- EU broadens the remit of the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking to include AI gigafactories and quantum, enhancing cloud and data centre infrastructure
- Legislation enters into force to support strategic compute capacity for researchers, startups and industry across Europe
What happened: EU adopts enhanced HPC framework
The European Union formally adopted an amendment to the EuroHPC Regulation, expanding the role of the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) to support the deployment and operation of next-generation compute infrastructures, including large-scale AI gigafactories and quantum technologies.
The amended regulation, which entered into force on January 16, 2026, provides a legal and operational basis for establishing AI Gigafactories, facilities designed to deliver world-class high-performance computing power suited to training and deploying advanced artificial intelligence models. These hubs aim to offer researchers, startups, industry and public authorities access to significant compute resources while aligning with EU data protection and AI governance standards.
This move builds on earlier efforts — including the 2024 introduction of “AI Factories,” smaller innovation ecosystems within EuroHPC — and now widens the mandate to industrial-scale computing centres. The regulation also strengthens the EU’s support for quantum computing research.
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Why it’s important
The amendment marks a strategic shift in Europe’s approach to cloud and high-performance computing infrastructure. By authorising AI gigafactories — essentially massive data centres tailored for AI workloads — the EU is seeking to reduce reliance on foreign cloud providers and bolster technological sovereignty in AI and quantum computing.
For Cloud Data Centres Networking, these developments signal future growth in European compute and networking capacity. Gigafactories and AI-centric data centres will require high-bandwidth networking, advanced cooling and interconnect infrastructure, and robust cloud integration to serve diverse users. From a financial perspective, the move reflects Europe’s attempt to align public investment with strategic technology deployment, an approach seen in other global tech initiatives such as the US CHIPS Act.
The enhanced EuroHPC framework also ties into broader industrial policy. It is likely to attract private partners and ecosystem players into public-private partnerships for computing infrastructure, creating potential opportunities for cloud, edge and networking firms to participate in Europe’s deep compute stack.
