Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
8JUN

Brussels locks 27 May for CAIDA and Chips II

3 min read
09:58UTC

The European Commission has fixed Wednesday 27 May 2026 for adoption of its long-trailed Tech Sovereignty Package, combining the Cloud and AI Development Act with a revamped Chips Act II. The file slipped twice before the date hardened.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The 27 May date is confirmed; the substance of CAIDA and Chips Act II at adoption is not.

The European Parliament's Legislative Train, Bloomberg and two further sourcings confirmed during the second week of May 2026 that the European Commission will adopt the Tech Sovereignty Package on Wednesday 27 May 2026, with the Cloud and AI Development Act (CAIDA, the EU's first procurement-level cloud-sovereignty law) and a revamped Chips Act II in a single batch. The package had slipped twice before this date was confirmed , once from late March and once from mid-April.

Adoption is the moment a Commission text leaves College stage and enters the legislative pipeline; it is the start of a process, not the end of one. CAIDA carries the procurement spine the package needs to bind public-sector buyers. Chips Act II carries the direct-investment instrument Brussels lacked when the Magdeburg project collapsed and when Crolles was suspended . The package will reach the Council and Parliament for trilogue negotiation in autumn 2026; final adoption, transposition deadlines and entry into force are downstream of 27 May.

Two days after publication, G7 Digital Ministerial chair Anne Le Hénanff, France's Minister Delegate for AI and Digital Affairs, will convene partners at Bercy on 29 May to read the text that emerged. Commissioner for Tech Sovereignty Henna Virkkunen carries the Commission file into both moments. What is calendar-locked is the political event; what remains uncertain is the package's substance at College stage, where CAIDA's leaked scope and Chips Act II's investment ceiling can both still be diluted.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

On 27 May 2026, the European Commission is scheduled to adopt two laws together. The first, CAIDA (the Cloud and AI Development Act), will stop US tech companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Google from hosting sensitive data for EU government agencies. The second, Chips Act II, gives Brussels money to invest directly in European microchip factories rather than relying on individual EU countries to fund them. The 27 May date matters because these laws have already been delayed twice. Until they formally pass, no government agency can use them as the legal basis for changing contracts or starting new ones. Think of it like a planning permission: the builder can prepare, but cannot break ground until the approval is in hand.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The two prior deadline slippages reflect a structural constraint in the College of Commissioners process: both CAIDA and Chips Act II require sign-off from multiple DGs with competing mandates. DG CNECT (digital), DG GROW (industry), and DG COMP (competition) each hold blocking votes inside the College. Chips Act II's equity-stake authority is the specific provision where DG COMP's state-aid orthodoxy and DG GROW's industrial-policy agenda pulled in opposite directions through Q1 2026.

A secondary cause is US trade-policy timing: the USTR Section 301 investigation into EU digital rules created pressure inside the College to avoid a 27 May adoption date that lands in the middle of US tariff decision week, but no rescheduling has been announced, suggesting the Commission ultimately concluded that delay would be more damaging to its legislative credibility.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    CAIDA adoption triggers a procurement review window for EU member states holding US-cloud contracts for financial, judicial, and health data; existing contracts are unlikely to be voided but renewals will face new compliance criteria.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Risk

    A third deadline slip would force the Commission to withdraw the package for re-consultation, effectively resetting both CAIDA and Chips Act II to a 2027 legislative timeline and leaving no direct-investment authority for the next fab-siting cycle.

    Immediate · 0.55
  • Opportunity

    Confirmed adoption creates a reference date against which national procurement authorities can begin tender preparation for sovereign cloud replacements, accelerating the migration pipeline that Scaleway and OVHcloud are already positioning for.

    Short term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #5 · Brussels' 27 May package, two days before G7

Institute for the Study of War· 17 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Bahrain / Gulf partners
Bahrain / Gulf partners
Bahrain's PAC-3 interceptor magazine sits at 87% depletion after absorbing IRGC salvos aimed at US bases; no resupply is scheduled before 2027, concentrating the intercept burden on US assets and Israeli Iron Dome and Arrow-3.
IAEA / Vienna process
IAEA / Vienna process
IAEA officials cited proliferation concerns over 440.9 kg of HEU unaccounted for after 97 days without inspector access; the Board session that opened 8 June cannot retroactively close the evidentiary gap its own resolution documents.
China
China
China absorbed the Shanghai Qianye designation by OFAC and opposes censure at the IAEA Board, arguing the verification gap was created by strikes rather than Iranian non-compliance, a framing it shares with Russia to protect the non-Western bloc's Board votes.
Russia
Russia
Putin reaffirmed at SPIEF on 6 June his offer to hold Iran's uranium stockpile as custodian, a proposal the IAEA's 97-day verification gap now renders undeliverable: no one can transfer or confirm a stockpile that has not been inspected.
United States / Trump administration
United States / Trump administration
Trump publicly asked Netanyahu not to retaliate and described a deal as 95% done; Rubio then acknowledged enrichment terms could take months. The 24-hour gap between the request and the Mahshahr strike removes the credible-restraint argument from US diplomatic leverage with Tehran.
Israel / Netanyahu government
Israel / Netanyahu government
Netanyahu struck the Mahshahr complex and missile sites inside Iran within 24 hours of Trump's public no-retaliation request, a second kinetic override of US counsel that confirms Israel will not allow Tehran to dictate the terms of the exchange.