France swaps Microsoft for Iliad's Scaleway to repatriate health data hub


FILE PHOTO: A view shows a Microsoft logo at Microsoft offices in Issy-les-Moulineaux near Paris, France, March 21, 2025. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo

April 23 (Reuters) - France ⁠has chosen domestic cloud provider Scaleway, a subsidiary of Iliad, ⁠to host the country's Health Data Hub, replacing Microsoft Azure in ‌a long-contested arrangement, Scaleway said on Thursday.

The decision fits into a broader shift asEurope seeks cloud sovereignty independent of U.S.-based Big Tech.

In Germany, the state of Schleswig-Holstein is migrating 30,000 ​government workstations away from Microsoft products, while Denmark's ⁠digital affairs ministry is switching ⁠to open-source LibreOffice following similar moves by the cities Copenhagen and Aarhus.

The contract ⁠also ‌adds to the French cloud provider's momentum in Europe. Earlier in April, the European Commission awarded a 180 million euro ($210 million) cloud ⁠tender to Scaleway, Post Telecom, OVHcloud and STACKIT.

Scaleway, ​evaluated against more than ‌350 technical criteria, will be responsible for securing health records covering ⁠tens of millions ​of French citizens. The new platform is set to be operational between late 2026 and early 2027.

The French government in 2019 chose Microsoft Azure to host health ⁠data without a competitive tender, drawing sustained ​legal and political scrutiny.

France's data watchdog refused to greenlight a permanent transfer of the full dataset, citing risks linked to the extraterritoriality of U.S. laws.

France's national ⁠cybersecurity agency later established its SecNumCloud certification framework imposing stringent requirements for critical data, notably ruling that accessto the data could not be gained by means of non-European legislation, de facto excluding U.S. providers and their European subsidiaries.

A ​follow-up law passed in 2024 mandates that sensitive ⁠data be hosted on sovereign-guaranteed infrastructure.

Last year, under oath before the French Senate ​inquiry commission, Microsoft's legal director admitted the ‌company could not oppose a U.S. injunction ​targeting French citizens' data, even if it was hosted in France.

($1 = 0.8553 euros)

(Reporting by Leo Marchandon in Gdansk, editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)

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