More of AWS’s all-in EU public cloud, write-up from Nick Patience:

the ESC represents a total technical decoupling intended to satisfy the most cautious European customers and their regulators. By locating all data – including metadata, billing and identity management – entirely within the EU and staffed exclusively with EU residents (and eventually citizens), AWS is trying to neutralize the legal and geopolitical risks associated with the U.S. Cloud Act, which enables US law enforcement, under certain conditions, to compel US-based cloud providers (such as AWS) to hand over data stored anywhere in the world, even if that data belongs to foreign entities or is stored in a different jurisdiction (e.g. the EU).

And, pricing:

Customers will pay a sovereignty premium for the services compared to a region in Frankfurt. AWS estimated the premium at 10-15%. AWS users pay a similar premium for AWS’s FedRAMP-compliant cloud in the US and for similar services from rival cloud providers. For enterprises, the value proposition rests on whether this isolation provides enough regulatory peace of mind to justify potentially higher costs.

Side-note: I’ve been liking Nick Patience’s stuff. He’s a good analyst, from 451.

AWS European Sovereign Cloud Debuts in Germany