President Emmanuel Macron announces €93 billion in 'Choose France' investments

Since the first "Choose France" in 2018, a year after Macron came to power, more than 230 projects have been announced, representing several thousand jobs, according to the Élysée Palace.
French President Emmanuel Macron said he was expecting "record" foreign investment amounting to €93 billion at an international conference on Monday, including for artificial intelligence and data centres.
Around 200 executives from around the world are expected at the Versailles palace west of Paris for Macron's annual "Choose France" event.
Last year's conference set a record of €20 billion in announced projects.
But money already pledged for this year is set to surpass the combined €87 billion raised over the past eight years, according to a figure from Macron's office.
"This edition of Choose France alone will make it possible to crystallise a record amount of €93 billion in confirmed investments, for more than 15,000 jobs. It is obviously by far a record edition and it is historic," Macron said.
The pledges include €45 billion from Japanese tech investor SoftBank, Macron said.
Its founder, Masayoshi Son, said over the weekend that it would spend €75 billion on artificial intelligence infrastructure, including €45 billion by 2031 on data centres in northern France.
Macron said the other investments would also be spent on "artificial intelligence, on data centres" as well as semiconductors, critical minerals, tractors and trucks, steel and healthcare.
'Computing capacities in Europe'
Macron said the projects would help "make France by far the leading country hosting data centres" and "computing capacity in Europe" as well as a "forward base for the production of AI robots and for industrialisation through AI."
"We are clearly bridging the gap we had in computing capacities in Europe," compared with the United States and China, he added.
SoftBank's Son said France's nuclear-powered electricity was a key factor in choosing France.
Now we can "convert electricity as a raw material into more high-value intelligence," he added, including for export.
Canadian asset manager Brookfield is to invest $10 billion (€8.5 billion) in a data centre in the Escaudain area of northern France.
Investment firm Ardian and Nordic data platform Verne will put $5 billion (€4.2 billion) into a data centre in the Paris region.
US firm Salesforce announced $2 billion (€1.7 billion) in investment by 2030, including for an AI hub in Paris.
Taiwanese group Foxconn is expected to invest €120 million in the western city of Angers for a production line for motherboards dedicated to AI, in partnership with French supercomputer specialist Bull, sources told the AFP news agency.
Retail giant Amazon, which said earlier this month that it would invest more than €15 billion in France over the next three years, creating 7,000 jobs, said it would create an extra 1,000 jobs at three logistics centres.
'Most foreign investment'
The conference could also see announcements on rare earths.
Since the first "Choose France" in 2018, a year after Macron came to power, more than 230 projects have been announced, representing several thousand jobs, according to the Élysée Palace.
France has attracted the most foreign investment in Europe for seven straight years, according to the consultancy EY, but Macron said it "does not come out of thin air."
EY said France attracted 852 projects last year out of 5,026 recorded in 47 European countries, a 17% drop in a difficult international environment.
The country has notably attracted more projects linked to AI than anywhere else in Europe but industry has suffered, particularly the automobile, chemical and metallurgy sectors.
Economist Sylvain Bersinger said the announcements in Versailles "must not obscure the fact that overall corporate investment in France is depressed, that reindustrialisation remains more of a pious wish than a reality and that France does not necessarily appear more attractive for foreign investors than its neighbours".
Macron wants to make France a world leader in AI and has announced €1.55 billion of public investment to develop quantum technologies and semiconductors.




