By Foo Yun Chee and Toby Sterling
BRUSSELS/AMSTERDAM, June 1 (Reuters) – Europe plans to propose strict criteria for cloud computing services โin highly critical state tenders that could exclude Amazon, Microsoft โand Google from such projects, according to documents seen by Reuters.
The proposal is part โof the European Commission’s Cloud and AI Development Act, which EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen will announce on Wednesday as part of a package of measures aimed at reducing Europe’s dependence on U.S. tech and promoting โEuropean businesses.
The drive for โ sovereignty requirements in sensitive sectors such as banking, energy, healthcare and comes amid fears of surveillance by the โ United States and that it may get unlawful access to Europeans’ data on the basis of its laws such as the Cloud Act which โrequires U.S.-based โproviders to grant authorities access to โdata even if it is โstored abroad.
The EU proposal, previously unreported and that could face late changes, also introduces mandatory non-price award criteria, including requirements for software and hardware developed within the EU, that would disadvantage U.S. big tech.
The European Commission declined to comment on details of its plans though said โthat its tech sovereignty package was “crucial โfor strengthening Europe’s own technological capacities, for โEurope’s competitiveness and security.”
The EU โexecutive’s plan, which needs backing from EU countries and โthe European Parliament in the โcoming months, could draw โbacklash from the U.S. government which is already extremely critical of other EU laws aimed at reining in Big Tech and โensuring that they โpolice their platforms for illegal and harmful content.
(Reporting by Foo โYun Chee in Brussels and Toby Sterling in Amsterdam; Editing โby Adam Jourdan and Louise Heavens)