Austria Urges EU to Explore Hosting Anthropic Amid AI Access Concerns
Austria has urged the European Union to examine the possibility of establishing a presence for Anthropic within the bloc to counter efforts by the United States to restrict foreign access to the AI company’s most advanced models.
In a letter released by the Austrian government and addressed to EU Technology Commissioner Henna Virkkunen, Austria’s State Secretary for Digitalisation, Alexander Proell, argued that Europe must ensure it remains connected to major technological innovations. He said the region should take proactive steps to strengthen its position in the rapidly evolving artificial intelligence sector.
Austria Calls for Strategic EU Role
Proell proposed that the European Union should jointly explore the strategic establishment and participation of Anthropic within the bloc. He said Europe could offer the company legal certainty, access to a large market, investment opportunities and a values-based environment that aligns with its principles.
However, the letter did not outline how such an arrangement could be achieved. Proell also acknowledged that many observers would question whether the proposal was realistic.
Europe Must Shape Its Own Technological Future
Despite the expected scepticism, Proell argued that the debate should not focus solely on the practical challenges. Instead, he said Europe must decide whether it wants to shape its own technological future or continue relying on decisions made elsewhere.
He wrote that the central issue was not whether the proposal would be easy to implement. Rather, he said Europeans should consider whether they are prepared to become architects of their technological future instead of remaining administrators of choices made outside the continent.
Anthropic Yet to Respond
Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Austria’s proposal.
Meanwhile, the discussion comes as the European Commission continues efforts to strengthen the region’s technology sector. Earlier this month, the Commission proposed legislation aimed at boosting domestic cloud computing, artificial intelligence and semiconductor industries. The measures are intended to reduce the European Union’s dependence on major U.S. technology companies, despite criticism from the U.S. government over the bloc’s regulatory approach towards the industry.
The proposal reflects the European Union’s broader ambition to improve technological resilience and expand its capacity in strategic digital industries while reducing reliance on external providers.
With inputs from Reuters

