Doorgeplaatst artikel

Strong contributions and a substantive panel discussion characterised the CoE-DSC Strategy Meeting ‘Steering for cloud sovereignty’ on 18 June in The Hague, all grounded in concrete, action-oriented perspectives. Only by connecting public and private parties, and aligning supply and demand, we can achieve federated solutions that give organisations greater control and reduce digital dependence.
At the Gaia-X Tech-X & Hackathon #9 in Athens, CoE-DSC and TNO played a prominent role in advancing trusted data sharing and interoperability within the European digital ecosystem. A major highlight was the CoE-DSC/TNO team winning the first prize at the hackathon, achieved with an AI-powered solution that enhances trusted collaboration between digital services. The event also showcased important progress in trust and compliance frameworks that support the future development of interoperable European data spaces.
Considerable effort is being invested in interoperability, standards and infrastructure, but far less attention is being paid to demonstrating the real-world benefits these developments deliver. The Data SVP! team aims to change that.

NEN has launched the public consultation for Trusted Data Transaction (TDT) Part 3: a standard for interoperability requirements. This means that Dutch stakeholders can review the draft and submit comments […]

Today, the Open Cloud Alliance (in Dutch: Open Cloud Alliantie, OCA) presented a manifesto for a sovereign government cloud to Michiel Boots, Director-General for Economy and Digitalisation at the Ministry […]

While standardisation is a critical foundation for Digital Product Passports, the adoption of the DPP ultimately will determine its impact in practice. To explore what is needed for and currently hinders DPP adoption, we spoke with Carolynn Bernier (CIRPASS-2 Consortium Coordinator & Senior Research Engineer at Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives, CEA) and Sjoerd Rongen (Digital Product Passports Lead at TNO and coordinator of the Centre of Excellence for Digital Product Passports).
With the Energy Act coming into force on 1 January, the Netherlands has taken an important step towards transparent, secure and sovereign energy data. A central role in this transition has been assigned to Het Normo, which has officially been designated as the Data Exchange Entity (in Dutch: gegevensuitwisselingsentiteit, GUE)
Do you want your data sharing initiative to unlock the true value of data and take the step from ambition to scalable impact? Then we invite you to take part in the Impact Challenge, the official launch of our new Data Sharing Valorisation Program (Data SVP!). 
During a Community Meeting on 22 January, the Centre of Excellence for Digital Product Passports (CoE DPP) presented the DPP Landscape Scan and DPP Adoption Pulse to the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate. The reports show where the Netherlands currently stands and what is needed from government to take the next step.
The Data Act has come into effect since September 12, 2025. We spoke with Rex Leijenaar (Team manager/MT member Telecom and Digital at Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets - ACM) and Gijs van Houwelingen (researcher at TNO/CoE-DSC) about this topic.
Trust frameworks are the backbone of sovereign data sharing. Discover a range of publications that CoE-DSC has contributed to.
Three quarters of global cloud capacity is managed by three so-called hyperscalers: Microsoft, Google and Amazon Web Services. In the discussion about the need for (more) sovereignty, there are also calls for a European equivalent. Peter Verkoulen discusses this topic.
The task for Rijkswaterstaat is to ensure that the Netherlands remains safe, liveable and accessible. Digitisation should help achieve this. Furthermore, Rijkswaterstaat is investing heavily in its sovereignty, and creating a government cloud is one of the ideas.
We spoke with Jan Merckx (Sustainability Lead at GS1 Netherlands) and Sjoerd Rongen (Digital Product Passports Lead at TNO) about DPP standardisation.
Organisations and businesses have been dealing with digital data for decades. So why is there so much excitement about the data economy? Why is progress and growth increasingly dependent on our ability to share and exchange data? In 'Campus - Understanding data economy', Gaia-X Hub Germany organises various courses about data related topics, amongst others the above questions.