
Governments and enterprises may push investment toward smaller sovereign providers, but those providers still face the same brutal economics of the cloud market. They need capital, scale, customers, engineering depth, and ecosystem gravity. Many smaller providers will struggle to compete over time. Some will fail. Others will narrow their focus. Many will eventually be acquired, directly or indirectly, by larger players, including the very US-based cloud providers Europe is trying to reduce dependence on.
That’s the irony. Political pressure may spark a burst of sovereign cloud activity, but market gravity tends to reward scale. Sovereign cloud investment may create a temporary diversification, but in the long run, it could still end in concentration.
Sovereignty is not a bad goal, but the cloud business is structurally difficult. Running a competitive cloud platform is expensive. Matching hyperscaler capabilities is even harder. Enterprises eventually notice the gaps in services, AI tools, ecosystem support, geographic resilience, and operating maturity. When they do, they drift back toward the biggest and most capable providers.

