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Deutsche Telekom Expands Sovereign Industrial AI Cloud

Deutsche Telekom expanded its Industrial AI Cloud initiative by naming its B2B unit T-Systems a “Sovereign Partner Cloud” provider for the ServiceNow AI Platform in Germany. The move builds on a partnership between T-Systems and ServiceNow that dates back to 2014 and positions the telecom operator to deliver AI-driven workflow automation for enterprises that require locally operated, compliant infrastructure.

The deployment runs on Deutsche Telekom’s T Cloud infrastructure and integrates the ServiceNow AI Platform to automate and standardize enterprise workflows across IT operations, customer service, and human resources. T-Systems will provide consulting, implementation, licensing, hosting, and operations as a single integrated offering. The approach targets German enterprises in highly regulated sectors that require strict data sovereignty, regulatory compliance, and secure local hosting of AI applications.

The partnership also ties into Deutsche Telekom’s broader Industrial AI Cloud initiative launched earlier this year. The Munich-based AI facility functions as a sovereign AI factory built with partners including SAP and Siemens, delivering a technology stack described as “Made in Germany.” The platform includes connectivity, compute infrastructure, AI platforms, and SaaS applications designed for industrial workloads such as digital twins, robotics, and simulation.

“Europe needs AI solutions for industry. What was missing so far was an infrastructure – open, safe and confident. We have now created this with our Industrial AI Cloud and with a technology stack ‘Made in Germany’,” said Ferri Abolhassan, Member of the Board of Management of Deutsche Telekom and CEO of T-Systems.

🌐 Analysis

Deutsche Telekom’s Industrial AI Cloud reflects a broader push across Europe to establish sovereign AI infrastructure that keeps data and compute resources within national or regional jurisdictions. Governments and enterprises increasingly view digital sovereignty as critical for sectors such as manufacturing, defense, healthcare, and public administration.

Other European telecom operators are pursuing similar strategies. For example, operators including Telefónica, Orange, and Deutsche Telekom have explored sovereign cloud and AI platforms tied to national or regional data residency requirements, while hyperscalers continue investing heavily in European data center infrastructure. The contrast highlights two parallel models emerging in Europe: sovereign operator-led AI infrastructure and hyperscaler-led cloud expansion.

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