France 2030: €54 Billion to Reinvent the French Economy

Launched on 12 October 2021 by President Emmanuel Macron at the Élysée Palace, France 2030 is a €54 billion national investment plan — the most ambitious French industrial strategy since the Commissariat au Plan of the post-war era. It aims to position France as a leader in reindustrialization, ecological transition, and technological sovereignty by the end of the decade. As of early 2026, €38 billion has been deployed across 7,457 projects, mobilizing 196,824 direct jobs and generating 6,103 patents. The program is administered by the Secrétariat Général pour l'Investissement (SGPI) under the Prime Minister's authority.

The 10 Strategic Objectives

France 2030 is structured around 10 objectives that define where France intends to lead by 2030. Each objective channels billions into research, industrial scale-up, and workforce development:

#ObjectiveBudgetKey Target
1Small Modular Nuclear Reactors€1BBuild innovative SMRs by 2030
2Green Hydrogen Leader€2.3BProduce 2 electrolyzers by 2030; 6.5 GW capacity
3Decarbonize Industry€5.6BCut industrial emissions 35% vs 2015
42 Million Electric Vehicles€2.5BProduce 2M EVs annually by 2030
5Low-Carbon Aircraft€1.2BFirst low-carbon regional aircraft by 2030
6Healthy, Sustainable Food€2.3B3rd agricultural revolution: robotics, biocontrol, genetics
720 Biomedicines€3BProduce 20+ biotherapies/biomedicals made in France
8Cultural & Creative Industries€1BInvest in studios, IP, immersive content
9Deep Sea & Space€1.5BFund deep-sea exploration and space ventures
10Invest in Talent & Training€2.5BTrain the workforce for emerging industries

The remaining budget is allocated to cross-cutting priorities including semiconductors, AI, and quantum computing (€9.5B), battery gigafactories and nuclear (€8B+), and health innovation infrastructure.

Scale and Impact: The Numbers

According to the official France 2030 dashboard, the program has achieved the following as of Q4 2025:

MetricValueContext
Total budget€54 billionLargest EU national innovation plan
Deployed capital€38B+70%+ deployment rate in 4 years
Projects funded7,457Across all 13 French regions
Jobs mobilized196,824Direct employment in funded projects
Sustained jobs156,000+Long-term positions created
Patents filed6,103IP generated by funded projects
SMEs/startups funded4,000+55% of beneficiaries are SMEs
Industrial sites1,800+New or expanded manufacturing facilities

The Institutional Architecture

France 2030 operates through a multi-layered institutional framework. The SGPI (reporting to the Prime Minister) defines strategy. Execution is delegated to four operators:

Bpifrance — France's public investment bank, manages startup grants, innovation loans, and equity investments. It administers roughly 60% of France 2030 funds flowing to the private sector. See our Bpifrance deep dive.

ADEME — the ecological transition agency, manages funds for energy, circular economy, and decarbonization projects.

ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche) — manages academic and fundamental research funding.

Caisse des Dépôts — manages long-term investment vehicles and territorial development programs.

International Context: How France Compares

France 2030 sits within a global wave of industrial policy. Compared to peer programs:

ProgramCountryBudgetFocus
France 2030France€54BReindustrialization, green transition, AI, health
CHIPS ActUSA$280BSemiconductors, R&D, manufacturing
Inflation Reduction ActUSA$369BClean energy, EVs, climate
NextGenerationEUEU€806BRecovery, digital, green (France receives €40B)
High-Tech Strategy 2025Germany€15BInnovation, deep tech

What distinguishes France 2030 is its execution speed — 70%+ of funds deployed in under 4 years — and its sectoral breadth, covering everything from nuclear reactors to biomedicines to cultural content. The program has been praised by the OECD and the IMF as a model for mission-oriented innovation policy.

Choose France: The FDI Engine

France 2030 works in tandem with the Choose France summits at Versailles. In January 2025, the 8th edition secured a record €40.8 billion across 53 projects, including €20.8B for AI infrastructure — reflecting the program's pull on global capital. Since 2018, Choose France has generated €87.7 billion in commitments and 163,000+ jobs. France has been Europe's #1 FDI destination for 6 consecutive years according to EY's Attractiveness Survey.

What Comes Next: 2026–2030

The program enters its second phase with a focus on scaling funded projects to industrial production. Key milestones ahead include: first EPR2 reactor construction at Penly (EDF), Verkor's battery gigafactory reaching full capacity in Dunkirk, the Mistral AI sovereign compute buildout with 18,000 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs, and France's bid to host the world's first exascale supercomputer via the EuroHPC initiative. For investors, the opportunity window is the next 24–36 months, as many France 2030–funded companies transition from R&D to revenue. See our investment strategy guide and tax incentives overview.