Airbus picks Iliad’s Scaleway for AI and defense cloud, signaling Europe’s break from US hyperscalers
Airbus's choice underscores Europe's strategic shift towards data sovereignty, reducing reliance on US tech giants and enhancing regional autonomy. The post Airbus picks Iliad’s Scaleway for AI and defense cloud, signaling Europe’s break from US hyperscalers appeared first on Cry

Airbus picks Iliad’s Scaleway for AI and defense cloud, signaling Europe’s break from US hyperscalers The multi-year deal to migrate critical aviation and military applications reflects a deepening push for digital sovereignty across European industry Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jul. 16, 2026 Europe’s largest aerospace company just made a very deliberate choice about where its most sensitive data will live. And the answer is: not with Amazon, Microsoft, or Google.
Airbus signed a multi-year partnership with Scaleway, the cloud computing arm of French telecom group Iliad, to build sovereign cloud infrastructure for defense and industrial workloads. The deal, announced on July 16, will see roughly 70 critical applications migrated to Scaleway’s platform by the end of 2028, with the potential to scale that number to around 900 applications spanning aircraft design, engineering, and production. Advertisement Why this matters beyond the defense sector The selection process was anything but casual.
Scaleway had to clear more than 150 technical and legal requirements during Airbus’s evaluation, a bar specifically designed to ensure alignment with the company’s stringent security standards for classified and certified aviation work. The partnership will also incorporate AI tools from Mistral AI, the Paris-based startup that has become Europe’s flagship large language model developer. Those tools are intended to boost operational efficiency across military and certified aviation applications.
Scaleway was appointed by the European Commission back in April 2026 to provide a sovereign public cloud and AI platform for EU institutions. That contract effectively served as a stamp of approval, positioning Scaleway as Europe’s go-to provider for workloads that absolutely cannot touch infrastructure subject to foreign jurisdiction laws like the US CLOUD Act. Europe’s sovereignty obsession is getting real Airbus’s decision to migrate critical applications, potentially up to 900 of them, to a European-owned cloud provider represents a concrete commitment to localized data management.
Scaleway’s parent company Iliad, founded by French billionaire Xavier Niel, has been positioning for exactly this moment. The company has invested heavily in data center capacity and AI infrastructure across France, betting that European enterprises would eventually prioritize data residency over the convenience of hyperscaler ecosystems. That bet is now paying off in the form of contracts with both the continent’s largest aerospace firm and the European Commission itself.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy. TECHNOLOGY Airbus picks Iliad’s Scaleway for AI and defense cloud, signaling Europe’s break from US hyperscalers The multi-year deal to migrate critical aviation and military applications reflects a deepening push for digital sovereignty across European industry by Editorial Team Jul.
16, 2026 Share Add us on Google Europe’s largest aerospace company just made a very deliberate choice about where its most sensitive data will live. And the answer is: not with Amazon, Microsoft, or Google. Airbus signed a multi-year partnership with Scaleway, the cloud computing arm of French telecom group Iliad, to build sovereign cloud infrastructure for defense and industrial workloads.
The deal, announced on July 16, will see roughly 70 critical applications migrated to Scaleway’s platform by the end of 2028, with the potential to scale that number to around 900 applications spanning aircraft design, engineering, and production. Advertisement Why this matters beyond the defense sector The selection process was anything but casual. Scaleway had to clear more than 150 technical and legal requirements during Airbus’s evaluation, a bar specifically designed to ensure alignment with the company’s stringent security standards for classified and certified aviation work.
The partnership will also incorporate AI tools from Mistral AI, the Paris-based startup that has become Europe’s flagship large language model developer. Those tools are intended to boost operational efficiency across military and certified aviation applications. Scaleway was appointed by the European Commission back in April 2026 to provide a sovereign public cloud and AI platform for EU institutions.
That contract effectively served as a stamp of approval, positioning Scaleway as Europe’s go-to provider for workloads that absolutely cannot touch infrastructure subject to foreign jurisdiction laws like the US CLOUD Act. Europe’s sovereignty obsession is getting real Airbus’s decision to migrate critical applications, potentially up to 900 of them, to a European-owned cloud provider represents a concrete commitment to localized data management. Scaleway’s parent company Iliad, founded by French billionaire Xavier Niel, has been positioning for exactly this moment.
The company has inve
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