# Choice, compliance, and collaboration: Europe’s path to open digital sovereignty

> Source: <https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/identity-security/choice-compliance-and-collaboration-europes-path-to-open-digital-sovereignty/>
> Published: 2026-06-18 07:00:00+00:00

The European Commission’s Tech Sovereignty Package comes at a defining moment for the continent's digital future. European competitiveness and security are top of the agenda for European business, institutions, and citizens, and a significant investment in European digital capacity is needed to deliver those goals. In that context, it is understandable that Europe is considering how to boost the European Union digital footprint from chips, to cloud adoption, to AI data infrastructure.

The European Commission’s strategy is to be grounded in "openness, partnership, and fair competition." Indeed, the package contains bold measures consistent with these principles on interoperability to address vendor lock-in and an open source strategy for the public sector, as well as on more rapid data center deployment.

We will work cooperatively with the EU institutions providing our best knowledge about how to achieve these stated objectives in practical terms. To that end, we believe certain elements of the Cloud and AI Development Act (CADA) should be changed to avoid unintended market isolation, ensuring that trusted global partners can continue to support Europe’s security and scaling goals under a framework of true openness.

Our approach to sovereignty, developed over many years, is grounded in delivering tangible, technical, and verifiable control and open choice, while investing in the growth and security of Europe’s digital infrastructure — consistent with what we understand to be the goals of this strategy.

We have engineered a comprehensive menu of [Sovereign Cloud](https://cloud.google.com/sovereign-cloud) solutions, designed to meet Europe's tiered compliance requirements at every level. From standard public cloud configurations with strict European data boundaries to independently operated regional cloud services to fully air-gapped solutions for the most sensitive public-sector operations, we ensure that compliance never requires sacrificing technological excellence.

Through our deep “Made with Europe” collaborations with regional champions — including S3NS in France; Thales, the Schwarz Group, and T-Systems in Germany; PSN in Italy; Clarence in Luxembourg; and Telefónica in Spain — we are actively delivering the operational resilience and jurisdictional controls designed to meet the highest regulatory standards of existing sovereignty frameworks at national level.

Across our partner-led sovereign solutions, the S3NS offering in France has been qualified to meet [SecNumCloud 3.2, Europe’s highest sovereignty regulatory bar](https://www.thalesgroup.com/en/news-centre/press-releases/s3ns-announces-secnumcloud-qualification-premi3ns-its-trusted-cloud). Our partners Clarence and S3NS, together with Mistral, offer services that have been approved by the EU Directorate-General for Digital Services (DIGIT) for use by EU Institutions who have sovereign cloud needs. We believe this is what constitutes a true trusted partnership and encourage the Commission to follow this existing path, which is already meeting sovereign expectations across Europe today.

A primary concern within the CADA proposal is the design of the Union Assurance Levels (UALs). While harmonizing sovereignty criteria across member states is a constructive step, criteria at each of the four UALs would limit or exclude global providers, regardless of the security mitigations they offer.

Regulations should create space for innovative and effective technology approaches to sovereign control, instead of rigid geographic criteria that sacrifice the potential to have control without undue disruption to global supply chains.

We understand and support the data sovereignty and extra-territorial risk-mitigation priorities of European policymakers. Through capabilities like Cloud External Key Manager (EKM), one of the tools within our suite of sovereign solutions, Google Cloud allows customers to maintain their encryption keys outside of Google's infrastructure. This control creates a technical barrier to unauthorized access to unencrypted data by third parties without the explicit consent and awareness of the customer.

The EU has already designed an alternative, more balanced model in the proposed [Industrial Accelerator Act](https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/publications/industrial-accelerator-act_en). This framework has the potential to successfully maintain collaboration with trusted non-EU partners under a default presumption that trusted partners can operate as EU origin, underpinned by robust global trade rules and strong back-stop powers. We urge co-legislators to apply a similar philosophy to CADA.

Sovereignty must empower end-users with more choice, not less. A healthy European digital ecosystem requires open foundations that prevent vendor lock-in, restrict choice, and drive up costs.

We strongly support CADA's goal to foster an open, interoperable cloud ecosystem. To make this meaningful, we believe that the policy must align with a commitment to openness across every level of the digital stack — infrastructure, models, and applications.

Our own approach is built on this foundation: We offer open, portable infrastructure with [no data transfer exit fees](https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/networking/eliminating-data-transfer-fees-when-migrating-off-google-cloud?e=48754805), we champion open AI models like Gemma, and we support open-standards applications. Our stack-wide open approach is designed to help European enterprises build, migrate, and scale without friction.

Yet organizations can’t maximize the benefits of an open approach because restrictive licensing practices lock customers into a single ecosystem. To restore true choice, we advocate for three straightforward reforms: allowing users to move their software licenses freely, ensuring fair pricing for legacy software, and guaranteeing that software runs equally well on any cloud platform.

Physical compute infrastructure is the bedrock of digital sovereignty. While we support the ambitions of the [Chips Act 2.0](https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/proposal-chips-act-20) to invest €30 billion in European semiconductor research and development, we believe that this investment is just as important as establishing regulatory rules that attract large scale investments in compute infrastructure.

To help achieve that goal, we recommend the measures outlined below. As a long-standing investor in European data infrastructure, operating 13 European cloud regions and deepening that commitment with recent investments in Germany, Belgium and Sweden, we hope to see a policy that leverages the pace and scale of committed global investors like us.

We welcome the introduction of "special project" status to streamline permitting, grid access, and power purchase agreements (PPAs) in designated zones. To ensure these measures succeed, we support:

Prioritizing fast-track permitting benefits for highly sustainable infrastructure projects.

Aligning national sustainability criteria with the upcoming EU-wide rating scheme, ensuring it does not penalize energy-efficient technologies like water cooling.

Ensuring that these acceleration zones do not artificially constrain the geographic location of new sites, and extending supportive grid connection measures to viable data centers operating outside of designated zones.

As ministers prepare to gather for the upcoming Council Summit, Europe has a historic opportunity to build a resilient, competitive, and truly open digital future.

By championing open-source software — from our contributions to Kubernetes, Chromium, Android, TensorFlow, and open AI models like Gemma — and by co-engineering solutions with Europe's industrial leaders, we are proving that global innovation and European values can be furthered together.

We look forward to collaborating with Member States, European policymakers and our regional partners to ensure that the final Tech Sovereignty Package fosters local economic growth, safeguards national security, and keeps Europe at the cutting edge of global AI innovation.
