Deutsche Telekom joins GovTech framework to simplify sovereign cloud access

German public authorities have spent years navigating a familiar tension: the need for modern cloud infrastructure on one side, and strict data sovereignty requirements on the other. Most procurement processes made accessing both at the same time genuinely difficult. A new framework agreement involving Deutsche Telekom and Bechtle AG is trying to change that on a practical level, not just a policy one.

Through the GovTech Deutschland framework awarded to Bechtle, federal, state, and local authorities in Germany can now procure T Cloud Public directly through Bechtle’s multi-cloud broker portal. That removes the need for individual tendering procedures each time an authority needs cloud or AI resources, which has historically added months to procurement timelines and created significant administrative overhead for IT managers already stretched thin.

The framework covers the Deutschlandplattform, the MEDI:CUS healthcare platform, and authorized bodies across all three levels of German government. Both the Deutschlandplattform and MEDI:CUS are already running productively on the GovTech framework, which means this is not a theoretical arrangement waiting for its first use case.

Baden-Württemberg provides a concrete example of what the infrastructure can handle at scale. T-Systems migrated the state’s Moodle learning platform to T Cloud Public, moving one of the world’s largest e-learning deployments into a German-operated cloud environment. More than 1,600 schools across the state now use the platform in regular teaching, serving 1.5 million learners, with automatic scaling managing peak load periods without disruption.

T Cloud Public meets BSI C5:2020, ISO 27001, and GDPR requirements. For public sector procurement officers, that combination matters because it removes the compliance uncertainty that has pushed many authorities toward US-based hyperscalers despite sovereignty concerns they could not fully resolve.

Ferri Abolhassan, CEO of T-Systems International and board member at Deutsche Telekom, put the ambition plainly. By the end of 2026, he said, T Cloud Public will reach functional parity with major hyperscalers, while already matching them on pricing today. That is a specific and testable claim, which makes it more interesting than most sovereignty positioning tends to be.

German public sector IT moves slowly by design. Removing procurement friction is one of the few levers that actually speeds things up.

 

 

 

 

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