The third annual European sovereign cloud day took place in Brussels on 3 June 2025 gathering representatives from cloud vendors, service providers, industry experts, as well as members of the European Parliament. Keynote speeches and panel discussions cast some light on the new sovereignty challenges cloud providers and buyers in Europe are facing, which we can summarize around three major themes: 1. An unavoidable need to focus on AI sovereignty; 2. An urgent call for standardization; 3. A shift in perspective from data protection to resilience.
Here are our key takeaways from these discussions:
Sovereign AI calls for a new supporting ecosystem in Europe. Whilst AI usage is becoming ubiquitous across industries all over Europe poses, recent geopolitical tensions are raising some urgent questions. Sovereign AI means that organizations can adopt LLMs that nobody can take away from them, and that they can feed these LLMs with data that should not leave the country when this is a requirement, and that it can be hosted on a cloud infrastructure that does not suffer from any dependability on foreign governments’ decisions. European operators will have to offer a viable sovereign alternative to the ones of dominant US or Chinese vendors if they want to provide an appropriate ecosystem for sovereign AI in Europe.
Cloud vendors and users need standards to sustain sovereign deployments. Fragmentation of the cloud is one of the key challenges that vendors are facing in Europe today. As David Michels, researcher at the University of London, pointed out: “the argument that we cannot beat the hyperscalers is not helping. We need interoperability and standards”. On top of that, Francesco Bonfiglio, CEO of Dynamo Cloud, affirmed “data is the fuel, we need to build the pipe: this is the concept behind Eurostack”. On this point, the discussions also highlighted how far the European cloud ecosystem is from offering a true sovereign alternative to the global vendors.
The sovereignty discussion moves from data protection to business resilience. In times of mounting geopolitical pressures, data protection is a comparatively smaller problem for businesses. Overreliance and over-dependability on US hyperscalers are now concerning European organizations. In this context, a stronger focus on digital and cloud sovereignty allows organizations to be more resilient and avoid dependability on foreign governments’ influences. The European sovereign cloud day has clearly outlined how the digital sovereignty discussion has passed the data protection layer and now drives European organizations’ fundamental choices regarding their cloud infrastructure and vendors ecosystem.
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