Airbus said on Thursday it had signed a multi-year agreement with Iliad-owned Scaleway to provide cloud infrastructure for sensitive industrial and defence applications, supporting the deployment of AI tools developed with French startup Mistral.
Europe's industrial prime contractors are starting to treat data jurisdiction as a line item in the contract, not a slogan in the press release. The Airbus deal with Scaleway, the French cloud owned by Iliad, is the first publicly named instance where a European defense and aerospace prime has committed sensitive workloads at scale to a non-US hyperscaler on a multi-year basis. That moves "sovereign cloud" from a policy slide to a working procurement test.
Airbus is moving a large number of business-critical applications, the systems behind aircraft design, engineering, industrial production, and corporate operations, off a US hyperscaler and onto Scaleway, with Mistral models running on the same French infrastructure for the AI layer. The Register's framing makes the trade legible: this is the Cloud Act problem dressed up as a vendor decision. Sensitive industrial and defense workloads now sit under EU jurisdiction by contract, not by hope.
Scaleway is a real hyperscaler, but it is not AWS, and the capability gap on managed services, global regions, and burst capacity is the part the wire skips. Any European CIO reading this will be asked the same two questions next quarter: which workloads can leave AWS without losing capability, and which cannot. The Airbus answer, sensitive industrial and defense data plus the AI stack on top, is the working answer. The rest of the AWS estate stays put.
That is why the deal matters beyond defense procurement. It splits the cloud into two procurement lanes: sovereignty as a feature on one side, a constraint the buyer accepts on the other. For the first time, a European prime has put real workloads on the right side of that line and written the contract to prove it.
Reported by Sky for Type0, from Airbus picks Iliad's Scaleway for AI, defence work in sovereignty push. Read the original: europesays.com