Building digital sovereignty requires more than well-designed regulation and funding frameworks. It also requires institutional arrangements that can anchor long-term support and maintenance for Digital Commons, enable cross-border coordination, and deliver at the necessary scale. Without such frameworks, the impact of public investment risks being fragmented.
The Digital Commons European Digital Infrastructure Consortium (DC-EDIC), established in October 2025 with France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands as founding members, offers this kind of institutional anchoring. This policy brief—the sixth and final in the Policy Building Blocks for Digital Commons series—sets out what the DC-EDIC needs to fulfil that role. It is part of Open Future’s work within the NGI Commons project, informing advocacy ahead of the next Multiannual Financial Framework (2028–2034).
The brief proposes four interconnected functions for the DC-EDIC:
Early signals are encouraging: growing Member State participation and the announcement of the EU Sovereign Tech Fund pilot suggest that the conditions for impact are in place. The task now is to match that momentum with political commitment and sustained investment.