In the space of a single week in early February, Capgemini signed sovereignty-focused partnerships with all three major US hyperscalers — Google Cloud, AWS, and Microsoft. Days later, CEO Aiman Ezzat used the company’s full-year results presentation to publicly dismiss calls for complete European tech autonomy.
The juxtaposition was deliberate, and it tells a more interesting story than the headline financials. Capgemini is not just adding AI capabilities to its consulting portfolio. It is building a distinct commercial proposition around one of Europe’s most politically charged technology questions: who controls the infrastructure that enterprises depend on?
The gap between rhetoric and reality
European digital sovereignty has been a policy preoccupation for several years now, accelerated by concerns over US government data access, the dominance of American cloud providers, and the growing strategic importance of AI infrastructure. The European Commission has pushed for greater technological independence. Member states have launched sovereign cloud initiatives. The language of autonomy is everywhere.
The reality, as Ezzat put it bluntly during the post-earnings call, is more complicated. “There is no such thing as absolute sovereignty,” he told journalists. “Nobody has it, because no one has sovereignty over the entire value chain required to deliver services.”
This is not a controversial claim among practitioners, but it is a notable one for a CEO whose company is headquartered in Paris and whose chairman also leads the digital working group at the European Round Table for Industry. Ezzat has been discussing sovereignty with the European Commission in Brussels and at Davos. His position is informed, not casual.
A four-layer framework
Ezzat outlined what amounts to a practical sovereignty framework built around four layers: data, operations, regulation, and technology. His argument is that Europe has meaningful independence on the first three — data residency and governance, operational control over services, and regulatory authority through instruments like GDPR and the AI Act. The fourth layer, the underlying technology stack, is where US Big Tech dominance means full independence is neither achievable nor, in his view, desirable.
Rather than pursuing autonomy at every layer, Capgemini’s approach is to offer clients “the right sovereignty solution based on the use case, the client environment, the government.” In practice, this means European-managed services running on American infrastructure — sovereign in governance and operations, pragmatic on technology.
As maddaisy noted earlier this week in examining Capgemini’s full-year results, the company estimates that over 50% of service contracts will include sovereignty requirements by 2029, up from just 5% in 2025. That trajectory, if it holds, represents a structural shift in how enterprise IT contracts are structured across Europe.
Three partnerships, one message
The timing of Capgemini’s hyperscaler announcements was no coincidence. On 6 February, the company expanded its partnership with Google Cloud, establishing a Sovereign Cloud Delivery Practice and Centre of Excellence. Capgemini will operate as a Google Distributed Cloud air-gapped operator — meaning it can deliver fully managed services with total isolation from the public internet, suited to defence, intelligence, and critical infrastructure clients.
On 9 February, a similar announcement followed with AWS, focused on sovereign-ready cloud and AI capabilities. Two days later, Capgemini formalised integrated sovereignty solutions with Microsoft. Three announcements in five days, each offering variations on the same theme: Capgemini as the European operator sitting between the client and the American cloud.
This is a positioning play with genuine commercial substance. For European enterprises navigating tightening regulation — particularly public sector organisations, financial institutions, and healthcare providers — the question is not whether to use cloud services but how to use them in ways that satisfy increasingly specific sovereignty requirements. Capgemini is betting it can be the answer to that question.
Where AI and sovereignty converge
The sovereignty proposition becomes more compelling when combined with Capgemini’s broader AI pivot. Generative and agentic AI bookings exceeded 10% of group bookings in Q4 2025, and the company has trained 310,000 employees on generative AI and 194,000 on agentic AI — systems designed to take autonomous actions rather than simply generate content.
AI workloads are particularly sensitive from a sovereignty perspective. They involve large volumes of proprietary data, often require access to regulated information, and increasingly touch decision-making processes that organisations want to keep within controlled environments. A sovereign AI solution — where the model runs on infrastructure governed under European jurisdiction, operated by a European firm, but built on the technical capabilities of a US hyperscaler — addresses a specific and growing need.
Ezzat framed AI itself with characteristic pragmatism in a separate interview with Fortune. “AI is a business. It is not a technology,” he said, warning leaders against treating it as a “black box being managed separately.” His caution against AI FOMO — “You don’t want to be too ahead of the learning curve. If you are, you’re investing and building capabilities that nobody wants” — suggests a company that has learned from watching the metaverse hype cycle play out.
What to watch
Capgemini’s sovereignty strategy raises several questions worth tracking. First, whether the 50%-by-2029 estimate for sovereignty-embedded contracts proves accurate, or whether it reflects the kind of optimistic forecasting that consulting firms are prone to when promoting a new service line. Second, how European competitors — particularly Atos, which has its own sovereignty ambitions, and smaller European cloud providers — respond to Capgemini’s hyperscaler-partnered model. Third, whether the European Commission’s own stance on sovereignty tilts toward the pragmatic Capgemini position or toward more aggressive technological independence.
For consultants and practitioners, the practical takeaway is straightforward: sovereignty is moving from a compliance checkbox to a structural feature of European enterprise contracts. The firms that build credible delivery capabilities around it now — not just policy positions, but operational partnerships and trained workforces — will have a meaningful advantage as regulation tightens. Capgemini has placed its bet. The question is whether the market follows.