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European cloud providers back EU push to cut reliance on US tech

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on June 1, 2026

2 min read

· Last updated: June 1, 2026

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Thirteen European Cloud Providers Join EU Effort to Cut US Tech Reliance

European Commission's Push for Technological Sovereignty

BRUSSELS, June 1 (Reuters) - Thirteen European cloud providers joined forces with a group of EU lawmakers and NGOs on Monday to back the European Commission's drive to cut the region's dependence on U.S. technologies and support local businesses.

New Measures to Promote European Cloud Services

• The Commission is set to announce measures on Wednesday aimed at ensuring European companies, rather than U.S. rivals, provide cloud streaming services for sensitive public tenders, while also boosting the production of made-in-Europe chips.

Background: Global Tensions and Technological Competition

• The push is driven partly by tensions with the United States and China, as well as by a broader effort to catch up with both rivals in key technologies.

Defining Technological Sovereignty

• "Technological sovereignty means that Europe has the capacity to freely design, understand, choose from different home-grown sources, build, operate and effectively regulate the digital systems on which its society and economy rely," the groups said in a joint open letter seen by Reuters.

Key Supporters and Signatories

• Signatories include French cloud vendor OVHcloud, Germany's Nextcloud, social networks Mastodon and Monnett Social, Swiss privacy software company Proton, browser company Ecosia and Dutch quantum chip maker QuantWare.

• Lawmakers from the Greens group at the European Parliament and six civil groups including Defend Democracy and Save Social also signed the letter.

Unified Message from Lawmakers

• "Our message is simple: Build European, buy European, protect European," said lawmaker Alexandra Geese.

(Reporting by Foo Yun CheeEditing by Ros Russell)

Key Takeaways

  • European providers are rallying behind the European Commission’s sovereignty push to replace U.S. tech in sensitive public cloud tenders and chip supply chains
  • This aligns with the Commission’s broader digital sovereignty strategy—including a €180 million sovereign cloud tender and draft Chips Act and Cloud and AI Development Act—to prioritize EU-based infrastructure and resilience (commission.europa.eu)
  • The move addresses geopolitical risks, offers alternatives to U.S. hyperscalers dominating EU markets, and seeks to strengthen regulatory control, supply‑chain transparency and technological independence (techradar.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Which companies are backing the EU push for tech independence?
French OVHcloud, Germany's Nextcloud, Mastodon, Monnett Social, Proton, Ecosia, and Dutch QuantWare are among the signatories.
What is the aim of the European Commission’s new measures?
The measures aim to ensure European companies, not US rivals, provide cloud services for sensitive public tenders and support EU chip production.
Why is Europe trying to reduce reliance on US technologies?
The push is driven by growing tensions with the US and China, and a desire for technological sovereignty and digital independence.
Who else supports the initiative besides cloud providers?
Lawmakers from the Greens group at the European Parliament and six civil groups, including Defend Democracy and Save Social, support the move.

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