PlanetHoster strengthens European cloud ambitions with Digital Forest deal

PlanetHoster completed its acquisition of Digital Forest, which operates from France as an environmentally focused hosting company, during this week, which marked a new phase in European cloud market competition.

The move signals more than simple portfolio expansion. The mid-sized cloud providers who operate in the current market demonstrate their opposition to three major market forces. The first force requires businesses to comply with regulations, while the second force drives environmental sustainability, and the third force demands customers maintain control of their data.

Digital Forest entered the market in 2020 under the leadership of Simon Cardon with a clear objective. The company encouraged businesses to treat digital infrastructure as part of their environmental footprint rather than as an invisible utility. As a result, it promoted energy conscious hosting setups, lighter web design practices, and measurable reductions in server related emissions.

Now, PlanetHoster integrates that approach into its broader European cloud strategy. The company already operates infrastructure designed to keep customer data within European jurisdictions. However, through this acquisition, it adds environmental optimization practices to that framework. Consequently, the discussion shifts from simple hosting performance to long term operational responsibility.

Cardon will step into the role of CEO Europe. Therefore, continuity remains central to the transition. His appointment suggests that PlanetHoster intends to scale Digital Forest’s operating model rather than dilute it.

At the same time, the deal lands in a competitive environment dominated by global hyperscalers. Nevertheless, many European organizations now scrutinize where data resides and how infrastructure consumes energy. Because of that shift, regional providers increasingly compete on compliance, transparency, and efficiency instead of raw scale alone.

This particular acquisition does not try to compete with the giants in the cloud market. Rather, it enhances an alternative that focuses on regulatory compatibility and sustainable management of infrastructure. With the evolution of digital policy in Europe and the tightening of environmental reporting, companies that match performance with accountability may gain better traction in procurement choices in both the private and public sectors.

 

 

 

 

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