Kochi, Jan 20: IBM has announced the launch of IBM Sovereign Core, the industry’s first AI-ready, sovereign-enabled software designed to help enterprises, governments, and service providers build, deploy, and manage secure and compliant sovereign environments for AI workloads.
The new offering comes amid a growing global emphasis on digital sovereignty, driven by tightening regulatory frameworks, heightened data governance requirements and the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence.
IBM said organisations increasingly require self-managed technology environments that provide complete operational authority, especially as AI workloads intensify concerns around data control, jurisdiction, and accountability, a release said.
Digital sovereignty, IBM noted, extends beyond data residency to include control over technology operations, access governance, workload execution, and the jurisdiction under which AI models function.
However, many organisations lack platforms that allow them to modernise and re-host applications, particularly AI-enabled applications, under sovereign control with continuous compliance reporting.
Citing industry trends, IBM referred to a Gartner prediction that over 75 per cent of enterprises worldwide will have a digital sovereignty strategy by 2030, often centred on sovereign cloud approaches.
“As AI adoption accelerates in India, organizations must balance innovation with stricter regulatory requirements and control over sensitive data and AI workloads,” said Sandip Patel, Managing Director, IBM India and South Asia. “IBM Sovereign Core offers an AI-ready sovereign stack that ensures compliance, operational autonomy, and flexibility, while reinforcing our long-standing open hybrid cloud strategy.”
Built on Red Hat’s open-source foundation, IBM Sovereign Core is purpose-designed to embed sovereignty directly into the software architecture, rather than layering controls on existing systems. Key features include customer-operated control planes, in-jurisdiction identity and encryption key management, continuous compliance reporting with auditable evidence, governed AI inference within local boundaries, and rapid deployment with flexible infrastructure choices.
Industry experts welcomed the move, noting that sovereignty concerns now extend well beyond data storage. “The critical question is who controls the system and whether that control can be demonstrated to regulators,” said Sanjeev Mohan, Principal, SanjMo. “IBM’s approach addresses data, operations, technology, and assurance holistically.”
IBM said customers can deploy Sovereign Core across on-premises data centres, in-region cloud infrastructure, or through IT service providers. The company has initiated collaborations in Europe with partners such as Cegeka in Belgium and the Netherlands and Computacenter in Germany, to enable localised operations and compliance management.
IBM Sovereign Core will be available in tech preview from February, with general availability planned for mid-2026, when additional capabilities will be introduced.
IBM clarified that statements regarding future plans and product direction are subject to change without notice.
IBM introduces AI-ready Sovereign Software to address digital sovereignty needs



