France Data Center Site Selection: The Grid-First Intelligence Framework
For US developers and infrastructure funds evaluating France, site selection is not primarily a real estate decision. It is a grid decision. The difference between an 18-month timeline and a 4-year timeline is almost entirely determined by which site you acquire, in which order you initiate procurement, and whether existing HV infrastructure is on that site when you sign.
This page is the operational intelligence framework GridReadiness uses to evaluate France data center sites. It covers the five criteria that determine grid deployment speed, the regional landscape, the RTE fast-track programme, brownfield site typology, and the transformer procurement sequence that determines whether your timeline is real or theoretical.
THE 5 SITE SELECTION CRITERIA THAT DETERMINE GRID SPEED
Every France data center site selection decision ultimately reduces to five grid-related criteria. Real estate, construction, and permitting are secondary — they can be solved with capital. Grid infrastructure cannot be accelerated with capital alone. It requires either existing infrastructure or navigating a queue.
The single most valuable site characteristic. A site with an active or dormant HTB (63 kV, 90 kV, 225 kV) substation eliminates 12–24 months of RTE connection process and 20–60 months of transformer procurement. Value: 18–36 months of timeline compression vs greenfield.
Criterion 2 — Location within RTE fast-track zone
The 5 RTE-designated fast-track sites have pre-approved grid reinforcement. Connecting within these zones accesses prioritised RTE study processing and confirmed capacity allocation. Sites outside these zones enter standard queue.
Criterion 3 — Transformer supply line confirmed
A site without a confirmed transformer position in a manufacturer's order book is a site with a theoretical timeline. EU second-tier manufacturers (Efacec, Pauwels, TMC) currently deliver at 20–32 months. This must be secured before or simultaneous with RTE connection application.
Criterion 4 — Water stress index below 3.0
ESG compliance for hyperscaler requirements and EU Energy Efficiency Directive (EED) reporting. Northern and eastern France score best. Mediterranean regions score poorly — relevant if you are based in the Arc méditerranéen.
Criterion 5 — Planning authority pre-positioning
French planning (permis de construire) for large data centers takes 12–18 months. Regions with existing data center precedent — Hauts-de-France, Île-de-France periphery — process faster. Cold starts in new regions add 6–12 months.
RTE'S 5 FAST-TRACK SITES — SPECIFICATIONS AND ACCESS
In 2025–2026, RTE formally identified five priority zones where grid reinforcement investment has been made ahead of demand. These are the fastest connection points in France for new large loads. They represent the French government's explicit commitment to AI infrastructure deployment.
BROWNFIELD SITE TYPOLOGY — WHAT TO LOOK FOR
A brownfield data center site in France is a former industrial location with one or more of the following: an active HTB substation connection, a dormant HTB connection recoverable within 6–12 months, or significant electrical infrastructure (transformers, switchgear, busbars) that can be repurposed. These assets are the result of France's heavy industrial past and represent the fastest path to grid-connected AI compute in Western Europe.
Tier 1 — Active HTB connection (highest value)
Former aluminum smelters (Pechiney/Alcan sites) · former EDF thermal power stations · former chemical plants (BASF, Rhodia, Arkema sites)
Timeline advantage: 24–36 months compression · transformer on site or recoverable
Tier 2 — Dormant HTB connection
Former steel mills (Usinor/Arcelor legacy) · former glass factories · former paper mills in industrial zones
Timeline advantage: 12–18 months compression · transformer procurement still required
Tier 3 — HTA infrastructure only
Former logistics hubs · former auto plants · industrial parks with HTA metering
Timeline advantage: 6–12 months on permitting · full HTB connection still required
Validated case: Nebius Béthune (former Bridgestone factory, Hauts-de-France)
240 MW · €8B · 18 months from signing to first power · existing HTB connection reused
GridReadiness maintains intelligence on 40+ brownfield sites beyond the 63 government-listed locations, including sites not publicly marketed, sites in pre-sale negotiation, and industrial zones with dormant HTB assets. This intelligence is available to qualified developers and funds on engagement. See consulting services.
REGIONAL GRID LANDSCAPE — FRANCE DATA CENTER ZONES
| Region | Grid Strength | Brownfield Stock | Water Stress | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hauts-de-France | Very high | Very high (industrial belt) | Low | Priority zone |
| Grand Est | High | High (Lorraine steel) | Low | Strong alternative |
| Normandie | High (nuclear) | Medium | Low | Selective |
| Île-de-France (periph.) | High | Medium | Low-medium | Latency play |
| Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes | Medium | Medium | Medium | Project-specific |
| PACA / Méditerranée | Medium | Low | High | Avoid for large loads |
TRANSFORMER PROCUREMENT — THE CRITICAL PATH SEQUENCE
The most common error in France data center site selection is treating transformer procurement as a construction task. It is a deal-structuring task. The sequence matters more than the timeline itself.
Step 1 (Month 0–2): Site identification and preliminary grid assessment
Contact GridReadiness or RTE for initial connection feasibility review
Step 2 (Month 1–3): Transformer supplier engagement — BEFORE site signing
Efacec / Pauwels / TMC: request lead time confirmation and provisional order slot
This step determines your real timeline. Without it, all other timelines are theoretical.
Step 3 (Month 2–4): RTE connection application submission
Submit S3REnR (Schéma Régional de Raccordement au Réseau des Énergies Renouvelables) request
RTE study: 4–6 months · HTB agreement: 12–18 months from submission
Step 4 (Month 3–6): Site acquisition with transformer clause
Include confirmed transformer order or manufacturer slot in acquisition agreement
Without this clause, seller has no incentive to wait for equipment delivery
Step 5 (Month 6–18): Construction + transformer delivery in parallel
Civil works, building shell, MEP, concurrent with transformer manufacturing
Commissioning: 3–6 months after transformer delivery
FRANCE VS US — SITE SELECTION COMPARISON
| Criterion | US (Virginia / Texas) | France (Brownfield) |
|---|---|---|
| Grid connection timeline | 7–10 years | 12–24 months (RTE) |
| Brownfield grid assets | Rare / largely consumed | 40+ active/dormant sites |
| Fast-track capacity | None identified | 4,800 MW · 5 zones |
| Transformer lead time | 48–60+ months | 20–32 months (EU OEMs) |
| Power cost | $60–90/MWh variable | €50–70/MWh nuclear stable |
| Carbon intensity | High (gas peak) | 51 gCO2e/kWh (rank 3 global) |
| Water stress (cooling) | Variable | Low (north/east) |
| Total timeline to first power | 8–12 years (greenfield) | 18–36 months (brownfield) |
FAQ — FRANCE DATA CENTER SITE SELECTION
GridReadiness provides site selection intelligence for developers and funds evaluating France. Site assessments are conducted with Xavier Watrelos — HV specialist with 30+ years of RTE/Enedis connection experience and industrial transformer procurement. If you need ground-truth data on grid timelines, brownfield availability, and transformer sourcing:
→ Related: Grid data center intelligence hub · France guide for US developers · 280 GW EU grid requests
Sources: RTE 2026 · Choose France 2026 · GridReadiness field intelligence · EU Energy Efficiency Directive · UNU-INWEH water stress data. Updated June 2026.