EU Sovereign Cloud Initiative Drives Single-Source Solutions

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Europe’s cloud service providers are overcoming market and regulatory hurdles through strategic partnerships with hyperscalers, ISG Provider Lens™ report says

LONDON, December 18, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Enterprises in Europe are experiencing faster, more secure and reliable cloud services through single-source providers—the direct result of partnerships between Europe’s cloud platform providers and global hyperscalers, according to a new research report published today by Information Services Group (ISG) (Nasdaq: III), a leading global technology research and advisory firm.

The 2024 ISG Provider Lens™ Multi Public Cloud Services report for Europe finds alliances between Europe’s cloud platform providers and the world’s hyperscale data center operators have quickly given rise to a seamless, scalable and stable cloud ecosystem using open-source infrastructure technologies, meeting the EU’s tightening standards for security and interoperability.

Ironically, that current ecosystem is being made possible by the same U.S.-based hyperscalers whose power and influence the EU’s Gaia-X regulatory framework was supposed to have tempered. Gaia-X was launched in 2019 to regulate data sovereignty for information considered confidential by EU member states.

"The idea behind the Gaia-X initiative was to drive European ownership of cloud and data center infrastructure," said Matthias Paletta, ISG director, technology modernization, in Europe. "Instead, the EU’s strict requirements for data privacy and sovereignty have ended up constraining organizations purchasing Gaia-X platforms and services with respect to scalability and accessibility."

Despite the legal and operational hurdles caused by the EU’s strict data sovereignty regulations, the region’s nascent sovereign cloud market is poised for growth, the report says. Prioritizing regulatory compliance, Europe’s enterprises continue to seek relationships with Gaia-X Association members, which share a privacy-by-design approach that fosters collaborative trust.

But institutions already accustomed to the agility and scalability offered by Google Cloud, AWS and Microsoft Azure are finding it difficult to discover a Gaia-X alternative that measures up. Google led the way in 2021 by forging separate partnerships with EU-based hyperscale providers T-Systems (a subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom) and Paris-based Thales. A year-and-a-half later, Google followed up with a partnership with Brussels-based Proximus, which serves both Belgium and Luxembourg.

Those partnerships led to competitive, single-source sovereign cloud services that offer the flexibility and adaptability Europe’s enterprises have come to expect, while adhering to EU regulations that now prohibit sovereign data from being hosted on public cloud infrastructure.