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There’s more to life than LLMs, or why Europe needn’t fall behind in AI adoption 

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Some races are won or lost in the first moments after the starting whistle, so let’s get this out of the way: as a whole, Europe is not competitive with the U.S. or China in developing the high-scale, foundational large language models (LLMs) on which the AI economy depends.  

The continent’s sole noteworthy LLM, France’s Mistral, is the exception that proves the rule, and still substantially smaller than those of global market leaders like OpenAI, Google, Meta, Deepseek or Anthropic. The sums being invested into these American and Chinese models make catching up unlikely.  

Does this mean that Europe has lost its chance to benefit from the AI revolution on equal terms with the U.S.?  

Not necessarily. The value of AI mostly manifests in how firms use the technology, says Matthias Tauber, who leads Boston Consulting Group’s operations in Europe, Middle East, South America, and Africa. “When it comes to AI adoption, we don’t see a difference between European or U.S. companies. Whether they will be winners, yes or no, will be determined by who drives adoption faster,” he tells Fortune.  

Dominic King, EMEA research lead at Dublin-based consultancy and IT firm Accenture, agrees: “European companies are well-positioned to add value by building applications on top of general-purpose U.S. models.”  

In other words, it’s still all to play for. 

Which European companies are ahead? 

When it comes to AI adoption, Europe still has its work cut out for it. According to the European Parliament, only 13.5% of EU companies were using AI as of last year. While that’s no doubt increased substantially since, it’s a far cry from Europe’s 75% target. It’s also likely to be well behind the U.S., with McKinsey estimating a 45-70% transatlantic adoption gap in the same year.  

Zoom in, however, and you’ll see a more nuanced picture, with many European firms at least keeping up with their global competitors.  

“When it comes to AI adoption, we don’t see a difference between European or U.S. companies. Whether they will be winners, yes or no, will be determined by who drives adoption faster.”Matthias Tauber, Head of BCG Europe, Middle East, South America and Africa

Much depends on the size of the business. Accenture research on Europe found a clear relationship between the strength of an organisation’s AI capabilities, such as its talent and data governance, and its AI deployment. Larger companies are “typically able to invest more, have stronger change management skills and benefit from larger datasets,” King says. 

Which companies are ahead also depends on their sector. Alongside the obvious candidates like IT, many of Europe’s leading industries—like automotive, biopharma, fintech and aerospace—are among those where AI significantly impacts core activities, rather than just supporting functions. This makes them both ripe to benefit from AI deployment, and vulnerable to external disruption of the kind already playing out in electric vehicles. 

That blend of threat and opportunity has made firms in these sectors more likely to actively lean into the new technology. “Here we see early adopters boosting productivity with AI, for example, by accelerating drug discovery, conducting more accurate simulations and improving product design,” adds King. 

Accenture itself, while best understood as a multinational with European headquarters rather than as a distinctly European company, is among those early adopters. In 2023, Accenture announced it would set aside $3 billion to integrate AI internally and to become experts on it for its clients, per previous Fortune reporting.  

The firm booked $4.1 billion for GenAI work, and $1.8 billion in revenue, as of its Q3 earnings call in June, with embedded AI, deep industrial knowledge and energy efficiency emerging as key themes. It is aiming to build an 80,000-strong data and AI workforce by 2026, having already hit 75,000.  

Larger companies are “typically able to invest more, have stronger change management skills and benefit from larger datasets.”

Dominic King, EMEA research lead, Accenture

Schneider Electric is another European company going big on AI. The industrial technology and energy management group generated over €100 million (around $116.9 million) in business value from embedding AI into its operations, Gwenaelle Avice Huet, its executive vice president of operations in Europe, tells Fortune. That figure, which actually dates back to as early as 2022, is a result of cost savings and operational efficiencies it made via its “self-healing” supply chain platform.  

The French multinational uses AI in its supply chain, financial advisory and customer service. “Our internal Jo-ChatGPT platform enables employees to securely leverage generative AI, boosting productivity and creativity while maintaining data integrity,” Avice Huet adds. Externally, AI is also used in Schneider Electric’s flagship products, such as energy management and industrial automation.  

The main way that Schneider Electric benefits from the AI boom is more direct, though, due to its role as a leading global supplier of electrical components used in data centers, alongside others like the Netherlands’ ASML, a key technology supplier for advanced semiconductor manufacturers. 

To give a sense of the size of the market they are supplying, in the EU alone €100 billion in data center investments are projected by 2030, according to the European Data Centre Association, although this is likely to be substantially lower than the equivalent in the U.S., which McKinsey estimates will alone receive around 40% of global data center investment this decade. 

Some of this investment is coming from companies that you wouldn’t normally call tech firms, with EU businesses such as Lidl’s parent company, Schwarz Gruppe, eyeing their own data centers, partly from a desire to reduce Europe’s dependence on American capabilities.  

Not everyone is proving so enthusiastic, however. As in other countries, there are also prominent sectors of the European economy that tend to lag in AI adoption, such as utilities and telecommunications—ironically, sectors that themselves underpin the rollout of AI. King explains that these struggle with fragmentation, access to capital, and weak AI capabilities due to low AI literacy and a lack of concrete use cases with clear return on investment. 

A double infrastructure gap 

Despite some stragglers, the big picture is of soaring demand for AI, but even with the vast sums being invested in European data centers, supply is still struggling to keep up. As a result, infrastructure risks becoming a critical bottleneck, making AI more expensive and slower to use. Data center vacancy rates—a measure of their available additional capacity—are at an all-time low on the continent.  

AI adoption is also likely to come up against another infrastructure bottleneck, in the energy system. Data centers use substantial electricity—Goldman Sachs predicts they could add 40-50% to Europe’s power demand over ten years.  

This causes two problems. First, the additional burden on the grid will apply upward pressure on Europe’s high energy prices, which already weigh on industrial competitiveness. Second, if Europe’s energy infrastructure investments can’t keep up with data center demand, then it risks constraining AI adoption for European businesses. 

It’s not just the lack of power per se. Data centers depend on an uninterrupted energy supply, but the product they facilitate creates demand spikes that make outages more likely. If there’s too much volatility, it can impede their operations, add costs and disincentivize further investment.  

“If you’re a data center operator, you’re sat in the middle of double uncertainty, with more volatility coming in on the demand side and more volatility on the energy market side,” says Jade Batstone, cofounder and CEO of Zendo, a startup helping data centers become more energy efficient.  

The danger for Europe’s competitiveness is that its economy could fall relatively further behind on both AI and energy prices, in the absence of accelerated, simultaneous investment into both sets of infrastructure.  

It would be a mistake to see AI only as a problem for the energy sector, however. It can also be part of the solution. The International Energy Agency (IEA) projects that AI could unlock an additional 175 gigawatts of global energy capacity simply by improving the efficiency of grids, which is more than just a marginal efficiency gain: it’s higher than the total projected global energy demand for data centers by 2030, and five times more than Europe’s 2030 projected power demand

Standing firm on going green  

This points to the one area where Europe has something of an advantage over the U.S.—the intersection between data centers and renewable power.  

Europe has “a strong legacy” in data centers, clean technology and manufacturing, meaning its competitive edge lies in “building the resilient, sustainable infrastructure that powers AI,” argues Avice Huet, pointing to Schneider Electric’s partnership with Nvidia on AI-native data center designs. 

“While high energy costs may weigh on Europe’s competitiveness today, particularly in energy-intensive industries, smart deployment of AI combined with the continent’s leadership in renewables technologies such as offshore wind could help reduce both emissions and costs in the long-term,” King adds.  

Such an outcome is particularly appealing for businesses that are committed to both AI and decarbonization, with large tech firms such as Google setting the bar with commitments to be fully powered by renewable energy by 2030. Indeed, BNP Paribas notes that most hyperscalers favor renewables even on economic grounds alone, owing to the lower operational costs from solar, geothermal and wind. 

But fully renewable data centers may not be so straightforward to achieve, notes Zendo cofounder and COO Drew Barrett: “You’re going to really struggle to do that in grids that haven’t deeply decarbonized already.”  

This is where Europe’s advantage comes in. While no one has hit the full decarbonization bar yet, renewables did generate 50% of all electricity used in the European Union last year, per the IEA—comfortably the highest of the major economies. Brussels has also set the goal for data centers to be climate neutral by 2030, requiring them to report on energy consumption, how much of that is renewable, and water usage.  

While some may see such regulation as an additional barrier to investment, Avice Huet argues that “decarbonization is not a constraint on competitiveness; it is central to Europe’s ambitions for growth and industrial strength.” 

This position mirrors the EU’s Clean Industrial Deal, a strategy to build a competitive niche in clean technologies, which could extend to ‘green’ data centers—especially as the U.S. looks to fossil fuels to power its computing needs, following President Trump’s AI action plan, which was notably silent on renewables.  

But while European lawmakers’ studied focus on consumers over businesses has resulted in world-leading laws on data protection and sustainability, Tauber says it has still complicated the private sector’s ability to actually compete. Given the complexity and fragmentation of EU legislation, which is interpreted differently across member states and sits on top of multiple layers of domestic law, Europe should deregulate, he says. 

There has been some progress in simplifying regulations. The EU’s AI Continent Action Plan proposes streamlined permitting for data centers that meet energy and water efficiency standards, meaning green data centers are preferentially incentivized. Avice Huet sounds an optimistic note: “With a continued focus on cutting the red tape, electrification, digitalization, and grid modernisation, Europe can emerge stronger, more resilient, and more competitive on the world stage.”  



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SpaceX to offer insider shares at record-setting $800 billion valuation

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SpaceX is preparing to sell insider shares in a transaction that would value Elon Musk’s rocket and satellite maker at as much as $800 billion, people familiar with the matter said, reclaiming the title of the world’s most valuable private company. 

The details, discussed by SpaceX’s board of directors on Thursday at its Starbase hub in Texas, could change based on interest from insider sellers and buyers or other factors, said some of the people, who asked not to be identified as the information isn’t public. SpaceX is also exploring a possible initial public offering as soon as late next year, one of the people said. 

Another person briefed on the matter said that the price under discussion for the sale of some employees and investors’ shares is higher than $400 apiece, which would value SpaceX at between $750 billion and $800 billion. The company wouldn’t raise any funds though this planned sale, though a successful offering at such levels would catapult it past the record of $500 billion valuation achieved by OpenAI in October.

Elon Musk on Saturday denied that SpaceX is raising money at a $800 billion valuation without addressing Bloomberg’s reporting on the planned offering of insiders’ shares. 

“SpaceX has been cash flow positive for many years and does periodic stock buybacks twice a year to provide liquidity for employees and investors,” Musk said in a post on his social media platform X. 

The share sale price under discussion would be a substantial increase from the $212 a share set in July, when the company raised money and sold shares at a valuation of $400 billion. The Wall Street Journal and Financial Times earlier reported the $800 billion valuation target.

News of SpaceX’s valuation sent shares of EchoStar Corp., a satellite TV and wireless company, up as much as 18%. Last month, EchoStar had agreed to sell spectrum licenses to SpaceX for $2.6 billion, adding to an earlier agreement to sell about $17 billion in wireless spectrum to Musk’s company.

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The world’s most prolific rocket launcher, SpaceX dominates the space industry with its Falcon 9 rocket that lifts satellites and people to orbit.

SpaceX is also the industry leader in providing internet services from low-Earth orbit through Starlink, a system of more than 9,000 satellites that is far ahead of competitors including Amazon.com Inc.’s Amazon Leo.

Elite Group

SpaceX is among an elite group of companies that have the ability to raise funds at $100 billion-plus valuations while delaying or denying they have any plan to go public. 

An IPO of the company at an $800 billion value would vault SpaceX into another rarefied group — the 20 largest public companies, a few notches below Musk’s Tesla Inc. 

If SpaceX sold 5% of the company at that valuation, it would have to sell $40 billion of stock — making it the biggest IPO of all time, well above Saudi Aramco’s $29 billion listing in 2019. The firm sold just 1.5% of the company in that offering, a much smaller slice than the majority of publicly traded firms make available.

A listing would also subject SpaceX to the volatility of being a public company, versus private firms whose valuations are closely guarded secrets. Space and defense company IPOs have had a mixed reception in 2025. Karman Holdings Inc.’s stock has nearly tripled since its debut, while Firefly Aerospace Inc. and Voyager Technologies Inc. have plunged by double-digit percentages since their debuts.

SpaceX executives have repeatedly floated the idea of spinning off SpaceX’s Starlink business into a separate, publicly traded company — a concept President Gwynne Shotwell first suggested in 2020. 

However, Musk cast doubt on the prospect publicly over the years and Chief Financial Officer Bret Johnsen said in 2024 that a Starlink IPO would be something that would take place more likely “in the years to come.”

The Information, citing people familiar with the discussions, separately reported on Friday that SpaceX has told investors and financial institution representatives that it’s aiming for an IPO of the entire company in the second half of next year.

Read More: How to Buy SpaceX: A Guide for the Eager, Pre-IPO

A so-called tender or secondary offering, through which employees and some early shareholders can sell shares, provides investors in closely held companies such as SpaceX a way to generate liquidity.

SpaceX is working to develop its new Starship vehicle, advertised as the most powerful rocket ever developed to loft huge numbers of Starlink satellites as well as carry cargo and people to moon and, eventually, Mars.



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National Park Service drops free admission on MLK Day and Juneteenth while adding Trump’s birthday

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The National Park Service will offer free admission to U.S. residents on President Donald Trump’s birthday next year — which also happens to be Flag Day — but is eliminating the benefit for Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth.

The new list of free admission days for Americans is the latest example of the Trump administration downplaying America’s civil rights history while also promoting the president’s image, name and legacy.

Last year, the list of free days included Martin Luther King Jr Day and Juneteenth — which is June 19 — but not June 14, Trump’s birthday.

The new free-admission policy takes effect Jan. 1 and was one of several changes announced by the Park Service late last month, including higher admission fees for international visitors.

The other days of free park admission in 2026 are Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Constitution Day, Veterans Day, President Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday (Oct. 27) and the anniversary of the creation of the Park Service (Aug. 25).

Eliminating Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth, which commemorates the day in 1865 when the last enslaved Americans were emancipated, removes two of the nation’s most prominent civil rights holidays.

Some civil rights leaders voiced opposition to the change after news about it began spreading over the weekend.

“The raw & rank racism here stinks to high heaven,” Harvard Kennedy School professor Cornell William Brooks, a former president of the NAACP, wrote on social media about the new policy.

Kristen Brengel, a spokesperson for the National Parks Conservation Association, said that while presidential administrations have tweaked the free days in the past, the elimination of Martin Luther King Jr. Day is particularly concerning. For one, the day has become a popular day of service for community groups that use the free day to perform volunteer projects at parks.

That will now be much more expensive, said Brengel, whose organization is a nonprofit that advocates for the park system.

“Not only does it recognize an American hero, it’s also a day when people go into parks to clean them up,” Brengel said. “Martin Luther King Jr. deserves a day of recognition … For some reason, Black history has repeatedly been targeted by this administration, and it shouldn’t be.”

Some Democratic lawmakers also weighed in to object to the new policy.

“The President didn’t just add his own birthday to the list, he removed both of these holidays that mark Black Americans’ struggle for civil rights and freedom,” said Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada. “Our country deserves better.”

A spokesperson for the National Park Service did not immediately respond to questions on Saturday seeking information about the reasons behind the changes.

Since taking office, Trump has sought to eliminate programs seen as promoting diversity across the federal government, actions that have erased or downplayed America’s history of racism as well as the civil rights victories of Black Americans.

Self-promotion is an old habit of the president’s and one he has continued in his second term. He unsuccessfully put himself forwardfor the Nobel Peace Prize, renamed the U.S. Institute of Peace after himself, sought to put his name on the planned NFL stadium in the nation’s capital and had a new children’s savings program named after him.

Some Republican lawmakers have suggested putting his visage on Mount Rushmore and the $100 bill.



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JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says Europe has a ‘real problem’

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JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon called out slow bureaucracy in Europe in a warning that a “weak” continent poses a major economic risk to the US.

“Europe has a real problem,” Dimon said Saturday at the Reagan National Defense Forum. “They do some wonderful things on their safety nets. But they’ve driven business out, they’ve driven investment out, they’ve driven innovation out. It’s kind of coming back.”

While he praised some European leaders who he said were aware of the issues, he cautioned politics is “really hard.” 

Dimon, leader of the biggest US bank, has long said that the risk of a fragmented Europe is among the major challenges facing the world. In his letter to shareholders released earlier this year, he said that Europe has “some serious issues to fix.”

On Saturday, he praised the creation of the euro and Europe’s push for peace. But he warned that a reduction in military efforts and challenges trying to reach agreement within the European Union are threatening the continent.

“If they fragment, then you can say that America first will not be around anymore,” Dimon said. “It will hurt us more than anybody else because they are a major ally in every single way, including common values, which are really important.”

He said the US should help.

“We need a long-term strategy to help them become strong,” Dimon said. “A weak Europe is bad for us.”

The administration of President Donald Trump issued a new national security strategy that directed US interests toward the Western Hemisphere and protection of the homeland while dismissing Europe as a continent headed toward “civilizational erasure.”

Read More: Trump’s National Security Strategy Veers Inward in Telling Shift

JPMorgan has been ramping up its push to spur more investments in the national defense sector. In October, the bank announced that it would funnel $1.5 trillion into industries that bolster US economic security and resiliency over the next 10 years — as much as $500 billion more than what it would’ve provided anyway. 

Dimon said in the statement that it’s “painfully clear that the United States has allowed itself to become too reliant on unreliable sources of critical minerals, products and manufacturing.”

Investment banker Jay Horine oversees the effort, which Dimon called “100% commercial.” It will focus on four areas: supply chain and advanced manufacturing; defense and aerospace; energy independence and resilience; and frontier and strategic technologies. 

The bank will also invest as much as $10 billion of its own capital to help certain companies expand, innovate or accelerate strategic manufacturing.

Separately on Saturday, Dimon praised Trump for finding ways to roll back bureaucracy in the government.

“There is no question that this administration is trying to bring an axe to some of the bureaucracy that held back America,” Dimon said. “That is a good thing and we can do it and still keep the world safe, for safe food and safe banks and all the stuff like that.”



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