France’s OVHcloud bets on frontier AI as Europe seeks alternatives to US models
France’s OVHcloud is moving beyond cloud infrastructure into frontier AI model development, a shift that could test whether Europe can produce another serious alternative to US and Chinese AI systems.
The company, one of Europe’s leading homegrown cloud providers, plans to train a family of models from scratch and aims to open-source them once they meet its performance targets, CEO Octave Klaba told Reuters.
The move would put OVHcloud in closer comparison with Mistral AI, the Paris-based model developer that has become Europe’s most visible challenger to US AI labs.
Klaba said the economics of building advanced AI models have changed, with improvements in chips, training methods, and synthetic data reducing the cost of a project that may once have required about $1.15 billion (€1 billion) to now cost less than $230 million (€200 million).
Reuters reported that OVHcloud said one of its models has completed pre-training on Jupiter, the Germany-based EuroHPC supercomputer described as Europe’s fastest and its first exascale system, though the company has not yet disclosed detailed performance benchmarks.
This comes as European governments and enterprises are increasingly having to assess AI infrastructure through the lens of data governance and continuity of access, rather than performance alone.
Those concerns were sharpened this month after Anthropic said a US government export-control directive required it to suspend access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models by foreign nationals inside and outside the US.
Training is only the opening cost
OVHcloud’s lower cost estimate does not capture the full cost of becoming a frontier AI model provider, said Neil Shah, vice president for research and partner at Counterpoint Research.
The $230 million (€200 million) figure likely refers mainly to the initial training run, Shah said. Once trained, however, models require continued investment because they can become depreciating assets if they are not improved with fresh data.
OVHcloud would also need to spend on fine-tuning, post-training, sovereign infrastructure, storage, security, distribution, and enterprise support. It would also need enough scale to make model serving economically viable against established AI providers such as Google and Anthropic.
“Model is seen as a depreciating asset if it is not consistently trained and kept fresh with the data,” Shah said.
That makes OVHcloud’s plan a test not only of technical capability, but also of policy support and economic viability. If the company falls short, enterprises may be reluctant to shift workloads away from more established models.
The lower training cost could still give OVHcloud a credible starting point, said Charlie Dai, principal analyst at Forrester.
The budget range can be enough to produce a credible frontier model as efficiency gains reduce the cost of entry, Dai said. But enterprise competitiveness will depend on sustained capabilities beyond training, including inference efficiency, data pipelines, evaluation frameworks, and ecosystem reach.
Buyers need proof
OVHcloud’s plan remains an expression of intent rather than demonstrated capability, said Sanchit Vir Gogia, chief analyst at Greyhound Research, pointing to the absence of published benchmarks and other details.
“$200 million now buys a serious training run,” Gogia said. “It does not buy a serious enterprise AI franchise.”
Gogia said questions around sovereignty also extend to the infrastructure used to train the model, noting that pre-training was run on Jupiter rather than on infrastructure owned or controlled by OVHcloud.
The system is a publicly owned European supercomputer in Germany that runs on American silicon, Gogia said, adding that this shows how partial European AI sovereignty remains.
CIOs will need evidence that the models can be supported in production, governed effectively, audited when needed, and exited without major disruption.
Gogia said a European-owned model could reduce some dependence on US and Chinese providers, but would not remove jurisdictional risk. “Sovereignty does not abolish the off switch,” he said. “It changes whose hand rests upon it.”
OVHcloud’s move into model development could also alter the lock-in risks enterprises need to assess, Gogia said. Customers may be able to move cloud infrastructure later, but find it harder to shift AI workloads once applications and processes are built around a provider’s models and governance tools.France’s OVHcloud bets on frontier AI as Europe seeks alternatives to US models – ComputerworldRead More