Three years and already in the cockpits. The French startup has just gained access to four Airbus divisions, and it does not intend to stop there.
The Carrousel du Louvre, in Paris, is hosting this Wednesday, May 28, the “ AI Now Summit » by Mistral AI, an event organized right on the third anniversary of the startup founded by Arthur Mensch, Timothée Lacroix and Guillaume Lample. There was nothing commemorative about the occasion. Among the announcements of the day, it is the partnership with Airbus which sets the tone: the European aeronautics giant has signed a licensing agreement covering the entire Mistral AI suitewith deployments planned locally, in a trusted cloud or in any environment deemed relevant.
Airbus opens its four divisions in Mistral
The agreement is not limited to commercial aviation. Mistral AI now operates on four Airbus activities: commercial aircraft, helicopters, defense and space. The executive director of digital at Airbus, Catherine Jestin, speaks of “high-impact use cases” in “trusted and responsible” AI. The co-founder and technical director of Mistral, Timothée Lacroix, promises to help improve flight safety.
In practice, Mistral’s AI could take charge of the automatic drafting of technical documents (thousands of pages of manuals essential to the construction of an airplane or a helicopter), and assist engineers throughout the entire design cycle. Airbus will also benefit fromdirect access to Mistral researchers and influence on the product roadmap, which makes it a two-way partnership: Airbus buys AI, but it also helps shape it.
A detail which sets the level of ambition: Airbus has until now been working with Palantir Technologies via its Skywise platform, dedicated to the maintenance and exploitation of aeronautical data. With Mistral, the cursor moves up a notch in the value chain, from maintenance to design and simulation. Mistral is not replacing Palantir but is positioning itself upstream.
BMW, EDF, and a suite dedicated to industry
The same day, Mistral announced partnerships with BMW and EDF. At BMW, the startup becomes the central partner of the “Large Industry Model” initiative, a program which aims to train models capable of reasoning on complex industrial data (simulations of automobile crashes, for example). These announcements are added to a list of industrial clients which is starting to weigh in: CMA CGM (100 million euros over five years), TotalEnergies, Stellantis, SAP, Accenture.
To strengthen this offer, Mistral launched “ Mistral for Industrial Engineering ”, a suite that combines physics models, engineering expertise and robotics. The sequel is based on the acquisition, announced the previous week, of the Austrian company Emmi AI, specialized in digital twins faithful to the laws of physics: fluid dynamics, solid mechanics, multi-physics systems. On the infrastructure side, Mistral announced the opening in the third quarter of 2026 of a 10 megawatt computing center in Les Ulisin Essonne, dedicated to inference.
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Source :
AIrbus
