France's Eviden to build new supercomputer with AMD in European AI push


FILE PHOTO: An AMD logo and a computer motherboard appear in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

(Reuters) -Eviden, a division of French IT group Atos, said on Tuesday it had won a contract together with U.S. chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) to build a new supercomputer in Europe, as the region moves to close the technology gap with the U.S.

The machine, named after French computer scientist Alice Recoque, will be installed in France, with construction expected to start by the end of 2026.

It will be the second exascale supercomputer in Europe, after Jupiter in Germany, with a total cost estimated at 554 million euros ($642.5 million) over five years, Eviden said.

Supercomputers are vastly more powerful than traditional ones, and are considered exascale when their peak performance exceeds one exaflop, a metric used to measure computing power.

Eviden said the Alice Recoque, which can surpass one quintillion calculations per second, has computing power equalling that of 10 million personal computers connected together.

The global tech industry is scaling up computing and energy investments to meet the demands of artificial intelligence.

While U.S. tech giants have dominated this space, Europe is expanding its computing capacity through initiatives like EuroHPC JU, which pools resources from EU member states.

The new supercomputer project is led by France’s high-performance computing agency GENCI and operated by state research organization CEA. Funding will be provided by EuroHPCand by the Jules Verne consortium.

Philippe Lavocat, CEO of GENCI, told Reuters that sovereignty was a main request from EuroHPC and the French government.

The computer will be used to advance AI models, climate change modelling and medical research, he said.

Eviden will incorporate AMD's MI430X chips, part of the MI400 family, and the same generation of graphics processing unit slated for use by ChatGPT-maker OpenAI.

About 70% of the machine's components will be produced in Europe, compared with about half for Jupiter.

"We are embedding a new networking technology that replaces Nvidia networking used in Jupiter," said Emmanuel Le Roux, Eviden's head of advanced computing and AI.

($1 = 0.8622 euros)

(Reporting by Gianluca Lo Nostro and Leo Marchandon in Gdansk; Editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Windows running slow? Microsoft’s 11 quick fixes to speed up your PC
Meta to let users in EU 'share less personal data' for targeted ads
Drowning in pics? Tidy your Mac library with a few clicks
Flying taxis to take people to London airports in minutes from 2028
Smartphone on your kid’s Christmas list? How to know when they’re ready.
A woman's Waymo rolled up with a stunning surprise: A man hiding in the trunk
A safety report card ranks AI company efforts to protect humanity
Bitcoin hoarding company Strategy remains in Nasdaq 100
Opinion: Everyone complains about 'AI slop,' but no one can define it
Google faces $129 million French asset freeze after Russian ruling, documents show

Others Also Read