{"id":13566,"title":"Building Europe\u2019s Public AI Stack","link":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/en\/2026\/01\/13\/building-europes-public-ai-stack\/","date":"01\/13\/2026","date_unix":1768288049,"date_modified_unix":1768288126,"date_iso":"2026-01-13T07:07:29+00:00","content":"<p><em>In a new policy brief, we show why Europe\u2019s dependence on foreign AI infrastructure is a growing risk to strategic autonomy and democratic control &#8211; and how a Public AI approach can turn AI into open, mission-driven public digital infrastructure that serves the common good.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Today\u2019s most capable AI systems are increasingly becoming part of Europe\u2019s basic infrastructure and now underpin search, communication, education, healthcare or even security\u2011relevant systems. Yet this infrastructure is largely developed and governed by a small group of non\u2011European firms that concentrate investment, data and talent in their hands.<\/p>\n<p>In a new policy brief we take this imbalance as its starting point. We argue that Europe\u2019s dependence on foreign cloud providers and foundation models is not just an economic problem, but a direct risk to strategic autonomy, democratic decision\u2011making and the European social model.<\/p>\n<h2><strong>The three pillars of Public AI<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p>Public debate about artificial intelligence often swings between uncritical optimism and alarmist scenarios. In this policy brief we deliberately step away from this hype and treat AI as a \u201cnormal technology\u201d: powerful and transformative, but ultimately shaped by political and social decisions, rather than an autonomous force beyond democratic control.<\/p>\n<p>In this perspective, the key question is not whether Europe can win an abstract \u201cAI race\u201d, but what kind of AI infrastructure it wants to rely on \u2013 and who that infrastructure should serve. The answer we put forward is Public AI: a framework that understands AI as public digital infrastructure organised around the common good.<\/p>\n<p>Public AI rests on three pillars. First, universal, equal and non\u2011discriminatory access to compute, data, models and applications, supported by open licences, open standards and interoperable, often open\u2011source ecosystems. Second, mission\u2011driven public goals that guide investments towards clearly defined public needs and create digital public goods where markets under\u2011provide. Third, public control through meaningful oversight, public funding or direct provision, with options for citizen participation and public ownership of successful innovations.<\/p>\n<h2><strong>Europe\u2019s policy toolkit is taking shape<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p>The good news is that Europe is not starting from scratch. Last year, the European Commission has launched a range of initiatives \u2013 including the AI Continent Action Plan, the Apply AI strategy and the Data Union Strategy \u2013 to expand computing capacity, support model development, increase access to high\u2011quality data and deploy AI in strategic sectors.<\/p>\n<p>Taken together, these steps represent a substantial public investment in Europe\u2019s AI future. Yet, without an explicit Public AI focus, they risk reinforcing existing dependencies instead of overcoming them. If publicly funded computing facilities, models and datasets primarily serve proprietary solutions controlled elsewhere, Europe will have paid for infrastructure that others ultimately steer.<\/p>\n<p>To avoid this outcome, the brief calls for a \u201cfull\u2011stack\u201d perspective. Compute, data, models, applications and software should be treated as parts of a single Public AI stack rather than as separate policy fields. Measures at each layer need to reinforce one another. Equally important are demand\u2011side tools such as strategic public procurement, targeted support for public\u2011sector use cases and guidance for responsible deployment, so that new infrastructure is actually used to create public value.<\/p>\n<h2><strong>Three building blocks for European Public AI<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p>On this foundation, we make policy recommendations with regards to three key layers of the AI stack: compute, models and data.<\/p>\n<p>On compute, we argue that investments must be clearly oriented towards Public AI objectives. In fact, investments in computing power \u2013\u00a0 and particularly the Gigafactories initiative \u2013 need a much clearer orientation towards public AI objectives. While Gigafactories and AI Factories should indeed support a broad range of AI development projects, the strategic importance of public AI should be explicitly recognised and prioritised.<\/p>\n<p>On models, we call for a demand\u2011driven strategy centred on a family of European public foundation models that are permanently open and democratically governed. These general\u2011purpose systems should be complemented by smaller, specialised models tailored to concrete domains. Open\u2011source licensing and transparency about architectures, training methods and data are framed as essential \u2013 both for accountability and reproducibility, and to allow European actors to build on publicly funded technologies without creating new structural dependencies.<\/p>\n<p>On data, we argue for a European data commons to counter emerging \u201cdata winters\u201d, in which high\u2011quality datasets are increasingly locked away. A Public AI data strategy should combine legal certainty for using publicly available data in model training with new governance mechanisms for sharing high\u2011value datasets. Data Labs linked to AI Factories are presented as potential institutional \u201cglue\u201d between data holders, developers and compute providers, provided they are explicitly tasked with serving open\u2011source development, public\u2011sector needs and public\u2011interest applications.<\/p>\n<p>Ultimately, the Public AI approach is not about deploying AI everywhere, but about deploying it where it genuinely serves public needs. We argue against an uncritical \u201cAI first\u201d principle and instead for purposeful deployment guided by evidence, mission\u2011oriented research and innovation, and strong governance. In some areas, the most responsible decision will be not to use AI at all.<\/p>\n<p>The Public AI policy brief is aimed at European decision\u2011makers in EU institutions and member states, as well as researchers, public\u2011interest technologists and civil society organisations that want to shape a different AI future for Europe.<\/p>\n<p>The future of AI in Europe is still open. Whether AI becomes another driver of dependency or a shared public infrastructure will depend on the choices made now. We invite all actors involved in Europe\u2019s digital transformation to engage with its proposals and help build a Public AI ecosystem that truly serves the common good.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><span data-teams=\"true\"><i>This text is licensed under a \u202f<\/i><a id=\"menurlnv\" class=\"fui-Link ___1q1shib f2hkw1w f3rmtva f1ewtqcl fyind8e f1k6fduh f1w7gpdv fk6fouc fjoy568 figsok6 f1s184ao f1mk8lai fnbmjn9 f1o700av f13mvf36 f1cmlufx f9n3di6 f1ids18y f1tx3yz7 f1deo86v f1eh06m1 f1iescvh fhgqx19 f1olyrje f1p93eir f1nev41a f1h8hb77 f1lqvz6u f10aw75t fsle3fq f17ae5zn\" title=\"http:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/4.0\/\" href=\"http:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/4.0\/\" target=\"_blank\" aria-label=\"Opens in a new tab\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" aria-label=\"Link Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License\"><i><strong>Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License<\/strong><\/i><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n","excerpt":"<p>In a new policy brief, we show why Europe\u2019s dependence on foreign AI infrastructure is a growing risk to strategic autonomy and democratic control &#8211; and how a Public AI approach can turn AI into open, mission-driven public digital infrastructure that serves the common good.<\/p>\n","thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/23\/2026\/01\/Public_AI_Cover_verpixelt.png","thumbnailsquare":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/23\/2026\/01\/Public_AI_Cover_verpixelt.png","authors":[{"id":8253,"name":"Dr. Felix Sieker","link":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/en\/blogger\/dr-felix-sieker\/"}],"categories":[{"id":698,"name":"Political decision-makers","link":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/en\/category\/political-decision-makers\/"}],"tags":[{"id":719,"name":"Latest Publications","link":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/en\/tag\/latest-publications\/"},{"id":639,"name":"Publications","link":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/en\/tag\/publications\/"},{"id":716,"name":"Solution Approaches","link":"https:\/\/www.reframetech.de\/en\/tag\/solution-approaches\/"}]}