Underpinning the EU s ten year digital transformation plan with a raft of new data, digital and cyber regulation
What is the Digital Decade?
The Digital Decade is an exciting and ambitious legislative programme designed to propel the EU to the forefront of tech innovation. It includes 13 key laws that cover a wide range of topics, such as AI regulation, cybersecurity, operational resilience, commercial data sharing, privacy, digital competition, and online safety. While these laws may seem diverse, they are all connected by a common goal of advancing technology and innovation.
While the Digital Decade aims to bring positive changes, it also presents several challenges including:
-
Personal Liability: Management bodies
may face personal liability for decisions they have
limited visibility over, increasing individual risk.
-
Increased Compliance Burden: The laws
impose complex obligations, requiring significant
changes to operations and processes, often without clear
regulatory guidance.
-
New Business Rights: Businesses gain
new rights, such as allocating risk across supply chains
and accessing third-party data at reasonable prices.
-
Unfamiliar Subject Matter: Businesses
may be unfamiliar with the new requirements, and
existing governance and risk controls may not be
suitable.
-
Overlapping Implementation Measures:
Implementation measures often overlap, leading to
potential duplication of costs and effort.
- Revenue-Based Penalties: The laws introduce significant revenue-based penalties, comparable to those in competition and data protection laws.
Whilst compliance is an important aspect, the Digital Decade strategy is intended to promote growth and is projected to add EUR270 billion annually to EU GDP by 2028.


