Questions & Answers on the First report on the State of the Digital Decade

Source: EuPC
26 September 2023

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What is the link between the Digital Economy and Society Index (DESI) and the 2030 Digital Decade?

In the past decade, the Commission has monitored the yearly Member States' performance on digital through the DESI – the Digital Economy and Society Index. The DESI annual reports included country profiles and comparisons that allowed Member States to identify areas of strengths and weaknesses.

The Decision establishing the Digital Decade Policy Programme 2030 assigns DESI a new role. DESI is now integrated into the report on the state of the Digital Decade and complements the monitoring of progress towards the digital targets. This reflects a shift of focus from the assessment of a country's relative performance to a collective effort in bridging the gap to the 2030 Digital Decade targets and objectives.

The DESI 2023 consists of a set of relevant indicators which are presented as a multi-dimensional dashboard and have been better aligned to the agreed EU-level targets for 2030 in the areas of digital infrastructure, digital skills, digitalisation of businesses and of public services. The Commission presents the findings in the annual State of the Digital Decade report, of which the first was published today.

How is the EU propelling forward the digital transformation?

Over the last year, the EU has stepped up action to re-assert its technological leadership and facilitate the digital transformation, while fostering its resilience. Building on the world's largest integrated market area, the EU has boosted action to address strategic dependencies, notably on critical raw materials, semiconductors, cloud and edge computing, and cybersecurity technologies. Reforms and investments have been put in place in the context of Next Generation EU under the Recovery and Resilience Facility. In addition, the EU Chips Act has given the market the right signals and already €100 billion in investments have been announced by the industry. Now, adequate public support must complement these investments.

The successful achievement of the EU's digital transformation based on the ambitious Digital Decade targets will require additional policy measures, actions, and large investments from both the public and the private sector, highlighting the importance of joining forces notably through multi-country projects (MCPs). In addition to the existing implementation mechanisms for large-scale projects, the Digital Decade Policy Programme introduces the European Digital Infrastructure Consortia (EDICs) to facilitate the setup and implementation of multi-country projects.

The report stresses the need for the Commission and the Member States to agree on an integrated and strategic approach on digital policy and to foster investments to reach the 2030 digital targets. Without strong and concrete actions, the full achievement of the digital transition will not be possible by 2030.

Through the established Digital Decade cooperation mechanism, the Commission and the Member States will continue evaluating progress and highlighting the areas where progress needs to be accelerated.

What are the sources of data for the report and the indicators?

The data included in the report were mostly collected by the relevant authorities of the Member States, by the Commission (Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology, as well as Eurostat) and from the following studies launched by the Commission:

Main findings of the Digital Decade

Digital skills

Are we on track to reach the targets for digital skills set in the Digital Decade programme?

According to the baseline trajectory, under current conditions, in 2030 approximately 59% of the population will have at least basic digital skills. If the growth continues at current rates, it will be challenging to reach the 80% target by 2030.

Despite the sustained growth over the last 10 years, the number of ICT specialists in employment was 9.37 million across the entire EU in 2022. Under current conditions, the number of ICT specialists in the EU will be close to 12 million by 2030, falling short of around 8 million of the 2030 target (at least 20 million employed ICT specialists). Moreover, in 2022, the gender gap in ICT specialists was still substantial, with only 19% of the total ICT workforce being made up of women.

What measures are the EU and Member States taking to bridge the gap with the targets on digital skills?

To reach the Digital Decade targets by 2030, massive investments and policy interventions are needed to actively promote training and upskilling schemes, as well as fostering the development of digital skills from an early age, with a particular focus on supporting women and girls to enroll in STEM degree courses.

All Member States have been engaging in formal primary education and vocational training, as well as non-formal training initiatives (via public employment services, upskilling initiatives, etc.) on digital skills.  Moreover, to further address the shortage of ICT specialists, initiatives at Member State level also include the creation of shorter/more flexible courses to adapt to the varying needs of learners, as well as subsidised courses.

The Commission has considerably stepped up its efforts to boost digital skills, for example through the Digital Education Action Plan 2021-2027, the adopted digital education and skills package or the Cybersecurity Skills Academy.

More so, several EU funding instruments, along with the Recovery and Resilience Facility,  aim to strengthen digital capacities and the skills needed for their deployment, such as the Digital Europe Programme, the European Social Fund Plus, Horizon Europe and Erasmus+.

Digital infrastructure – connectivity, semiconductors, edge nodes and quantum

Connectivity

How is the EU performing in ensuring widespread connectivity coverage?

In 2022, fixed very high-capacity networks, which include fibre networks, reached 73% of households in the EU, and 5G networks were available to 81% of households. However, the deployment of 5G stand-alone networks is lagging and 5G is still falling short in quality with regards to end-users' expectations and industry needs.

Major challenges to bridge the connectivity gap in rural areas remain. In rural parts of the EU, 9% of households are not covered by any fixed network, and 55% are not served by any fixed very high-capacity networks. 5G networks reached 51% of populated rural areas, up from 33% in the previous year.

How is the EU supporting the connectivity targets?

Data shows that major investments in connectivity will be needed to reach the 2030 targets. The EU will leverage connectivity investments through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF, €2.4 billion), the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD), InvestEU and EIB loans, and through the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) Digital (€2.1 billion until 2027). More so, investments in digital connectivity have attracted about 13% of the RRF digital expenditure amounting to about €16.4 billion, with €13 billion going specifically toward funding Gigabit network rollout.

In addition, the European Electronic Communications Code facilitates investments and addresses long-term challenges in the electronic communications sector. The recent draft Gigabit Infrastructure Act aims at reducing the cost of rolling out gigabit infrastructure across the EU by streamlining, digitising, and reducing the cost of network rollout procedures.

Semiconductors

How is the EU addressing the challenges in reinforcing semiconductor production in Europe?

To address the challenges in semiconductor production, several measures were undertaken. The EU Chips Act, which came into force on 21 September 2023, will reinforce the semiconductor ecosystem in the EU, ensure the resilience of supply chains and reduce external dependencies. 

Moreover, together with the Commission, the Member States launched a first successful Important Project of Common European Interest in Microelectronics and Communication Technologies, which mobilises €21 billion of private and public investments and a second IPCEI on Microelectronics and Communication Technologies which will include 56 companies, small and medium-sized enterprises (‘SMEs') and start-ups.

For the EU to reach its targeted market share of 20% of global value in chips, it will need to quadruple its revenues by 2030. To reach this goal, the EU should further step up investment and stimulate domestic chip design and manufacturing capabilities, as well as strengthen the industry behind microchip design, testing and validation.

Edge nodes

How is the EU performing in deploying edge nodes for decentralised data processing closer to the users? 

The Digital Decade target for edge and cloud requires the entry into operation
of 10 000 climate-neutral highly secure edge nodes by 2030.

The European Data Strategy highlighted the need for a change of paradigm in data processing, and it identified edge computing, which brings data processing closer to the user, as the essential technology to cope with the requirement for highly distributed and decentralised data processing.

In Europe, the development of the edge computing ecosystem is still in its early stages with only three total commercial deployments of edge computing in Europe in 2022. Achieving the target of 10 000 edge nodes by 2030 will require a collective focus to set up a whole ecosystem, based on a mix of skills, infrastructure, security, innovation, and public and private cooperation.

During the 2025-2027 period, the investments facilitated by the IPCEI on Next Generation Cloud Infrastructure and Services (CIS) are expected to make edge computing technologies and solutions commercially available to the market.

Quantum computing

How is the EU performing in developing quantum computing and supercomputers?

According to the targets set in the Digital Decade programme, by 2025 the EU plans to have its first computer with quantum acceleration, paving the way for the Union to be at the cutting edge of quantum capabilities by 2030.

In 2022, the European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) announced the selection of six sites across the EU to host and operate the first EuroHPC quantum computers, in Czechia, Germany, Spain, France, Italy, and Poland, which will be integrated into high-performance supercomputers. 

However, a substantial gap can be observed between the EU and several other major world regions (e.g., the US) as regards private sector investments in quantum, in a context where around 25% of quantum industry participants globally are based in Europe, but less than 5% of global funding.

Digitalisation of businesses

How are European SMEs performing in adopting basic digital intensity?

A basic level of digital intensity means that enterprises are using digital technologies such as online commerce, social media, etc. While languishing at an average rate of around 56% over the last few years, in 2022 the percentage of SMEs recording at least a basic level of digital intensity jumped to 69% This could represent the first sign of a positive impact of the intensified policy efforts at national and EU level that have been made to support the digitalisation of businesses over the past few years. However, this is still far from reaching the desired target of 90% of SMEs with at least a basic digital intensity, so further monitoring and efforts must continue.

Which EU-level initiatives are supporting the digitalisation of businesses?

Significant EU funds have been mobilised to support the achievement of digitalisation of businesses. The Digital Europe programme (DIGITAL) foresees €7.5 billion for projects in 5 key capacity areas, while 19% of the Recovery and Resilience Fund allocated to the digital transformation, i.e., €24 billion, is dedicated to the digitalisation of businesses.

Among the initiatives aimed at the digitalisation of industry and industrial ecosystems are the Key Digital Technologies (KDT) Joint Undertaking, the Made in Europe public-private partnership, as well as several multi-country projects, such as network of European Digital Innovation Hubs (EDIHs) under the Digital Europe Programme and the Important Project of Common European Interest Next Generation Cloud Infrastructure and Services (IPCEI-CIS).

Together with the Member States, the Commission is investing €1.5 billion, over a period of seven years, in a network of European Digital Innovation Hubs (EDIHs) to provide tailor-made digitalisation support to SMEs and public sector organisations.

The pre-notified IPCEI on Next Generation Cloud Infrastructure and Services gathers 13 Member States and more than a hundred enterprises across the European Union.

How are EU enterprises performing in adopting AI, Cloud or Big Data technologies?

When it comes to the Artificial Intelligence (AI) target, the latest data from 2021 shows that only 8%, so not even one in ten enterprises in the EU have adopted an AI technology. Under current trends, and without further investment and incentives, the projected baseline trajectory indicates that by 2030 only 66% of businesses will use cloud, 34% big data and 20% AI, while the target is for at least 75% of EU enterprises taking up cloud computing services, big data and/or AI by 2030.

In 2021, 34%, that is, one in three EU enterprises, purchased sophisticated or intermediate cloud computing services (e.g., software for the purposes of finance or accounting, resource planning, customer relationship management, security, etc.).

As regards to Big Data, the latest available data are from 2020. In 2020, big data analytics tools register the lowest uptake with only 14% of enterprises in the EU using them, the majority of them (34%) being large enterprises, followed by medium (21%) and small sized ones (13%).

How is the EU supporting unicorns and a start-up ecosystem in the EU?

Unicorns present a key source of innovation, new products and services, employment, and economic growth. The number of unicorns is therefore used as an indicator of innovation performance. At the start of 2023, 249 unicorns were based in the EU. The number of unicorns has increased significantly in the past decade. A continuation of the trend would allow the EU to meet its target before 2030, but is no ground for complacency in volatile markets. At EU-level, the EU Start-up Nations Standard (EU SNS) mobilised Member States to agree on best practices for creating a stable, predictable and supportive regulatory environment for start-ups. This ambition is now being operationalised by the Europe Start-up Nations Alliance (ESNA). The EU's Digital Markets Act will open up new opportunities for start-ups from March 2024, when the obligations kick-in for large online marketplaces.

Digitalisation of public services

What is the overall performance in the EU regarding the digitalisation of public services for businesses and citizens and health records?

Many Member States are relatively well positioned to achieve the target of 100% online availability of public services for businesses and citizens. In general, 88% of central government services are completely online, compared to 76% for regional government services and 62% of local government services.

However, despite the EU average increasing from 75 in 2021 to 77 in 2022, 15 countries score below 80 (out of 100) and are therefore still far from the Digital Decade target to be achieved by 2030.

Moreover, investment in public procurement of innovative digital solutions (e.g., based on AI or big data) is insufficient and would need to increase substantially from €118 billion to €295 billion in order to make innovative digital solutions available in public services.

Regarding the access to e-health records, the EU performs well and is on track to meet the EU target of 100% of EU citizens having access to their electronic health records, with an EU average score of 72 in 2022.

What is the overall performance in the EU regarding the deployment of electronic identification (eID) measures?

The achievement of this Digital Decade target is closely linked to a timely provision of the EU Digital Identity Wallet by the Member States. The wallets, which are the main novelty under the proposed revision of the eIDAS Regulation, will be based on common standards and allow EU citizens to prove their identity and other personal attributes for accessing online services.

Digital wallets may become available in the course of 2026 (subject to agreement by the co-legislators).

Meanwhile, by September 2023, a total of 21 EU countries have notified at least one national eID scheme under the current eIDAS Regulation. Four of the remaining countries are currently involved in at least one large-scale pilot project co-funded by the Digital Europe Programme to test the EU Digital Identity Wallet in a number of everyday situations and its integration into national eID infrastructure in 26 Member States and Iceland, Norway and Ukraine.

Digital Rights and principles

What is the role of the European Declaration on Digital Rights and Principles?

This report also includes the monitoring of the European Declaration on Digital Rights and Principles for the Digital Decade, which translates the EU's vision of digital transformation into principles and commitments. The Declaration provides a reference point for citizens on their online rights and freedoms in the digital transformation. It should also serve a guide for policy makers and companies when dealing with new technologies.

Is the Declaration binding?

While it is not binding, the Declaration was signed at the highest level by the European Parliament, the Council, and the Commission. It recalls most relevant online rights and contains commitments for the EU and Member States. The rights in the Declaration are based on existing EU rules and should be enforced on this basis. The monitoring of the Declaration will allow to measure progress in its implementation.

For More Information

Press release: First report on the State of the Digital Decade calls for collective action to shape the digital transition

Factsheet on the State of the Digital Decade

First report on the State of the Digital Decade

Digital Decade country reports