The European Union’s AI Continent Action Plan rests on five pillars designed to make Europe a global AI power. From 2026, Finnish AI Region takes on a new gateway role at the centre of the architecture — backed by a first term in which it reached over 11,300 people and helped raise over €26 million for client companies.
Text by Martti Asikainen, 29.5.2026 | Photo created with AI
The EU’s push to lead in artificial intelligence is built on five pillars set out in the AI Continent Action Plan, published by the European Commission in April 2025: computing infrastructure, data for AI, strategic AI innovation and adoption, AI skills and talent, and regulatory simplification.
For Finnish companies and public organisations, a practical entry point into that architecture exists close to home. We’re of course talking about us — Finnish AI Region, known as FAIR.
So what does the EU’s AI infrastructure actually look like on the ground? Within the plan’s broader framework, the Commission has put in place a set of concrete tools that businesses and researchers can use directly.
1. AI Factories are large-scale supercomputing facilities that give companies and researchers access to the serious processing power needed to train advanced AI models. The best-known example in the Nordic region is LUMI, the pan-European supercomputer sitting in Kajaani, northern Finland. Across Europe, 19 AI Factories are now up and running, with even more powerful AI Gigafactories in the pipeline.
2. TEFs — Testing and Experimentation Facilities — are dedicated environments where companies can try out AI applications in realistic, sector-specific settings before committing to full deployment. Think manufacturing floors, healthcare settings, or agricultural contexts.
3. AI-on-Demand platforms bring together AI tools, datasets, and expertise in one accessible place online, particularly useful for researchers and smaller innovators who need resources but do not have the infrastructure to build their own.
4. Digital Innovation Hubs (EDIHs), which are really the glue holding the whole network together. These are regionally based organisations that help companies and public bodies navigate all of the above, find the right funding, and build the skills they need. Their services are free or heavily subsidised, and they are open to businesses of all sizes as well as public sector organisations.
From 2026, our role gets bigger. EDIHs across Europe are taking on a new function as gateways to the entire EU AI infrastructure — a one-stop-shop model that means organisations no longer need to navigate the system alone.
In practice, if your company needs access to an AI Factory, a testing facility, or specialist expertise from another European hub, we are the place to start. We will either provide the service directly or point you to exactly the right partner, whether that is in Finland or elsewhere in Europe.
Two new services are launching as part of this expanded role. The AI Helpdesk is open to anyone who needs guidance on AI — it will help organisations find their way to the right tools and services across the EU’s AI infrastructure. Alongside that, we are introducing an AI-powered assessment tool to help SMEs check whether their technology solutions comply with the EU’s AI Act, before any issues arise.
The short answer is with most organisations. We work with businesses of all sizes. From startups and SMEs to larger companies and public sector bodies, and most of our services are free of charge. Our main focus areas are health technology, smart cities, and digital services, but we are open to organisations from any sector.
We are one of 83 EDIHs receiving renewed EU funding as of October 2025, with 102 hubs holding recognised status across EU member states and associated countries. Together, we form a network designed to ensure that no company, regardless of size or location inside the EU, has to figure out AI adoption on its own.
Whether the one-stop-shop model delivers on that promise in practice will depend on how well hubs coordinate across borders. That will become clearer as 2026 unfolds. But for Finnish organisations, the starting point is straightforward:, since we are the door. Feel free to contact us.