Bron: humansareobsolete.com
The European Union just dropped a €700 million war chest to accelerate AI automation across every major industry.
GenAI4EU - the EU's flagship generative AI initiative - has exploded past its original €500 million commitment to reach nearly €700 million in funding through Horizon Europe, the Digital Europe Programme, and the European Innovation Council.
And where's all that money going? Manufacturing, robotics, healthcare, energy, agrifood, mobility, and aerospace. AKA every sector that employs millions of European workers.
Europe isn't just playing catch-up with the US and China in AI. They're positioning themselves to lead the global automation revolution. Here's what €700 million in AI funding actually means for European workers.
EU investment in generative AI to automate entire industries
Let's break down where this massive funding is actually going, because the EU isn't exactly subtle about their automation goals.
Funding fundamental AI research and industrial deployment pilots
AI supercomputing capacity and "digital skills" programs
High-risk AI ventures and breakthrough technologies
The European Commission calls this "supporting the development and deployment of generative AI solutions across Europe's industrial ecosystems." Corporate speak for: We're funding the tools to replace human workers at scale.
This isn't venture capital throwing money at the next hot startup. This is coordinated government investment to ensure European companies can compete with US and Chinese automation. And compete means eliminate more jobs faster.
The GenAI4EU initiative isn't randomly spreading money around. They've specifically targeted sectors where AI can have the biggest impact on employment:
Notice a pattern? Every sector involves replacing human judgment, human monitoring, and human coordination with AI systems.
The EU isn't funding AI to make workers "more productive." They're funding AI to make workers unnecessary.
This isn't just about Europe. The EU is creating a massive competitive pressure that will force every other economic bloc to accelerate their own automation investments.
When European manufacturers can produce goods with 30-50% fewer workers thanks to AI automation, American and Chinese manufacturers have two choices:
Guess which option they're choosing?
The €700 million is also targeting "Made in Europe" AI development - meaning the EU wants to control the automation technology that's about to reshape the global economy. They're not just adopting AI; they're positioning Europe to export the tools that eliminate jobs worldwide.
In 2025, this kind of coordinated government investment creates a snowball effect:
We're witnessing the beginning of a global automation arms race, funded by taxpayers who are about to lose their jobs to the technology they're paying for.
Let's talk about what €700 million in AI funding actually buys in terms of job displacement.
The targeted industries employ roughly:
If AI automation eliminates even 15% of jobs in these sectors over the next 5 years (conservative estimate given the investment scale), that's roughly 9 million European jobs.
But here's the fucked up part: The EU is framing this as job creation. They're talking about "reskilling" workers and creating "higher-value employment opportunities."
Cool. Where exactly are 9 million displaced workers going to find "higher-value" jobs when AI is automating those too?
If you work in any of the targeted sectors - manufacturing, healthcare, energy, transportation, or aerospace - this funding is directly targeting your job for automation.
The EU's investment timeline suggests major deployments within 2-3 years. This isn't a distant future scenario. Companies are already applying for GenAI4EU grants to automate their operations.
Your survival strategy:
The EU just announced they're serious about automation leadership. Every company in these sectors will be under pressure to adopt AI or lose competitive advantage.
The question isn't whether automation is coming to your industry. The question is whether you'll be ready when it arrives.
Europe is betting €700 million that you won't be.