Paris Hosts Europe’s Deeptech Week 2026
From 16 to 20 March 2026, Paris transformed into a central hub for Europe’s fast-growing deeptech ecosystem, welcoming hundreds of startup founders, venture investors, corporate innovators and public decision-makers. The multi-day gathering, widely referred to as Deeptech Week, highlighted Europe’s ambition to convert world-class research into globally competitive companies.
A Pan-European Deeptech Convergence
Participants from across the continent convened to discuss how to scale breakthroughs in fields such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, advanced materials, climate tech and biotechnology. The event placed particular emphasis on bridging the gap between university laboratories and the market, a long-standing challenge for Europe’s innovation landscape.
Alongside founders and researchers, the week drew leading venture capital firms, corporate innovation units and public agencies responsible for research funding and industrial policy. By bringing these groups together in one city, organizers aimed to accelerate deal-making, foster strategic partnerships and encourage coordinated support for deeptech scale-ups.
Policy, Capital and Industrial Strategy
Panel discussions and closed-door roundtables focused on topics such as long-term patient capital, regulatory frameworks for emerging technologies, and Europe’s pursuit of technology sovereignty. Policymakers explored how to better align national and EU-level programs to help deeptech companies access growth financing and industrial infrastructure.
Investors used the week to scout high-potential startups, while corporates looked for collaboration opportunities that could speed up their own R&D and decarbonisation roadmaps. Founders, in turn, gained rare access to decision-makers capable of shaping regulations, public procurement and cross-border funding.
Strengthening Europe’s Deeptech Position
By concentrating Europe’s deeptech stakeholders in Paris over five intensive days, Deeptech Week 2026 underscored the region’s determination to compete with the US and Asia in commercialising science-driven innovation. Organisers and attendees alike framed the gathering as a catalyst for new investment vehicles, joint industrial projects and a more integrated European deeptech market in the years ahead.

