The French Defence Procurement Agency (DGA) has awarded Airbus Defence and Space a framework contract valued at up to €50 million (US$58.5 million) to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) components into the weapons, information, communication and cybersecurity systems used by the French armed forces. This multi-year initiative reinforces France’s ambition to strengthen technological sovereignty and accelerate the adoption of advanced AI capabilities across its defence infrastructure.
The contract extends to information systems delivered by both Airbus Defence and Space and Airbus Helicopters. Under this framework, Airbus and the DGA are working closely with the Ministerial Agency for Defence AI (AMIAD), established in May 2024 to ensure that France develops and maintains full mastery of key AI technologies, reducing reliance on external suppliers. The agreement forms a central pillar of France’s ministerial strategy on artificial intelligence for defence, which aims to secure national autonomy in this domain and expand the operational use of AI in military environments.
The first phase of work will focus on enhancing Spationav, France’s maritime surveillance system. New AI-enabled functions will allow the automated fusion of surveillance data derived from satellite systems and Spationav’s existing sensors, significantly improving situational awareness and response capabilities across maritime security missions.
Beyond maritime operations, a wide range of additional applications is under study or in early-stage development. These include intelligence analysis, cybersecurity resilience and network optimisation, such as real-time decision support to manage and improve the performance of military telecommunications networks. As the volume and diversity of data from satellites, radars, drones, smartphones and social platforms continues to surge, AI is increasingly essential for processing information at the required speed and scale.
The objective is twofold: to free personnel from time-consuming analytical tasks and to enable missions that would be impossible for humans to execute alone due to urgency or the sheer volume of data involved. A further strategic priority is ensuring the secure storage, archiving and structuring of the data that powers AI systems, supported by robust and purpose-designed digital infrastructure.
























