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BuiltInEu
Policy DigestMarch 31, 2026

Digital Euro Bets on European Cloud, Locks Out AWS and Azure

Digital Euro Bets on European Cloud, Locks Out AWS and Azure

OVHcloud and Scaleway will provide the cloud infrastructure for the European Central Bank's digital euro payment system. The selection, announced last week, came with an explicit restriction: only companies headquartered in the EU were eligible to apply. Amazon, Microsoft, and Google never had a chance.

The two French cloud providers were chosen as subcontractors under Senacor, the company building the SEPI (Secure Exchange of Payment Information) component. SEPI is the backbone that will handle the exchange of payment data between banks, merchants, and end users when Europeans eventually use the digital euro for everyday transactions.

Sovereignty Written Into Procurement

This isn't a symbolic gesture. The ECB designed the procurement process specifically to ensure "the European autonomy of the project," according to official documentation. The reasoning is straightforward: critical financial infrastructure cannot depend on providers subject to the US CLOUD Act, which allows American authorities to demand access to data held by US companies, regardless of where it's stored.

Steve Brazier, Informa Fellow and Canapii co-founder, described the move as "sovereignty written into procurement policy." Roy Illsley, chief analyst at Omdia, said "Europe is beginning to get their act together," though he added that it "may be too little too late" given how heavily the broader cloud market has already consolidated around US providers.

That consolidation is the backdrop. American hyperscalers control roughly 70% of the European cloud market. European providers, including OVHcloud, Scaleway, and Hetzner, hold a combined share of about 15%. (For a look at why that dependency creates real risk, see the recent Europa.eu breach.) The digital euro contract won't change those numbers. But it establishes a template for how EU institutions can structure procurement when sovereignty is a genuine requirement, not just a talking point.

What Comes Next

If regulators approve the digital euro framework during 2026, the currency could launch around 2029. That timeline gives European cloud providers several years of guaranteed, high-profile infrastructure work, with the ECB effectively vouching for their ability to handle mission-critical financial systems.

The timing also aligns with CISPE's push for the Cloud and AI Development Act to define sovereignty by operational control, not mere EU presence. Just two weeks ago, 25 European cloud CEOs signed an open letter warning the Commission against "sovereignty washing," where US hyperscalers set up EU subsidiaries without actually escaping American legal jurisdiction.

Why This Matters

European cloud providers now have an ECB reference contract. Enterprises evaluating their own cloud strategy have a signal that EU institutions are willing to pay the switching cost for genuine sovereignty. If the ECB trusts OVHcloud and Scaleway to run payment infrastructure for 350 million potential users, the "European cloud isn't enterprise-ready" argument gets harder to make.

The digital euro may still be years from your wallet. The procurement precedent it sets is already here.

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Products Mentioned

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OVHcloud🇫🇷

OVHcloud is a robust cloud storage solution designed to meet the needs of businesses and organizations seeking secure, scalable, and GDPR-compliant data management. With data centers strategically located across Europe, OVHcloud ensures that your data remains within EU borders, providing peace of mind with respect to data sovereignty and compliance with European regulations. Key features include seamless multi-cloud integration, allowing businesses to connect and manage multiple cloud environments efficiently. The platform offers scalable storage solutions to accommodate growing data needs, with API access for automation and streamlined operations. Security is a top priority, with built-in DDoS protection and customizable backup options to safeguard your data. OVHcloud’s high availability architecture ensures that your data is accessible whenever you need it. This service is ideal for European businesses, IT professionals, and organizations that prioritize data privacy and require reliable cloud storage. While specific pricing details are not mentioned, OVHcloud typically offers flexible pricing models to suit various business needs, ensuring cost-effectiveness without compromising on quality or security.

S
Scaleway🇫🇷

Scaleway is a cloud provider with a variety of services. Besides the public cloud called Scaleway Elements, they also offer dedicated servers and even renting racks in data centers.

H
Hetzner🇩🇪

Hetzner is a European cloud storage solution that offers reliable and affordable virtual servers hosted in Germany. Known for its competitive pricing, Hetzner provides a robust platform for businesses and individuals seeking efficient data storage and management solutions. With a focus on privacy and security, Hetzner ensures that all data is hosted within the EU, offering compliance with GDPR regulations and maintaining data sovereignty. This makes it an ideal choice for European businesses and privacy-conscious users who prioritize data protection. Hetzner's cloud storage services are particularly suited for small to medium-sized enterprises, developers, and IT professionals looking for cost-effective and scalable storage options. The pricing model is straightforward and paid, ensuring transparency and predictability in costs. Users can benefit from the peace of mind that comes with knowing their data is stored securely within the EU, adhering to strict data protection standards.

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