
Across Europe, “tech sovereignty” is rising up the agenda. For business leaders, however, the implications are practical rather than political. At its core, sovereignty is about control, resilience and trust in the systems that underpin modern operations.
The European Commission’s recently announced technology sovereignty package reflects this shift. With proposals including the Chips Act 2.0, the Cloud and AI Development Act, an EU Open-Source Strategy and a Strategic Roadmap for Digitalisation and AI in Energy, it is intended to strengthen Europe’s digital independence and resilience.
That matters because IT infrastructure is now vital infrastructure. Cloud platforms, connectivity, AI systems and cyber security capabilities are becoming as essential to economic growth and national stability as energy and transport networks.
Director, Vodafone Business Security Enhanced (VBSE), part of VodafoneThree.
For years, digital transformation was driven by globalization, scale and efficiency, with organizations prioritizing rapid innovation, cost optimization and access to global technology ecosystems.
But cyber-attacks, regulatory divergence and geopolitical uncertainty have exposed a fundamental reality: efficiency without resilience creates fragility.
From efficiency to resilience
Today, organizations are focused not only on whether systems can withstand cyber-attacks, but whether they can keep operating if a provider, jurisdiction or supply chain becomes unavailable.
Protection and prevention remain essential. But resilience also depends on where systems are hosted, who controls critical infrastructure, how data moves across jurisdictions and whether essential services can be restored quickly during disruption.
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Sovereignty is best understood as the ability to continue functioning with confidence when external conditions change. This is particularly relevant for organizations delivering critical services.
Why this matters for the UK
The UK faces many of the same pressures as Europe: rising cyber threats, tighter regulation and rapid AI adoption. But it also has real strengths, including a mature cyber security sector, world-leading professional services expertise, and a strong reputation for governance and innovation.
Those strengths give the UK a significant opportunity to position itself as a trusted partner for secure, resilient digital infrastructure. Realizing it, however, will require continued investment in infrastructure, skills and technology ecosystems.
The UK already has strong foundations. Within Vodafone Business, for example, security services for government and defense customers date back to 1989, underlining the long-term importance of trusted communications and secure operations.
Sovereignty must include AI
The sovereignty conversation is no longer limited to networks, cloud computing infrastructure or cyber security; it now extends to AI itself.
The UK government’s recent £400 million commitment to next-generation AI chips reinforces that ambition and signals a more deliberate push to build sovereign capability in the technologies that will underpin future competitiveness and resilience.
Government investment in sovereign computing capability and broader AI infrastructure also signals recognition that access to advanced computing resources is becoming a strategic national asset.
This matters because AI is rapidly becoming foundational infrastructure. Organizations are embedding it into business operations, cyber security programs, customer engagement and decision-making.
For businesses, sovereignty is not about limiting innovation. It is about ensuring critical capabilities can be developed, governed and accessed in ways that support long-term economic resilience and trust.
Connectivity as critical infrastructure
One of the most important and often overlooked aspects of sovereignty is connectivity. As organizations rely more on AI services, IoT devices and real-time data exchange, networks become the foundation of operational resilience.
If connectivity fails, everything built on it is affected, from customer services and supply chains to communications and core business operations.
That is why investment in secure, resilient, high-capacity networks is central to the sovereignty debate. Without trusted connectivity, digital sovereignty remains theoretical rather than practical.
The formation of VodafoneThree is a significant step in strengthening the UK’s digital backbone. With a commitment to invest £11 billion in next-generation connectivity and an ambition to deliver 99.96% population coverage by 2034, the UK is building infrastructure to support future growth and resilience.
As AI workloads, edge computing, hybrid working and data-intensive applications expand, resilient connectivity becomes a strategic national asset.
This is particularly important for organizations delivering essential services. Today, 77% of UK Blue Light services already run on Vodafone Business networks, underlining the growing importance of trusted connectivity in critical operations.
A strategic moment for the UK
Europe’s emerging sovereignty agenda should not be mistaken for digital isolation. Rather, it reflects a growing recognition that interdependence must be understood, managed and secured.
For security leaders, that means broadening the conversation beyond traditional threat protection to include critical dependencies, digital supply chain resilience and operational continuity. Cyber security is increasingly part of a wider discipline of digital resilience, where security, connectivity, infrastructure and governance converge.
By combining cyber security expertise, growing sovereign AI capabilities, regulatory strengths and continued investment in connectivity, the UK has an opportunity to establish itself as Europe’s trusted security ally.
In the next phase of digital transformation, success will not belong only to those with the most advanced technology, but to those with the most trusted, resilient and transparent foundations.
The sovereignty economy is already taking shape. The question is whether the UK chooses simply to participate in it, or to help define it.
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Director, Vodafone Business Security Enhanced (VBSE), part of VodafoneThree.
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