BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  How Europe is confronting
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 1 Apr 2026 12:28:04 -0500
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How Europe is confronting its digital dependency problem

Date:
Tue, 31 Mar 2026 14:15:59 +0000

Description:
As reliance on US cloud giants grows, Europe faces a pivotal moment for
digital sovereignty.

OPINION
By Mark Dando
General Manager for EMEA North at SUSE.

Until relatively recently, digital 
sovereignty wasnt at the top of the European political or regulatory agenda.
Yes, it was seen as an important issue, but five years ago it didn't have
anything like the profile or sense of urgency we see today. 

Indeed, momentum behind the creation of sovereign EU cloud infrastructure is
accelerating rapidly, with Novembers Franco-German summit the latest effort 
to further develop key aspects of an independent, secure and
innovation-friendly digital future for Europe.  At the same time, European
stakeholders across public and private sectors are reassessing their
dependence on external providers, particularly the US hyperscalers, and the
long-term implications for security , governance and competitiveness.

The core issues have become so pressing that the continent now faces a 
pivotal moment in deciding how it wants to manage and govern its digital
future. The current situation How did we arrive at this point? European
organizations have spent years relying on large non-EU technology providers.
To an extent, this is understandable. 

The likes of AWS, Microsoft and Google have compelling infrastructure
propositions which have revolutionized the cloud industry and brought massive
benefits to customers wherever they are. 

What most European customers also did was assume that local hosting,
contractual safeguards and regional compliance measures were sufficient to
meet sovereignty requirements.

That perspective was undermined when Microsoft confirmed to the French Senate
earlier this year that data stored within the EU may still fall under foreign
jurisdiction, calling into question the residency-based model that many had
trusted. 

In particular, US legal mandates such as the CLOUD Act can, in fact, override
geographic boundaries, raising concerns about how much control European
organizations truly retain. 

Adding to the problem is that the way organizations manage their data and
consume cloud services has also evolved. Enterprise environments are now more
fragmented than ever before, with unstructured data now dominating and
spreading across clouds, applications and jurisdictions in ways that are
difficult to track.

Hybrid and multi-cloud adoption has accelerated this complexity, reducing
visibility into where data sits and which legal frameworks govern it. 

The result is that digital sovereignty has morphed from a conceptual
aspiration into an operational and strategic concern. Organizations can no
longer kick the can down the road. Building for the future Clearly, the
current position is not sustainable. According to a 2025 industry report, 
AWS, Azure and Google Cloud together hold about 70% of the European
infrastructure cloud market, while all European-headquartered cloud providers
combined account for roughly 15%. 

From a sovereignty perspective, Europe needs digital solutions that are both
localized and scalable, rather than niche or limited-adoption offerings.
Providers operating in Europe are expected to build technologies that are
competitive with global alternatives while still meeting sovereignty
expectations. 

However, this isnt just a matter of unlocking infrastructure investment.
Sovereignty cannot be achieved in isolation; collaboration across the 
European technology ecosystem is essential, including partnerships between
organizations that may not have traditionally worked together. 

Our recent partnership with evroc, is a good example, as we join forces to
deliver secure, sovereign European cloud infrastructure. 

For example, customers need better visibility of the European options
available to them, as many remain unaware of the strength and maturity of
home-grown solutions.

Sovereignty also requires the ability to evaluate providers objectively, 
using clear criteria that reflect jurisdictional control, supply-chain
transparency and operational independence. 

On a practical level, the EU Cloud Sovereignty Framework serves as an
essential reference point, providing organizations with a structured way to
assess levels of sovereignty and make more informed decisions. 

Ideally, this will also help create a more level playing field in cloud
procurement, ensuring that suitable European providers are considered rather
than overlooked by default. 

Looking ahead, maintaining positive momentum will be vital. Notwithstanding
the emergence of new sovereign cloud infrastructure, organizations cannot
achieve meaningful sovereignty unless they retain dependable control over
their data. 

The core challenge is not just where data is stored but whether organizations
can govern how it is used, moved and accessed across different environments. 

In this context, it is essential to implement tools and processes that enable
them to enforce policies such as residency, access controls and retention
rules in a precise and verifiable manner. 

This approach places sovereignty as much in the realm of governance and
ongoing operational discipline as in infrastructure investment or regulatory
reform. In the years ahead, Europes ability to strengthen sovereignty will
hinge on whether organizations can guarantee control over their data
throughout its lifecycle, not just at the point of storage.

This article was produced as part of
TechRadarPro's Expert Insights channel where we feature the best and 
brightest minds in the technology industry today. The views expressed here 
are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or
Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here:
https://www.techradar.com/news/submit-your-story-to-techradar-pro

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/how-europe-is-confronting-its-digital-dependency
-problem

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