Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
17MAY

EU awards first sovereign cloud deal

3 min read
14:28UTC

Brussels put €180m on paper for a six-year sovereign cloud framework, awarded exclusively to four European providers. The contract is the first pan-EU institutional procurement of its kind.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

€180m over six years is small money, but it is the first EU-institutional procurement template member states can copy.

The European Commission awarded a €180m, six-year sovereign cloud framework contract to four European providers on 17 April 2026 under reference IP_26_833, restricted to European suppliers for cloud services to EU institutions 1. The press corner page did not render the names of the winning vendors at the time of writing 1. DG CNECT, the Commission's digital-strategy directorate, administered the procurement.

The contract translates to roughly €30m a year, modest against a $23bn European sovereign cloud market forecast for 2027 , where EU-native providers still hold only a 15% regional share. Against AWS's roughly €8bn quarterly European revenue, €30m a year is a rounding error. Read as a procurement template, though, it matters: every member state now has a ready-made legal instrument to point to when justifying European-only awards, and Union entities can buy cloud capacity exclusively from European vendors under pre-approved terms, replacing ad-hoc purchases that repeatedly landed with AWS, Azure and Google Cloud.

Brussels can also cite the framework on its own side of the ledger while pursuing DMA cloud gatekeeper probes against Amazon and Microsoft . Until the four providers are named, European cloud investors cannot price the revenue allocation; DG CNECT has been asked to confirm.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Cloud services are the computing infrastructure that organisations rent instead of owning: servers, storage, and software running in giant data centres. Most European governments and the EU itself have been buying these services from American companies like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. "Sovereign cloud" means cloud services where the data stays under European legal control, run by companies that cannot be ordered by a foreign government to hand over data. The EU's new contract commits it to buying exclusively from European providers for the next six years. The contract is small by market standards, but it creates a legal template that EU member states can now copy when running their own procurement processes. It also means the EU can no longer be accused of subsidising American tech companies with its own institutional spending while simultaneously trying to regulate them.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

European cloud providers hold only 15% of the European market against US hyperscalers commanding roughly 70%, despite delivering 4 to 14 times the compute value per euro according to a February 2026 Callista benchmark. Enterprise switching costs, established managed services ecosystems, and vendor lock-in through proprietary data formats have created a structural inertia that price competition alone cannot overcome.

EU institutional procurement historically defaulted to US hyperscalers through lowest-cost or best-value frameworks that did not weight data jurisdiction or sovereignty as criteria. The new framework creates a procurement category where European data-jurisdiction requirements become mandatory eligibility conditions, not scoring factors. That category creation is the structural change, not the €180m contract value.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The four unnamed winning providers gain a Commission reference contract they can cite in member-state and private-sector bids, improving their competitive position independent of the headline contract value.

    Short term · 0.82
  • Precedent

    If member states adopt equivalent frameworks, European sovereign cloud providers could see a structural revenue floor emerge across institutional markets in Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and Poland by 2028.

    Medium term · 0.65
  • Risk

    US hyperscalers may seek re-entry through European subsidiary structures or joint ventures that technically meet sovereignty criteria while routing commercial benefit back to US parent companies.

    Long term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #2 · Brussels buys, Britain backs, Google unlocks

European Commission· 19 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
The EUR 350m Sovereign Tech Fund has no Commission host, no budget line, and no commissioner's name attached six weeks after the April conference, while Germany is already paying maintainers to staff international standards bodies. The CRA open-source guidance resolves contributor liability but leaves the financial-donations grey area open with the 11 September reporting clock running.
ASML / Christophe Fouquet
ASML / Christophe Fouquet
ASML's Q2 guidance miss of roughly EUR 300m below consensus reflects DUV revenue compression set by US export controls, not European policy. Fouquet said 2026 guidance accommodates potential outcomes of ongoing US-China trade discussions; a bipartisan US bill to tighten DUV sales further would accelerate the cross-subsidy thinning Chips Act II's equity authority is designed to address.
Anne Le Henanff / French G7 Presidency
Anne Le Henanff / French G7 Presidency
Le Henanff chairs the 29 May Bercy ministerial two days after Brussels adopts the Tech Sovereignty Package, making the G7 communique the first international read of the Omnibus enforcement split and CAIDA's scope. France's Cloud au Centre doctrine is already operational via the Scaleway Health Data Hub contract.
German federal government
German federal government
Berlin operationalises sovereignty through procurement mandates (the ODF requirement and the Sovereign Tech Standards programme) rather than waiting for Commission legislation. The Bundeskartellamt has still not received the Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger filing, leaving Germany's flagship AI champion in structural limbo six weeks after the deal resolved.
US Trade Representative
US Trade Representative
The USTR Section 301 investigation into EU digital rules closes with a 24 July 2026 final determination. CAIDA's public-sector cloud restriction sits within the criteria that triggered the 2020 Section 301 action against France's digital services tax, and the US has not signalled whether the Thales-Google S3NS arrangement resolves CLOUD Act jurisdiction concerns.
CISPE / Valentina Mingorance
CISPE / Valentina Mingorance
CISPE shipped its own pass-fail sovereignty badge in April to establish an industry-auditable floor the Commission could adopt. Whether CAIDA inherits the CISPE binary or the multi-tier SEAL approach will determine whether certification is enforceable by public contracting authorities or requires Commission discretion.