Dubai Telegraph - EU to unveil plan to wean itself off US, Asia tech

EUR -
AED 4.237435
AFN 72.690883
ALL 95.363859
AMD 425.220056
ANG 2.065883
AOA 1059.214731
ARS 1669.022851
AUD 1.637158
AWG 2.076891
AZN 1.968925
BAM 1.95645
BBD 2.321921
BDT 141.505174
BGN 1.926801
BHD 0.435138
BIF 3444.177608
BMD 1.153828
BND 1.485694
BOB 7.994656
BRL 6.005445
BSD 1.152758
BTN 110.276204
BWP 15.64613
BYN 3.234575
BYR 22615.035551
BZD 2.31852
CAD 1.609216
CDF 2637.073018
CHF 0.920061
CLF 0.027073
CLP 1065.514526
CNY 7.827225
CNH 7.823412
COP 4144.020652
CRC 531.965212
CUC 1.153828
CUP 30.576451
CVE 110.710001
CZK 24.198046
DJF 205.058267
DKK 7.4742
DOP 67.164086
DZD 154.274464
EGP 60.055265
ERN 17.307425
ETB 183.2288
FJD 2.55908
FKP 0.864532
GBP 0.864304
GEL 3.068842
GGP 0.864532
GHS 13.626663
GIP 0.864532
GMD 83.649072
GNF 10124.843845
GTQ 8.788768
GYD 241.189087
HKD 9.041791
HNL 30.772532
HRK 7.535072
HTG 150.727465
HUF 355.881624
IDR 20950.46509
ILS 3.379598
IMP 0.864532
INR 110.167357
IQD 1511.515131
IRR 1586571.665197
ISK 143.40919
JEP 0.864532
JMD 181.990464
JOD 0.818075
JPY 184.861737
KES 149.248089
KGS 100.901945
KHR 4626.851843
KMF 492.684677
KPW 1038.278492
KRW 1752.595676
KWD 0.356971
KYD 0.960715
KZT 561.446801
LAK 25384.223508
LBP 103325.327964
LKR 388.642385
LRD 210.544763
LSL 19.095845
LTL 3.406955
LVL 0.69794
LYD 7.332548
MAD 10.685656
MDL 20.082585
MGA 4846.078595
MKD 61.633843
MMK 2422.231333
MNT 4129.30739
MOP 9.30477
MRU 46.193482
MUR 55.27441
MVR 17.827207
MWK 2004.200299
MXN 20.12865
MYR 4.684083
MZN 73.741456
NAD 19.09568
NGN 1569.275592
NIO 42.241986
NOK 10.925353
NPR 176.443857
NZD 1.984308
OMR 0.443649
PAB 1.152863
PEN 4.005227
PGK 5.031114
PHP 71.072364
PKR 321.337437
PLN 4.240031
PYG 7094.357008
QAR 4.19705
RON 5.242653
RSD 117.377769
RUB 84.203509
RWF 1688.050868
SAR 4.331239
SBD 9.286683
SCR 15.181636
SDG 692.870457
SEK 10.87529
SGD 1.484942
SHP 0.861449
SLE 28.388122
SLL 24195.205897
SOS 658.836138
SRD 43.094915
STD 23881.91716
STN 24.807309
SVC 10.087133
SYP 127.535067
SZL 19.095377
THB 37.860624
TJS 10.784736
TMT 4.038399
TND 3.366296
TOP 2.778142
TRY 53.212951
TTD 7.808425
TWD 36.389465
TZS 3028.797112
UAH 51.461798
UGX 4346.425208
USD 1.153828
UYU 46.435629
UZS 13808.439671
VES 649.126617
VND 30392.992421
VUV 136.474338
WST 3.146506
XAF 656.172161
XAG 0.017064
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.118279
XCG 2.077645
XDR 0.817379
XOF 651.333466
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.332327
ZAR 19.02161
ZMK 10385.839917
ZMW 20.260731
ZWL 371.532256
  • RBGPF

    1.4900

    61.5

    +2.42%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.36

    -0.36%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    24.18

    -0.95%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3300

    16.52

    -2%

  • NGG

    -1.6900

    80.17

    -2.11%

  • RIO

    0.2400

    100.93

    +0.24%

  • RELX

    -0.6300

    34.52

    -1.83%

  • AZN

    -4.4000

    181.55

    -2.42%

  • GSK

    -0.8800

    50.64

    -1.74%

  • CMSD

    -0.1050

    22.41

    -0.47%

  • BP

    0.7500

    43.72

    +1.72%

  • BCC

    -0.1100

    67.97

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    -0.0300

    59.69

    -0.05%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    14.81

    +0.74%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    12.46

    -1.12%

EU to unveil plan to wean itself off US, Asia tech
EU to unveil plan to wean itself off US, Asia tech / Photo: Sameer Al-DOUMY - AFP/File

EU to unveil plan to wean itself off US, Asia tech

The EU will set out on Wednesday how the 27-country bloc hopes to slash its dependence on American and Asian technology, and favour European digital alternatives.

Text size:

The plans risk further angering the United States, which has pushed back hard at the European Union's fines and rules in recent years against American tech companies.

The bloc has in the past year ramped up its efforts to boost domestic manufacturing across different sectors, and catch up with rival companies in the United States and China.

EU tech tsar Henna Virkkunen will unveil the new "technological sovereignty" package in Brussels, including new rules on chips, cloud computing and AI.

The goal: to build digital ecosystems that ensure Europe retains control over services and data, and resists foreign interference.

Brussels worries its soft underbelly has been exposed after crises over chips and rare earths with China last year, coupled with fears an angry President Donald Trump could one day pull the plug on US cloud computing via a "kill switch".

In a draft strategy document seen by AFP, the EU said it is reliant on foreign providers for "over 80 percent of its digital products, services, infrastructure and intellectual property", based on an official 2023 report.

The EU, however, insists the push is aimed not at shutting out foreign providers, but at strengthening European industry and keeping itself in the AI race.

- US cloud domination -

Based on the text seen by AFP, the package will include:

-- a new law on cloud computing and artificial intelligence to encourage the construction of data centres in the EU. Brussels hopes the rules will triple the bloc's capacity in the next five to seven years;

-- boosting the demand for European-made semiconductors with a new chips law;

-- a push for the public sector to use more open-source software solutions that ensure greater control and flexibility, and avoid being locked in;

-- creating a common EU scheme to rate the sustainability of data centres.

Cloud computing is dominated by US platforms with the three biggest -- Microsoft's Azure, Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud -- making up 70 percent of the European market.

The EU is estimated to spend 264 billion euros ($307 billion) annually on US cloud software, according to a 2025 report by French consultancy Asteres.

Brussels is also expected to impose sovereignty criteria for public contracts in the cloud and AI sectors, and wants to force governments to undertake "sovereignty risk assessments" to identify European providers when needed.

The push is partly fuelled by worries over Europeans' data since the Trump-era 2018 Cloud Act allows Washington to demand access to data from US-based providers regardless of where the information is held.

- 'We set our rules' -

There are fears the new rules could provoke retaliation by Trump. But an EU lawmaker who has worked closely on tech sovereignty told reporters Tuesday Europe "should not bow down to pressure".

"We set our rules in Europe, according to the needs and the demands of the European citizens," said Matthias Ecke of the Socialists and Democrats, though he expects US providers to remain "dominant" despite the EU push.

Brussels is making clear its determination.

The European Commission said last week it wants to reserve for European firms a share of the mobile satellite frequencies currently used by US operators.

The latest moves reflect a change in Brussels, not just moving away from regulating Big Tech but favouring European technology.

Chips, cloud computing and AI "are the nervous system of the modern economy", powering everything from defence to healthcare, EU lawmaker Oliver Schenk said.

"Europe therefore cannot afford to remain merely a consumer of critical technologies developed elsewhere," the conservative MEP told AFP.

Y.El-Kaaby--DT