evroc and SUSE have formed a strategic partnership to provide a European-focused cloud infrastructure and management solution centered on digital sovereignty. Through their joint commitment to Eurostack, the two companies combine SUSE’s strengths in infrastructure management with evroc’s advanced European cloud platform, delivering a secure, resilient environment for customers’ most important workloads.
Initially, evroc will offer SUSE Linux Enterprise and SUSE Linux Micro as available operating systems, positioning the company as one of Europe’s first Sovereign Cloud Service Providers within a growing european cloud ecosystem. SUSE Rancher Prime is also being certified to run on evroc’s cloud, ensuring a strong combination for Kubernetes management. This arrangement represents both a strategic alliance and a commercial offering to deliver enterprise-ready sovereign solutions. The offering will be generally available in the first quarter of 2026.
“This partnership with evroc is a significant step forward in our commitment to providing a choice of open, interoperable and secure solutions for our customers,” says Frank Feldmann, Chief Strategy Officer at SUSE. “Together, we are building a truly European cloud ecosystem that empowers businesses with digital sovereignty and the flexibility they need to innovate.”
All joint evroc and SUSE offerings will include SUSE Sovereign Premium Support to ensure customers get support through European personnel. As part of the long term partnership, evroc and SUSE will introduce more open infrastructure solutions and support offerings over time, including SUSE virtualization and SUSE AI technologies.
“We are delighted to partner with SUSE to bring a comprehensive and sovereign cloud offering to the European market,” adds James Collis, VP of Partnerships at evroc. “SUSE’s proven expertise in enterprise open source, combined with evroc’s advanced cloud infrastructure, will provide an unparalleled solution for organisations seeking control and security over their digital assets.”
“By working with a trusted ecosystem of partners that can assure sovereign controls without sacrificing agility, technology providers can help organizations to successfully implement sovereign infrastructure and alleviate these challenges” says Rahiel Nasir, research director, European cloud practice, lead analyst, digital sovereignty at IDC. “This approach allows European enterprises to move beyond partial sovereignty and address the full spectrum of data, technical, and operational sovereignty requirements to support the modern regulatory landscape.”
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