The relevant actors are Google and the French public infrastructure process around Châteauroux. The strongest public record is the CNDP project page for the Google Ozans-Châteauroux data centre and its electrical connection. That page places the project in Étrechet, Indre, Centre-Val de Loire, identifies Google France and its subsidiaries with RTE, and says a preliminary consultation is pending.
The control surface is physical AI infrastructure: land, grid connection, fibre routes, local permits, heat reuse and public consent. CNDP says the project would cover about 195 hectares, include 8 to 10 data-centre buildings, require two electrical substations, and need underground 225,000-volt and aerial 400,000-volt connection infrastructure. It also lists objectives given by the sponsors: long-term demand for data, cloud and artificial intelligence, French digital-sovereignty capacity, and reuse of waste heat for part of Diors' heating needs.
Google Cloud already operates a Paris cloud region, so the Châteauroux plan should be read as a possible shift from colocated French cloud presence toward owned industrial-scale infrastructure. That changes the public question. Local economic development and AI compute demand sit beside land take, power-system reinforcement, construction phasing, water and heat impacts, and scrutiny over who controls strategic digital infrastructure.
The available evidence supports a proposed project and consultation path, not a final construction order, final capacity, full budget or guaranteed opening date. CNDP describes a first phase in 2028-2029 for one data-centre building and 225,000-volt RTE connection, followed from 2031 by progressive delivery of seven to nine additional buildings and further RTE 400,000-volt infrastructure. The watchpoint is whether consultation, grid works, permits and local acceptance convert the plan into a live Google-controlled French data-centre campus.

