latest-generation Nvidia H100 and B200 GPUs, interconnected via Nvidia NVLink and InfiniBand, deliver over 500 petaflops of peak performance1.
- Hosting in Europe: Data processing will take place in data centers located in France and Germany that comply with the GDPR and are powered by carbon-free electricity.
- Optimization for open-source models: Mistral AI will train its proprietary models, such as Mistral 7B and Mixtral 8x22B, on these platforms, but will also offer an API providing access to shared LLMs trained on European corpora.
This infrastructure positions Mistral as a player capable of competing technically with the largest U.S. cloud providers—while maintaining a European presence.
Why Europe needs it
Today, more than 90% of the AI computing power used in Europe comes from non-European cloud services2. This dependence raises several challenges:
- Sensitive data: training models on public and confidential datasets subject to extraterritorial laws such as the Cloud Act.
- Latency and availability: reliance on infrastructure hosted outside the EU, with risks of service interruptions or congestion.
- Cost of accessing computing power: European startups and research institutions are struggling to access competitive resources due to the prices set by U.S. hyperscalers.
Mistral AI, backed by Bpifrance and the Public Investment Bank as part of the France 2030 strategy, embodies a political commitment to reverse this trend.
Expected real-world use cases
This new infrastructure opens up a number of possibilities:
- Training European language models: Mistral announces multilingual models optimized for Romance, Germanic, and Slavic languages, in response to the Anglo-centric nature of current models.
- Deployment of AI agents in sensitive sectors: healthcare, justice, and cybersecurity—areas where data must remain within the country.
- Power-sharing with academic partners: through a dedicated access portal for European universities and research centers (INRIA, DFKI, ETH Zurich, etc.).
- Sovereign LLM-as-a-Service offerings for businesses: billed in euros, hosted in Europe, and with no data transfer outside the EU.
Toward an industrialized European AI sector?
Mistral’s announcement is part of a broader effort to build a truly integrated European AI ecosystem, spanning everything from hardware to software:
- Hardware: Nvidia still dominates, but new projects are emerging in France (SiPearl, Kalray).
- Software: Open-source alternatives such as Hugging Face and Mistral are gaining traction.
- Infrastructure: With Scaleway, OVHcloud, and Eviden, France is building a high-performance cloud infrastructure.
A report by the Institut Montaigne (May 2025)3 identifies computational sovereignty as one of the three key levers for ensuring European digital autonomy, alongside data control and algorithmic regulation.
Sovereignty with conditions
Despite this progress, several challenges remain:
- Technological dependence on Nvidia: while the data and models are European, the chips remain American.
- Global cost competition: even when shared, this infrastructure struggles to match the aggressive pricing of Google or Amazon.
- Eco-design and digital frugality: such power requires greater attention to energy consumption, especially in the context of the ecological transition.
A demonstration that is as much political as it is technical
More than just a technological breakthrough, Mistral AI’s new infrastructure sends a strong signal to the European AI ecosystem. It embodies a model in which performance, sovereignty, and openness can coexist.
It remains to be seen whether this ambition can become a lasting standard that is accessible to researchers, SMEs, and innovators across the continent.
What if the future of European artificial intelligence depended on reclaiming its hardware foundations?
References
1. Nvidia. (2025). Nvidia Blackwell B200 Technical Overview.
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/blackwell
2. European Commission. (2024). AI Infrastructure Dependence Report.
https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/
3. Institut Montaigne. (2025). AI and Sovereignty: Infrastructure Challenges.
https://www.institutmontaigne.org/publications

