
“AI and Cloud are transforming the global economy, and Europe cannot afford to be left behind. Europe needs a strong, sovereign digital ecosystem. SECA is a critical step in building a secure, independent, and future-proof digital infrastructure — one that keeps Europe strong, competitive, and in control,” IONOS CEO Achim Weiss said in a statement about the project’s launch.
This was echoed by Aruba CEO Stefano Cecconi: “The creation of these common APIs — with Aruba and IONOS as first movers — marks a pivotal and voluntary step for the European cloud industry towards enhanced interoperability, strengthening the continent’s cloud services ecosystem.”
SECA is also a critical building block for the emerging EuroStack initiative, an attempt to carve out alternatives to the standards and technologies that cement US tech domination across multiple fields from microprocessors to computing standards.
Not long ago, EuroStack would have been viewed as worthy but unlikely to go anywhere quickly, not least because of its estimated €300 billion ($325 billion) cost. Europe seemed too competitive and fragmented to get its act together. But a few weeks of US President Donald Trump’s second term of office has changed that. Suddenly, US tech domination is no longer viewed as entirely benign.
“There is a growing desire among European organizations to have data sovereignty. There are concerns for the growing dependance on non-European cloud providers, and if you combine that with the current political climate, you have a strong case for SECA being adopted,” said Jason Wingate of Emerald Ocean Ltd which , as a Canadian company, could also have an interest in reducing its reliance on US technology vendors.
However, SECA still faces formidable obstacles: “The biggest challenge will be legal,” said Wingate. “The EU is a patchwork of national laws and regulations. It’s going to be complicated to navigate this and still be EU compliant, all the while being compliant with nation-level data and privacy laws.”