The global AI race is often framed as a battle between the United States and China. But at VivaTech, Europe is expected to make the case for an entirely different model.
In recent years, Silicon Valley has pushed aggressively toward scale, speed, and market dominance. Europe, on the other hand, is providing a counterbalance: a vision for artificial intelligence centered on industrial competitiveness and technological sovereignty.
That divergence has become more visible over the past year. While American AI companies continue racing to release increasingly powerful models, European policymakers have focused heavily on regulation, transparency, privacy, and infrastructure independence. Critics might claim this approach restrains innovation. Supporters argue Europe is attempting to lead with governance.
The debate will loom large at VivaTech 2026, which has become a showcase for Europe’s broader AI ambitions.
Where Europe thinks it can win
Europe’s AI ambitions are also being shaped by the industries it has historically dominated. While Silicon Valley’s AI boom has largely revolved around consumer platforms and foundation models, many European companies are focused on applying AI to complex, heavily regulated systems already embedded into everyday life:
Manufacturing. Logistics. Healthcare. Cybersecurity. Energy infrastructure. These industries are all becoming major AI battlegrounds and require more than powerful models alone — they demand operational expertise, compliance frameworks, enterprise coordination, and long-term institutional trust.
That dynamic could play to Europe’s strengths.
Rather than competing directly with Silicon Valley on consumer scale, Europe must position itself around industrial AI — the systems that quietly power supply chains, transportation networks, healthcare operations, and critical infrastructure. In many ways, that shift mirrors the broader evolution of AI, as the industry moves beyond experimentation and toward deployment inside large organizations.
At VivaTech 2026, those conversations are expected to take center stage.
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