The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and Nvidia have partnered to create sovereign AI and cloud technologies for public service media.
Nvidia’s collaboration with the EBU focuses on helping build sovereign AI and cloud frameworks for the EBU, whose 110 members include the BBC, France Télévisions, Italy’s RAI and Germany’s ZDF.

The partnership aims to develop cloud infrastructure and AI services that are governed by European policy, comply with European data protection and privacy rules, and embody European values.
Sovereign AI ensures nations can develop and deploy artificial intelligence using local infrastructure, datasets and expertise.
The partnership comes after the EBU’s Technical Assembly last week called for the development of ‘sovereign, interoperable, resilient, and sustainable’ cloud and AI infrastructure to support public service media across Europe.
“We are proud to collaborate with Nvidia to drive the development of sovereign AI and cloud services,” said Michael Eberhard, Chief Technology Officer of public broadcaster ARD/SWR, and Chair of the EBU Technical Committee. “By advancing these capabilities together, we’re helping ensure that powerful, compliant and accessible media services are made available to all EBU members — powering innovation, resilience and strategic autonomy across the board.”
Nvidia and the EBU plan to develop hybrid cloud architectures that meet the standards of European public service media. The EBU will contribute its Dynamic Media Facility (DMF) and Media eXchange Layer (MXL) architecture, aiming to enable interoperability and scalability for workflows, as well as cost- and energy-efficient AI training and inference. Following open-source principles, the work aims to create an accessible, dynamic technology ecosystem.
The collaboration will also provide public service media companies with tools to deliver personalised, contextually relevant services and content recommendation systems, with a focus on transparency, accountability and cultural identity. This will be achieved through investment in sovereign cloud and AI infrastructure and software platforms such as Nvidia AI Enterprise, custom foundation models, large language models trained with local data, and retrieval-augmented generation technologies.
As part of the collaboration, Nvidia is also making available resources from its Deep Learning Institute, offering European media organisations training programmes to create an AI-ready workforce. This will support the EBU’s efforts to help ensure news integrity in the age of AI.
In addition, the EBU and its partners are investing in local data centres and cloud platforms that support sovereign technologies.
“Building sovereign cloud and AI capabilities based on EBU’s Dynamic Media Facility and Media eXchange Layer architecture requires strong cross-industry collaboration,” said Antonio Arcidiacono, Chief Technology and Innovation Officer at the EBU. “By collaborating with Nvidia, as well as a broad ecosystem of media technology partners, we are fostering a shared foundation for trust, innovation and resilience that supports the growth of European media.”

Service List Registry appoints Peter MacAvock to advisory board
Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB) Project Former Chair Peter MacAvock will join the advisory board of online audiovisual services directory Service List Registry (SLR).

IBC Accelerators: Discover groundbreaking POCs and innovative solutions to real-world problems at IBC2025
Eight Accelerator projects and one Special Incubator project will be presented during IBC2025 as part of the Accelerator Media Innovation Programme, which seeks to offer fast-track solutions to real-world challenges facing the industry.
Blast and Singapore Tourism Board to host four esports arena events
Danish esports organiser Blast has signed a multi-year partnership with the Singapore Tourism Board (STB) to host four arena esports events in Singapore over the coming years.
.jpg)
Streamers reduce scripted TV commissions
The number of scripted TV originals ordered for production by the top six global streamers in the first half (H1) of 2025 has fallen by 24% year-on-year, according to Ampere Analysis.
EBU welcomes introduction of European Media Freedom Act
The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) has welcomed the European Media Freedom Act (EMFA) coming into force, stating it will strengthen media independence and pluralism.