

The formal signing ceremony took place in the presence of Dorothee Bär, German Federal Minister for Research, Technology and Space, and Philippe Baptiste, French Minister for Higher Education, Research and Space. The aim of the ambitious project is to establish a powerful European AI player at the intersection of cutting-edge research, industry, and society.
The new binational center bundles the excellent research capacities of both countries to provide viable answers to the rapid global AI transformation. In the face of intense international competition, the center makes a decisive strategic contribution to Europe's digital sovereignty. Through a permanent, institutionalized structure and the close integration of science and industry, the development of trustworthy, transparent and competitive AI technologies "Made in Europe" is to be accelerated.
"The founding of the open, French-German Center marks a decisive milestone for the future of European AI," explains Prof. Dr. Antonio Krüger, CEO of DFKI. "Through the concrete integration of the excellent AI research of Germany and France, we are moving beyond mere declarations of intent to actively create a foundation for Europe's digital sovereignty in artificial intelligence."
Dr Bruno Sportisse, Chairman and CEO of Inria, adds: "This Franco-German Center is one answer to the AI challenge. We have to align our strategies and to deliver impactful projects if we want to play the race at the forefront of research, technology and innovation. This requires to have trustworthy partnerships, a joint long-term roadmap and the ability to leverage with our ecosystems (AI clusters): this is what we build with DFKI."
The integrated "Project Factory" at the core of the Center functions as an agile innovation engine to flexibly transform bilateral research and development projects into tangible prototypes and software solutions. Furthermore, the explicitly open concept of the new Center promotes the active participation of other academic partners from both countries.
Furthermore, companies from both countries will receive direct access to projects in order to develop innovative AI applications in key sectors such as Industry 4.0, health, and mobility, and to bring them swiftly to market maturity. This research transfer is flanked by talent promotion and researcher mobility programs, which turns the Center into a highly attractive magnet for top global talent through bilateral career paths and joint summer schools. The profile is complemented by the establishment of a scientific think tank that develops well-founded recommendations for action on the social impact of AI, strengthens AI literacy among the population, and advises stakeholders from politics and business on issues regarding regulation, ethics, and standards.
The formal signing within the framework of Vivatech underlines the high political priority of cooperation for both governments.
Dorothee Bär, Federal Minister for Research, Technology and Space, declares on the occasion of the ceremony: “In today’s world, artificial intelligence (AI) is a decisive competitive factor. Hence, it was named as a key technology in the High-Tech Agenda Germany. We have to prevent Europe from being sidelined in the global AI landscape. The binational French-German Center for AI as collaboration between DFKI and Inria will help to seize emerging opportunities and leverage the combined expertise of France and Germany to drive Europe forward. It will conduct joint research on secure and trustworthy artificial intelligence, fully aligned with European standards. This partnership exemplifies how close Franco German cooperation can shape a stronger, more innovative European AI ecosystem.”
The binational Center is deliberately not designed as a closed system. The integrated Project Factory is open to further AI research clusters, universities and scientific organizations from Germany, France and beyond, as well as partners from industry and public administration, to weave a seamless European AI network.
Following the formal signing on June 18 , the step-by-step establishment of the structures as well as the setting up of dedicated offices at the respective locations of DFKI and Inria in Germany and France will begin from July 2026, followed by the launch of the first operational programs in late 2026.
Further information can be found at: https://french-german-ai-center.org
Spokesperson, DFKI
Press Officer, Inria