The Minister of the Presidency, Albert Dalmau, has chaired the Institutional Table for the Promotion of Data Centers.
07/07/2026
2 min

BarcelonaCurrently, the European Union (EU) is moving towards so-called strategic autonomy, which means doing everything possible to be less dependent on third parties, especially the United States and China. The club of twenty-seven is promoting this in all areas. The covid pandemic taught us that leaving the production of items ranging from masks to hand sanitizers to prevent infections in the hands of other countries or trade blocs poses a very high risk, both for access to products and for the prices that must be paid in cases of urgent need. Geopolitical crises also cause supply chain disruptions when there is a high dependence on materials and products from certain countries. Europe has been able to see this with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

In the world of technology, from chips to the cloud, access to programs, the storage of data and information via the internet... this subordination has also occurred, which has been generated over years, to technological giants, especially from the United States, through subsidiaries of Amazon and Microsoft, for example. In fact, these large conglomerates have data and all kinds of sensitive information of citizens and also of administrations in their hands. Currently, 80% of the Generalitat's services are hosted in a private cloud.

In this context, Salvador Illa's government has opted to create its own cloud to increase sovereignty over the data it uses, within the framework of the Generalitat de Catalunya's Technological Autonomy Strategy (Estratec). The Catalan executive assures that the sovereign public cloud model it proposes is "pioneering" in the EU for its level of compliance with digital sovereignty standards. It will be, it adds, the first with its characteristics to certify the SEAL 3 level of the European cloud sovereignty framework; that is, it will be capable of guaranteeing that all data hosted there will be under the control of European regulations.

The Generalitat has opened the tender for the contract, which has an approximate value of around 481 million euros during the first eight years, although the objective is "to maintain it once this period has passed". Once the sovereign public cloud is operational, 40% of the administration's data will be hosted there, which will correspond to public services that can be considered sensitive, such as health or security. 30% will remain in a private cloud, and the other 30% will operate from a public cloud to "take advantage of its innovation and scalability capacity", according to the plan designed by the Presidency department led by councilor Albert Dalmau.

The new sovereign public cloud must be located in Catalonia, and will be connected to the rest of the country's infrastructures to "guarantee the protection of information, the traceability of services and compliance exceeding applicable regulatory requirements". This initiative, together with the artificial intelligence (AI) gigafactory for which Catalonia is bidding, configures a model of digital autonomy and technological competitiveness that aims to guarantee sovereignty and data control by reducing the dominance of the private sector, especially multinational corporations from powers that compete with the EU.

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