Ampere Computing brings arm-based cloud instances to Europe through both hyperscale, regional providers
Cloud infrastructure in Europe is quietly going through a hardware shift, and Ampere Computing sits closer to the center of that change than most people outside the industry currently realize.
The chip company is rolling out its AmpereOne and AmpereOne M processors across a expanding roster of European cloud platforms, covering both global hyperscalers and the regional providers that serve organizations with stricter requirements around where their data physically lives. The list of partners involved tells much of the story on its own: Oracle, Scaleway, Glesys, Hetzner, C41.ch, and CloudSigma are all either launching or qualifying Ampere-based instances across the continent right now.
Oracle is moving first at the hyperscale level, bringing new A4 instances powered by AmpereOne M chips online in its London and Frankfurt cloud regions. These cover both standard workloads and AI inference, and customers with sovereignty requirements can access them through Oracle’s EU Sovereign Cloud and Oracle Alloy frameworks, which keep deployments within defined legal boundaries.
Among regional providers, each rollout carries its own character. Scaleway is introducing instances across facilities in France and the Netherlands. Glesys starts with hardware-as-a-service in Sweden before transitioning to cloud-based services later this year. Hetzner, which actually put Europe’s first Ampere-powered cloud servers online back in 2023, is now testing AmpereOne chips ahead of 2026 deployments. CloudSigma is building AI-specific offerings including Token-as-a-Service and Model-as-a-Service on AmpereOne M infrastructure, targeting sovereign and private cloud environments specifically.
The driving force behind most of these decisions is power efficiency rather than raw performance. Jeff Wittich, chief product officer at Ampere, made the point directly: providers across Europe face short-term power constraints as AI workloads scale, and hardware that delivers more compute per watt lets them serve more customers without expanding physical capacity. He also noted that European enterprises increasingly want their compute resources deployed domestically rather than routed through distant regions.
Matt Kimball from Moor Insights and Strategy added useful context from the regional provider side. Building custom silicon requires engineering teams that smaller cloud operators simply do not have. Ampere fills that gap by offering competitive Arm-based processors without demanding the infrastructure investment that hyperscaler-built chips represent.
Europe’s sovereign cloud market is projected to exceed 100 billion euros by 2030, and the current rollout positions Ampere directly within that trajectory.

