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EU Commission awards 180 million euro cloud contract to four European providers

By Thomson Reuters Apr 17, 2026 | 3:22 AM

By Leo Marchandon

April 17 (Reuters) – The European Commission on Friday awarded a 180 million euro ($212 million) tender for sovereign cloud services to four ​European providers for a six-year period, as ‌part of a push to reduce the bloc’s dependence on non-European technology.

The tender, launched in October 2025, was awarded to Luxembourg’s Post Telecom, Germany’s StackIT, French Iliad’s data centre unit ‌Scaleway ​and Belgium’s Proximus.

“This tender supports ⁠the Commission’s broader efforts ⁠to enhance its own sovereignty, reinforcing strategic control across key technologies and infrastructure,” the European Union’s executive body said in a statement.

The providers were ​selected based on their alignment with the Commission’s Cloud Sovereignty Framework, for which they had to ⁠ensure that non-EU entities have ⁠limited control over the technologies they use ​or the services they provide, the Commission said.

“Scaling the ​use of EU cloud is key to strengthening ‌Europe’s digital sovereignty,” Henna Virkkunen, the EU’s digital chief, said on X.

Post Telecom is bringing on partners OVHcloud and CleverCloud, while Proximus leads a consortium ⁠made up of Mistral AI, Clarence, and Thales and Google Cloud’s data centre joint venture S3NS.

OVHcloud founder and CEO Octave ⁠Klaba said ‌in a post on X that ⁠the Post Telecom consortium had been selected ​to ‌provide cloud services for the European ​Commission’s more ⁠than 40 agencies, allowing them to “prove there are credible alternatives in Europe”.

Paris-listed shares of OVHcloud rose after the announcement and were up around 2.5% by 1005 GMT.

($1 = 0.8488 euros)

(Reporting by Leo Marchandon in Gdansk, editing ​by Milla Nissi-Prussak)