In July 2024, the Australian government announced an AUD $2 billion (US $1.3 billion) investment into a strategic partnership between the Australian Signals Directorate and AWS in Australia to build a “Top Secret Cloud” for the government.
The sovereign cloud will support Australia’s defence and national intelligence agencies to securely host their most sensitive information. It will also improve the secure sharing and analysis of classified data at speed and scale, and provide an environment where agencies can leverage emerging technologies, like artificial intelligence and machine learning, in their work.
This strategy exemplifies sovereign cloud growth in APAC, particularly in the public sector. An estimated 48% of agencies in APAC are planning to include cloud sovereignty in their cloud strategy in the next 12 months, according to provider Capgemini.
The future may witness the proliferation of sovereign clouds, driven by cybersecurity concerns and data protection regulations that encourage more careful data management across national borders, as hyperscaler cloud providers invest in sovereign cloud services to meet this growing demand.
The demand for sovereign cloud solutions is rising rapidly in the APAC market.
Research from market intelligence firm IDC suggests 17% of APAC government agencies are already using sovereign cloud services, and a further 30% plan to have adopted this technology by 2025.
In 2022, Capgemini found that 73% of organisations in Australia believed that their companies will adopt cloud sovereignty to ensure compliance with regulations and standards of national, state, or local governments. Capgemini more recently suggested that its data showed 64% of organisations in Australia were actively investigating sovereign cloud as part of their strategy.
SEE: The state of edge computing in Australia
In Singapore, the public sector is embracing sovereign cloud technologies:
The rise of sovereign cloud solutions in APAC is driven by several factors, including:
Hyperscalers are investing in forms of sovereign cloud services in the region. These include AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure, as well as cloud service providers IBM, Oracle Sovereign Cloud, VMware Broadcom Sovereign Cloud, and NxtGen Sovereign Cloud.
IDC said these offerings fall into two categories: those specifically designed for the sovereign cloud market and branded as such; and those who aim for deployed infrastructure to be “sovereign-by-design” from the start with built-in sovereign controls.
For example:
“Many organisations have voiced concerns regarding the limited choice of sovereign cloud partners and the lack of required cloud features, among other notable challenges,” the IDC report said. “Perceptions are expected to shift in 2024, as vendors in the region have dedicated the past few years to establishing their presence in the sovereignty market.”
The explosion in regulations governing data across APAC means that sovereign cloud solutions will be a big part of the future. The sovereign cloud market in APAC is expected to grow rapidly, driven by the increasing need for data sovereignty and compliance.
Hyperscale cloud providers will likely play a dominant role in building these solutions for APAC via an adjustment or addition to their own service propositions for customers, potentially building them together with local government agencies and technology ecosystems.