Tech-sponsored study criticises plan to exclude non-EU cloud vendors

Reuters

Published Mar 06, 2023 12:11AM ET

Updated Mar 06, 2023 05:32PM ET

By Foo Yun Chee

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - A proposed European Union cloud security label that could exclude Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL)'s Google, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and other non-EU cloud services providers from the bloc is discriminatory and could lead to retaliatory measures, a study commissioned by a tech lobbying group said.

The European Centre for International Political Economy (ECIPE) report, which was commissioned by the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA), underscores growing private concerns about the draft label plan among U.S. tech giants, which have so far not made any public comment on it.

At issue is a provision in EU cybersecurity agency ENISA's certification scheme (EUCS) that requires cloud services providers to have their registered head office and global headquarters in the EU and to operate cloud services and store and process customer data in the 27-member bloc.

"I think the political intention is to squeeze out foreign suppliers but it will of course have also ramifications for EU businesses that are more or less relying on cloud computing services," ECIPE Director Matthias Bauer told Reuters.

"Member states should now call on the cybersecurity agency and also the European Commission to abandon politically motivated EUCS immunity requirements," he added.

ENISA is waiting for an opinion from EU countries, a spokesperson said and "will then finalise the scheme by taking into utmost account this opinion and submit the final candidate scheme to the European Commission".

The EU executive declined to comment on the ECIPE report.

"The scheme should be fully in line with EU law, as well as with the EU's international commitments, including on trade," a Commission spokesperson said.