By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Europe Must Avoid Becoming a Digital
Colony
Europe is under
siege—not by armies but by supply chains and algorithms. Rare-earth minerals, advanced
semiconductors, and critical artificial intelligence systems all increasingly
lie in foreign hands. As the U.S.-China tech cold war escalates, U.S. President
Donald Trump battles Europe’s attempt to regulate tech platforms, Russia
manipulates energy flows, and the race for AI supremacy intensifies, Europe’s
fragility is becoming painfully clear. For years, policymakers have warned
about the continent’s reliance on foreign technology. Those alarms seemed
abstract—until now.
Geopolitical
flashpoints, from the Dutch lithography firm ASML’s entanglement in the
U.S.-China chip war to Ukraine’s need for foreign satellite services, reveal
just how precarious Europe’s digital dependence really is. If Europe doesn’t
lock down its technological future, it risks becoming hostage to outside powers
and compromising its core values.
Fragmented measures
aren’t enough. A European Chips Act here, a half-implemented cloud or AI
initiative there won’t fix a system where every layer—from raw materials to
software—depends on someone else. Recent AI breakthroughs show that whoever
controls the stack—digital infrastructure organized into a system of
interconnected layers—controls the future.
The U.S. government
ties AI research to proprietary chips and data centers through its Stargate
program, while China’s DeepSeek masters the entire
supply chain at lower costs. Europe can’t keep treating chips, supercomputing,
and telecommunication as discrete domains; it needs a unifying vision inspired
by digital autonomy and a grasp of the power dynamics shaping the global
supply chain.
Without a coherent
strategy, the continent will be a mere spectator in the biggest contest of the
21st century: Who controls the digital infrastructure that powers everything
from missiles to hospitals?
The answer is
the EuroStack—a bold plan to rebuild Europe’s tech backbone layer
by layer, with the same urgency once devoted to steel, coal, and oil. That will
require a decisive mobilization that treats chips, data, and AI as strategic
resources. Europe still has time to act, but that window is closing. Our
proposed EuroStack offers a holistic approach that
tackles risks at every level of digital infrastructure and amplifies the
continent’s strengths.
The
EuroStack comprises seven interconnected layers: critical raw
materials, chips, networks, the Internet of Things, cloud infrastructure,
software platforms, and finally, data and AI.
Every microchip,
battery, and satellite begins with raw
materials—lithium, cobalt, rare-earth metals—that Europe doesn’t control. China
commands 60-80 percent of global rare-earth production, while Russia weaponizes
gas pipelines. Europe’s green and digital transitions will collapse without
secure access to these resources. Beijing’s recent export restrictions on
gallium and germanium, both critical for
semiconductors, served as a stark wake-up call.
To survive, Europe
must forge strategic alliances with resource-rich nations such as Namibia and
Chile, invest in recycling technologies, and build mineral stockpiles modeled
on its strategic oil reserves. However, this strategy will need to steer clear of
subsidizing conflict or profiting from war-driven minerals, as seen in the
tensions between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the
latter’s criminal complaints against Apple in Europe—demonstrating how resource
struggles can intensify regional instability.
Above this resource
base lies the silicon layer, where chips are designed, produced, and
integrated. Semiconductors are today’s geopolitical currency, yet Europe’s
share of global chip production has dwindled to just 9 percent. U.S. giants
such as Intel and Nvidia dominate design, while Asia’s Samsung and TSMC handle
most of the manufacturing. Even ASML, Europe’s crown jewel in lithography,
finds itself caught in the crossfire of the U.S.-China chip war.
Although ASML
dominates the global market for the machines that produce chips, Washington is
using its control over critical components and China over raw materials to put
pressure on the company. To regain control, Europe must double down on its
strengths in automotive, industrial, and healthcare chipsets. Building
pan-European foundries in hubs such as Dresden, Germany, and the Dutch city of
Eindhoven—backed by a 100 billion euro sovereign tech
fund—could challenge the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act and restore Europe’s
foothold.
A man rides a bicycle
past the Trocadero Esplanade as dark rain clouds loom over the Eiffel Tower in
Paris.
Next comes
connectivity, the digital networks that underpin everything else. When Russian
tanks rolled into Ukraine, Kyiv’s generals relied on Starlink—a U.S. satellite
system—to coordinate defenses. And U.S. negotiators last month suggested cutting access if no deal were made on Ukrainian
resources. Europe’s own Iris2 network remains behind schedule, leaving the
European Union vulnerable if strategic interests
clash.
Meanwhile, China’s
Huawei still dominates 5G infrastructure, with Ericsson and Nokia operating at
roughly half its size. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has even floated
buying Starlink coverage, underscoring how urgent it is for Europe to accelerate
Iris2, develop secure 6G, and mandate a “Buy European” policy for critical
infrastructure.
A key but often
overlooked battleground is the Internet of Things, or IoT. Chinese drones, U.S.
sensors, and foreign-controlled industrial platforms threaten to seize control
of ports, power grids, and factories. Yet Europe’s engineering prowess in robotics
offers a lifeline—if it pivots from consumer gadgets to industrial
applications. By harnessing this expertise, Europe can develop secure,
homegrown IoT solutions for critical infrastructure, ensuring that smart cities
and energy grids are built on robust European standards and safeguarded against
cyberattacks.
Then there is the
cloud, where data is stored, processed, and mined to train next-generation
algorithms. Three U.S. giants—Amazon, Microsoft, and Google—dominate roughly 70
percent of the global market. The EU’s Gaia-X project attempted to forge a
European alternative, but traction has been limited.
Still, the lesson
from DeepSeek is clear: Controlling data centers and
optimizing infrastructure can revolutionize AI innovation. Europe must push for
its own sovereign cloud environment—perhaps through decentralized,
interoperable clouds that undercut the scale advantage of Big Tech—optimized
for privacy and sustainability. Otherwise, European hospitals, banks, and
cities will be forced to rent server space in Virginia or Shanghai.
A sovereign cloud is
more than a mere repository of data; it represents an ecosystem built on decentralization,
interoperability, and stringent privacy and data protection standards, with
client data processed and stored in Europe.
Gaia-X faltered due
to a lack of unified vision, political commitment, and sufficient scale. To
achieve true technological sovereignty, Europe must challenge the monopolistic
dominance of global tech giants by ensuring that sensitive information remains within
its borders and adheres to robust regulatory frameworks.
When it comes to
software, Europe runs on U.S. code. Microsoft Windows powers its offices,
Google’s Android runs its phones, and SAP—once a European champion—now relies
heavily on U.S. cloud giants. Aside from pockets of strength at companies such
as SAP and Dassault Systèmes, Europe’s software
ecosystem remains marginal. Open-source software offers an escape hatch but
only if Europe invests in it aggressively.
Over time, strategic
procurement and robust investments could loosen U.S. Big Tech’s grip. A top
priority should be a Europe-wide, privacy-preserving digital identity
system—integrated with the digital euro—to protect monetary sovereignty and
curb crypto-fueled volatility. Piece by piece, Europe can replace proprietary
lock-in with democratic tools.
Finally, there is AI
and data, the layer where new value is being generated at breakneck speed.
While the United States and China have seized an early lead via OpenAI,
Anthropic, and DeepSeek, the field remains open.
Europe boasts world-class supercomputing centers and strong AI research, yet it
struggles to translate these into scalable ventures. The solution? “AI
factories”—public-private hubs that link Europe’s strengths in health care, climate
science, and advanced manufacturing.
Europeans could train
AI to predict wildfires, not chase ad clicks, and license algorithms under
ethical frameworks, not exploitative corporate terms. Rather than only
mimicking ChatGPT, Europe should fund AI for societal challenges through important
projects of common European interest, double down on high-performance computing
infrastructure, and build data commons that reflect core democratic
values—privacy, transparency, and human dignity.
The EuroStack isn’t about isolationism; it’s a bold assertion
of European sovereignty. A sovereign tech fund of at least 100 billion
euros—modeled on Europe’s pandemic recovery drive—could spark cross-border
innovation and empower EU industries to shape their own destiny. And a Buy
European procurement act would turn public purchasing into a tool for strategic
autonomy.
This act could go
beyond traditional mandates, championing ethical, homegrown technology by
setting forward-thinking criteria that strengthen every link in Europe’s
digital ecosystem—from chips and cloud infrastructures to AI and IoT sensors.
European chips would be engineered for sovereign cloud systems, AI would be
trained on European data, and IoT devices would
integrate seamlessly with European satellites. This integrated approach could
break the cycle of dependency on foreign suppliers.
This isn’t about
shutting out global players; it’s about creating a sophisticated,
multidimensional policy tool that champions European priorities. In doing so,
Europe can secure its technological future and assert its strategic autonomy in
a rapidly evolving global order.
Critics argue that
the difference in mindset between Silicon Valley and Brussels is an obstacle,
especially the bureaucratic nature of the EU and its focus on regulation. But
other countries known for bureaucracy—such as India, China, and South Korea—have
achieved homegrown digital technology from a much lower technological base than
the EU. Indeed, through targeted industrial policies and massive investments,
South Korea has become a world leader in the layers of chips and IoT. The EU currently already has a strong technological base with
companies such as ASML, Nokia, and Ericsson.
European
overregulation is not the issue; the real problem is a lack of focus and
investment. Until now, the EU has never fully committed to a common digital
industrial policy that would allow it to innovate on its own terms. Former
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi’s recent report on EU competitiveness—which calls for halting
further regulation in favor of massive investments—and incoming German
Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s bold debt reforms signal a much-needed shift in
mindset within the EU.
In the same spirit,
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has launched a defense package providing up to 800 billion
euros to boost Europe’s industrial and technological sovereignty that could
finally align ambition with strategic autonomy.
If digital autonomy
isn’t at the forefront of these broader defense and infrastructure strategies,
Europe risks missing its last best chance to chart an independent course on the
global stage.
To secure its future,
Europe must adopt a Buy European act for defense and critical digital
infrastructures and implement a European Sovereign Tech Agency in the model of
the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency—one that drives strategic
investments, spearheads AI development, and fosters disruptive innovation while
shaping a forward-looking industrial policy across the EU.
The path forward
requires ensuring that investments in semiconductors, networks, and AI
reinforce one another, keeping critical technologies—chips, connectivity, and
data processing—firmly under the EU’s control to prevent foreign interests from
pulling the plug when geopolitics shift.
Europe’s relative
decline once seemed tolerable when these risks felt hypothetical, but
real-world events—from undersea cable sabotage to wartime reliance on foreign
satellite constellations—have exposed the EU’s fragility.
If leaders fail to
seize this moment, they will cede control to external techno-powers with little
incentive to respect Europe’s needs or ideals. Once this window closes,
catching up—or even keeping pace—will be nearly impossible.
The
EuroStack represents Europe’s last best chance to shape its own
destiny: Build it, or become a digital colony.
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