ETSI delivers report on Cloud Computing Standards

The final report from ETSI’s Cloud Standards Coordination initiative was made public on December 11 in Brussels. The report was delivered at an event jointly organized between ETSI and the European Commission attended by over 100 experts from the cloud community.

The overall objective of the Cloud Standards Coordination initiative led by ETSI was to identify a detailed map of the standards required to support a series of policy objectives defined by the European Commission[1]. The initiative attracted cloud industry players, public authorities, user associations and more than 20 standards setting organizations to work collectively on this objective.


“I am pleased that ETSI launched and steered the Cloud Standards Coordination (CSC) initiative in a fully transparent and open way for all stakeholders. Today's announcement gives a lot of hope as our European Cloud Computing Strategy aims to create 2.5 million new European jobs and boost EU GDP by EUR 160 billion by 2020.” says Neelie Kroes, European Commissioner for the Digital Agenda.


The report provides:
• A definition of roles in cloud computing;
• The collection and classification of over 100 cloud computing Use Cases;
• A list of around 20 relevant organizations in cloud computing Standardization and a selection of around 150 associated documents, Standards & Specifications as well as Reports & White Papers produced by these organizations;
• A classification of activities that need to be undertaken by Cloud Service Customers or Cloud Service Providers over the whole Cloud Service Life-Cycle;
• A mapping of the selected cloud computing documents (in particular Standards & Specifications) on these activities.
Finally, the report offers a set of recommendations on the way forward. The analysis shows that cloud standardization is much more focused that anticipated and that standards are maturing in some areas.


“Cloud computing has gained momentum and credibility, thus generating new offers and demands for more complex use cases and services.” says Luis Jorge Romero, Director General at ETSI. “In this perspective, standardization is seen as a strong enabler for both investors and customers and can help increase security, ensure interoperability, data portability and reversibility”.

Tendfor introduces version 3.20 to enhance customer interactions via Microsoft Teams, aiming for...
OutSystems redefines AI engagement with new launches and partnerships at the 2026 ONE Conference in...
LogicMonitor is focusing on increased use of AI in IT operations to improve efficiency and support...
Wipro and ServiceNow collaborate on AI-driven workflows for enterprise functions across IT, HR,...
NinjaOne has reached a valuation of approximately $12.3 billion, following a period of growth and...
Deloitte and NVIDIA have launched an initiative called “Adopt 100” designed to support AI...
Island for SMBs launched on Pax8 Marketplace, aiming to simplify tech for MSPs with a unified...
Kao Data partners with Nebius for AI cloud infrastructure deployment, highlighting the UK’s role...