European data spaces: what are they and should I take part?
European data spaces are sectoral agreement frameworks for voluntary, trusted data sharing — not a central database. The mobility data space is the relevant one for transport. Taking part is voluntary and gives access to more and better supply-chain data.
Short answer: European data spaces are sectoral infrastructures for voluntary, trusted data sharing between organisations. They are agreement frameworks — not a central database. For transport and logistics the relevant one is the European Mobility Data Space (EMDS); taking part is voluntary and gives you access to more and better supply-chain data.
What is a data space?
Common European data spaces are sectoral infrastructures for data sharing, built on the horizontal data rules of the Data Governance Act (Regulation (EU) 2022/868) and the Data Act. The Commission is developing spaces for mobility, the Green Deal, manufacturing and health, among others.
Crucially, a data space is not a central database into which your data is dumped. It is a framework of agreements that governs how parties can share data securely while keeping control. Three building blocks:
- Governance: rules on who gets access, on what terms and with which rights.
- Technical standards: shared formats and connections so data can flow between systems, modes and countries.
- Data intermediaries: trusted go-betweens that broker sharing — a role the Data Governance Act explicitly frames.
The relevant space for the sector: EMDS
For transport and logistics the European Mobility Data Space (EMDS) is the relevant one. Sector data is deeply fragmented: by mode, country and company, each with its own formats. The EMDS aims to break that fragmentation by making access to and sharing of mobility and transport data easier — across modes and member states.
The EMDS is under construction. Its governance and standards are being shaped now; participation is voluntary at this stage and has no statutory date of application, unlike the Data Act or eFTI.
Should I take part — and what does it deliver?
Participation is voluntary and strategic. There is no obligation to join. What it delivers:
- More and better supply-chain data: access to broader, more usable data from other chain partners.
- Lower integration costs: shared standards reduce per-partner custom work.
- Position: those who are interoperable early help shape how the space works and stand stronger if participation becomes the norm.
How to begin: make your data and systems interoperable on the basis of existing standards, get your data rules (Data Act) in order — what you fix there pays off here — and follow the EMDS governance work so you can join in good time.
Read more: the Transport & Logistics overview. Take the scan.
Sources
- https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/data-spaces
European Commission — common European data spaces. - https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2022/868/oj
Regulation (EU) 2022/868 (Data Governance Act): frameworks for data sharing.
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Data Governance Act: what it means for data sharing in logistics
The Data Governance Act (Regulation (EU) 2022/868) builds trusted frameworks for data sharing: recognised data intermediaries, re-use of public-sector data and data altruism. For logistics it lowers the threshold to share supply-chain data safely.
Should I join the European mobility data space?
Participation is voluntary, not a legal duty like the Data Act or eFTI. Even so, joining early is strategic: it shapes your future data position and interoperability within the transport and logistics sector.
The Data Act: what compensation may I charge for sharing data (FRAND)?
If the Data Act obliges you to share data, you may charge a reasonable fee based on your costs of making the data available, plus a reasonable margin. For SMEs and non-profits: only the direct costs. Terms must be fair and non-discriminatory (FRAND).