European AI powerhouse Mistral AI has acquired Emmi AI, a physics-focused AI startup founded in Linz, Austria.
Emmi brings deep expertise in industrial simulation and physics-based modelling. With the deal, Mistral hopes to be the dominant AI partner for manufacturers and industrial enterprises operating in high-stakes sectors, including aerospace, automotive, semiconductors, and energy.
Emmi AI is developing physics AI models to accelerate industrial simulation workflows. The company counts more than 30 researchers and engineers on its team.
Emmi’s co-founders and the full team are expected to join Mistral AI’s Science and Applied AI divisions in May 2026, bringing with them capabilities in areas ranging from real-time power grid stabilisation to injection moulding simulation and automotive safety testing.
Beyond the technical and commercial rationale, the acquisition carries significant geographical significance. Linz will formally become a Mistral AI office, joining an international network that includes Paris, London, Amsterdam, Munich, San Francisco, and Singapore.
Mistral has also signalled its intention to hire further talent locally across Austria, Germany, and Lithuania, where the Emmi team is currently based.
“This strategic acquisition cements Mistral AI’s leadership in industrial AI and positions us as the partner of choice for manufacturers in high-stakes sectors like aerospace, automotive, or semiconductors. It empowers our customers with a fully integrated platform to solve complex challenges, transform core R&D processes, and accelerate high-value innovation,” Arthur Mensch, Co-founder and CEO of Mistral AI, said in a statement.
“This acquisition marks a turning point for industrial innovation. By engineering the first comprehensive AI stack fuelled by Physics AI, we are set to deliver real-time simulations and sophisticated digital twins. We aim to break through long-standing technical barriers that have slowed progress for decades, enabling our partners to solve the world’s most daunting engineering challenges,” Co-founder and Chief Science Officer Guillaume Lample added.
Johannes Brandstetter, Emmi AI’s co-founder and chief science officer, spoke of the broader implications for the AI4Science movement. “At Emmi AI, we have dedicated ourselves to solving high-stakes physical challenges, ranging from the real-time stabilisation of power grids to the intricate simulation of injection moulding and automotive safety testing.”
“Together, we are providing the foundational intelligence required to design and build the next generation of aircraft, vehicles, and semiconductors,” he added.
The acquisition arrives at a moment of heightened focus on European technological sovereignty, with the continent’s leading AI companies increasingly looking to anchor critical industrial capabilities domestically.
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