When seven European technology leaders issued a joint call for action in May 2026, much of the public discussion focused on regulation. Headlines emphasized concerns about competitiveness, compliance burdens and Europe’s ability to keep pace with the United States and China.
Those concerns were certainly present. Yet a closer reading of the statement — and an examination of the companies behind it — suggests a different interpretation.
The most significant message may not have been about regulation at all. It may have been about coordination.
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For decades, discussions about economic competitiveness often revolved around nations. Countries competed against countries. Industrial strategies were designed at the national level. Economic success was frequently measured through national champions, national industries and national policies.
Yet the geography of technological innovation increasingly tells a different story.
Many of Europe’s most important technological capabilities are not concentrated within individual countries. They are distributed across a network of highly specialised regions, research institutions and industrial clusters.
As Europe seeks to strengthen its position in semiconductors, artificial intelligence, cloud infrastructure and advanced manufacturing, the challenge may no longer be how to create national champions.
The challenge may be how to connect ecosystems.
Europe’s technological future may depend less on scale and more on coordination.
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For years, European policymakers spoke about digital sovereignty, strategic autonomy and technological independence. Yet much of that discussion remained largely conceptual. The presentation of the Tech Sovereignty Package on 3 June 2026 may mark the moment when those ambitions began to take concrete form.
At the heart of the package are the renewed Chips Act 2.0, new cloud and AI initiatives, support for advanced technologies such as photonics and quantum computing, and a growing recognition that digital infrastructure has become a strategic asset. The objective is not to isolate Europe from the global economy, but to reduce critical dependencies in an increasingly uncertain geopolitical environment.
What makes this shift particularly significant is that Europe appears to be moving beyond the traditional idea that competitiveness is primarily a matter of scale. Instead, the focus is increasingly on resilience, control over key technologies, and the development of specialised ecosystems that can secure Europe’s position in critical sectors.
This series explores the strategic logic behind that transformation. From semiconductors and cloud infrastructure to energy systems and innovation clusters, the articles examine how Europe is attempting to build the foundations of technological sovereignty — and what that may mean for the continent’s economic future.
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The future of Western Europe may depend less on any individual country than on the interaction between multiple forms of economic influence. Connectivity, complexity, specialisation, strategic capacity, openness and global reach together form an ecosystem whose resilience may become increasingly important in an age of fragmentation.
The United Kingdom remains one of the world’s most influential network economies. Through finance, law, education, research and global institutions, Britain continues to shape systems that extend far beyond its borders. Yet as economic security, industrial capacity and strategic infrastructure return to prominence, the country faces a new question: can global reach remain a source of power in an increasingly fragmented world?
Ireland built its success on openness. Through education, foreign investment and global integration, it became a hub for technology, pharmaceuticals and digital services. Yet as globalisation evolves, the country faces a new challenge: transforming international success into long-term domestic resilience.
Liechtenstein is one of Europe’s smallest states, yet one of its most productive economies. Through specialization, precision engineering and global connectivity, the principality demonstrates how economic influence can emerge from density, focus and indispensability rather than scale alone.