Europe’s pursuit of digital sovereignty rests on a flawed premise: that competing with the United States, rather than China, should be the central priority. To advance this goal, Brussels has embraced the so-called “Airbus model”—the belief that the government-led coordination that created an aerospace champion can be replicated to achieve dominance in semiconductors, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence (AI). The idea is seductive and gaining traction, but the analogy is unproven and misguided.
The comparison between Airbus’s bloc-coordinated aerospace development and its proposed application to digital sovereignty glosses over critical realities about how Airbus actually works and, more importantly, how digital markets function differently from aerospace. The Airbus approach, far from being a ready-made formula, risks being ill-suited—and even counterproductive—for the fast-moving, globally interconnected world of technology.
The reliance on the Airbus model is a misjudgement on three distinct and cascading levels. First, the analogy does not hold in the digital economy. Second, even if it did, it would lead Europe down a strategically wrongheaded path. Third, the push for this model is driven less by economic logic than by a deep-seated psychological need for European technological agency—a need the Airbus approach is unsuited to address.
- The Analogy Is Technically False
Digital markets don’t play by the same rules as aerospace. The two operate under such fundamentally different structural realities that their playbooks are not just different, but often incompatible.
Consider what the technology stack actually comprises. At its base are semiconductors. These are physical products that, admittedly, share some characteristics with aerospace manufacturing: high capital requirements, long development cycles, and economies of scale. Yet even here, the comparison breaks down under scrutiny. While a modern Boeing 737 MAX series aircraft is vastly more advanced than the original 1966 model, its evolution occurs in slow, heavily regulated, generational leaps. The core design is derivative, and any significant change is constrained by immense certification hurdles that span years or decades.
By contrast, the semiconductor industry operates at a blistering pace. A chip fab is not a single product but a process that must evolve constantly; new, more powerful process nodes emerge every 18-24 months. The contrast underscores the flaw in applying an aerospace analogy to digital technologies: stability may define aircraft manufacturing, but perpetual reinvention drives semiconductors.
Moving up the stack to cloud infrastructure are services that can be updated continuously, scaled instantly, and modified without touching physical hardware. Further up still, software applications exist in a realm of pure abstraction. No safety certification required, no materials science constraints, just code that can be rewritten, deployed, and iterated upon within minutes. The barriers to entry are minimal. Success depends less on meeting regulatory standards than on solving user problems better than competitors.
EuroStack proponents—who want to build a European alternative to the American digital tech stack—collapse these radically different layers into a single sovereignty project, as if a unified political vision could somehow paper over their distinct economic realities. Talk of building a “European alternative,” as if the stack were a product rather than an ecosystem, treats the stack as a thing to be manufactured rather than a complex interplay of competing and complementary services.
Proponents of the Airbus model conveniently forget that it took over two decades and billions in controversial state subsidies for the consortium to achieve stable profitability—a timeline that is an eternity in the digital economy, where market leaders can be crowned or dethroned in months.
The Airbus model partly worked in creating the current duopoly because aircraft are discrete, certifiable units where safety regulations create natural barriers to entry and where multi-decade development cycles are both necessary and acceptable. But only small portions of the technology stack share these characteristics. The vast majority operates on entirely different principles: rapid iteration, permissionless innovation, and winner-takes-most dynamics driven by network effects rather than regulatory requirements.
This categorical error—treating diverse digital technologies as a unified sovereignty project—leads directly to policy incoherence. The same industrial policy framework cannot simultaneously address the venture-scale dynamics of software startups, the capital-intensive economics of semiconductor manufacturing, and the network effects of platform businesses. Yet this is exactly what EuroStack attempts, applying a one-size-fits-all sovereignty template to layers of the stack that operate according to fundamentally different economic laws.
- The Strategy Won’t Work
Even if the Airbus model could somehow be adapted to digital markets, it would be the wrong strategy to pursue.
To begin with, the Airbus precedent is not the unblemished success story it’s made out to be. The consortium’s reliance on government subsidies sparked a 17-year dispute at the World Trade Organization, straining transatlantic relations for years, and ended with the WTO ruling that Airbus had received illegal state aid from European countries totalling $22 billion for the A380 and A350 models. Even on its own terms, the model led to costly missteps.
The A380, a marvel of engineering, cost an estimated $25 billion to develop and sold just 251 units before production was halted, leaving Airbus with a financial black hole. In the end, the A380 was a strategic miscalculation born from bureaucratic ambition, not market demand. It stands as a powerful symbol of how state-directed grand projects can succeed in building an impressive product that no one wants to buy at the necessary scale.
This tendency toward high-stakes, slow-moving projects is precisely what makes the model so dangerous for digital markets. The mismatch is already on display in Europe’s existing tech initiatives. Gaia-X, launched with Airbus as an inspiration, has been lapped by global cloud providers who’ve rolled out hundreds of new services while European firms grew too impatient to wait. EuroStack, launched with similar ambitions and a hefty €300 billion price tag, risks following the same pattern of being lapped by global providers who roll out hundreds of new services while European efforts struggle with coordination challenges. Modelled on a long-game strategy, these efforts struggle to match the agility and scale of digital competition.
Furthermore, the strategy invites a level of economic self-harm that aerospace disputes, for all their bitterness, never threatened. A digital protectionist approach would not be a targeted strike against a single industry; it would be a shock to the entire economic system. Unlike aircraft, which are discrete assets, digital services are the nervous system of modern commerce, woven into every supply chain and transaction.
To deliberately fragment this system in the name of sovereignty would risk isolating Europe from the very innovation it seeks to master. By building digital walls, Europe risks missing out on the exponential benefits that come from participating in the global flows of digital innovation and network effects that fuel genuine technological leadership. And of course, by weakening allied leaders, it risks ceding digital leadership to China. Adopting this playbook is not just misguided; it is an act of economic brinkmanship.
- The Psychology Is Misguided
Perhaps the deepest issue lies in the political and psychological drivers behind Europe’s obsession with digital sovereignty. The Airbus analogy persists not because of its economic or industrial logic, but because it serves a powerful symbolic purpose. The strategy is less about market effectiveness and more about responding to geopolitical anxiety and a desire to reclaim a sense of agency on the world stage. It is about proving that Europe can still direct grand, ambitious projects, and that the continent has not been relegated to a museum of past glories.
This underlying motivation explains the preference for a certain type of policy intervention. The EuroStack initiative is designed to project strength and technological intent. It is the modern equivalent of monumental public works—tangible, centrally planned, and politically legible. This approach allows policymakers to demonstrate action, but it fundamentally misreads the nature of digital competition.
The ambition for digital technological leadership is misguided, as it will likely weaken Western leadership and strengthen China. Moreover, the chosen blueprint is faulty. Clinging to a model that prioritises the illusion of control over the messy, unpredictable, and failure-strewn reality of genuine innovation will mire Europe in yesterday’s battles. European politicians would do well not to attempt to replicate Airbus in the digital economy.
Success will not come from recreating top-down, state-coordinated European champions. It will come from fostering a genuinely digital-native industrial strategy—one that unleashes private-sector competition, champions speed and scale, and aggressively removes the barriers, both real and psychological, to innovation. The goal should not be to build an Airbus for the digital age, but to create the competitive, market-based fertile ground from which globally competitive tech leaders can emerge. And finally, it is about finding areas where EU digital strength complements Western strength, to create a more robust Western, allied digital industrial system to compete with China.
Image Credit: Joe Ravi, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons