The European cloud evroc has announced the official launch of its sovereign cloud and AI services, which are now available for customer sign-up.
“Today, as evroc goes live, we are not just launching a cloud platform; we are delivering the definitive answer and solution to Europe's urgent need for genuine digital sovereignty. Our next-generation cloud and AI services are purpose-built to be the secure, scalable, and powerful foundation Europe needs to thrive in an AI-driven future, ensuring our continent's data remains sovereign and its innovations truly its own", said evroc Founder and CEO Mattias Åström.
First announced in 2023, the European owned and operated company is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, and has development offices in Sophia Antipolis, France, and London, the United Kingdom. The plan is for evroc to operate 10 hyperscale data centers by 2030, the first two in Stockholm and Mougins, France. The company says it has strategic partner data centers in Paris, Stockholm, and Frankfurt.
Flagship data center
evroc's flagship data center in Sweden will be located at Arlandastad, near the airport, and will have a capacity for up to 10,000 GPUs, liquid cooling, and energy density exceeding 150 kW per rack. The site will run entirely on fossil-free energy during normal operation and is designed to recycle excess heat into the local district heating network.
evroc will provide cloud services such as compute, storage, and networking – built for scalability, security, and full regulatory compliance. evroc is going live with a high-performance NVIDIA Blackwell-based GPU cluster, optimised for large-scale AI workloads with low latency and high energy efficiency.
evroc says its services are specifically engineered to handle sensitive workloads for sectors such as defence, government, financial services, healthcare, and critical infrastructure. With currently no European-owned hyperscale cloud solution available, evroc might be coming at the right time – especially after the Trump regime highlights the danger for Europe of being dependend on foreign tech.