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Open source software is critical infrastructure, but it’s underfunded. With a new feasibility study, GitHub’s developer policy team is building a coalition of policymakers and industry to close the maintenance funding gap.

Open source software is open digital infrastructure that our economies and societies rely on. Nevertheless, open source maintenance continues to be underfunded, especially when compared to physical infrastructure like roads or bridges. So we ask: how can the public sector better support open source maintenance?
As part of our efforts to support developers, GitHub’s developer policy team has commissioned a study from Open Forum Europe, Fraunhofer ISI and the European University Institute that explores how one of the open source world’s most successful government programs, the German Sovereign Tech Agency, can be scaled up to the European Union level. That study was published today. Here’s what it says and what you can do to help make the EU Sovereign Tech Fund (EU-STF) a reality.
There is a profound mismatch between the importance of open source maintenance and the public attention it receives. The demand-side value of open source software to the global economy is estimated at $8.8 trillion, and the European Commission’s own research shows that OSS contributes a minimum of €65-95 billion to the EU economy annually. Basic open source technologies, such as libraries, programming languages, or software development tools, are used in all sectors of the economy, society, and public administrations.
| Open source is everywhere | Open source is valuable | Open source is underfinanced |
|---|---|---|
| 96% of all code bases contain OSS | $8.8T demand-side value to global economy | 1/3 of OSS maintainers are unpaid |
| 77% of a given code base is OSS | €65-95M minimum contribution to annual EU GDP | 1/3 are the only maintainer of their OSS project |
The flip side of everybody benefiting from this open digital infrastructure is that too few feel responsible for paying the tab. The Sovereign Tech Agency’s survey of over 500 OSS maintainers showed that a third of them are not paid at all for their maintenance work, but would like to be. Another third earns some income from OSS maintenance, but is not able to make a living off this work. Perhaps even more alarmingly, a third of respondents are solo maintainers, and almost three quarters of surveyed projects are maintained by three people or fewer. As prominent security incidents such as the xz backdoor or the Log4Shell vulnerability have shown in recent years, it can mean serious risks for the OSS community’s health and the security of our global software ecosystem if too much is put on the shoulders of small, overworked, and underappreciated teams.
At GitHub, we are helping address this open source sustainability challenge through GitHub Sponsors, the GitHub Secure Open Source Fund, free security tooling for maintainers, and other initiatives. Yet we recognize that there is a significant gap between the immense public value of open source software and the funding that is available to maintain it, a gap that this research is seeking to address.
Building on the success story of the German Sovereign Tech Agency, which has invested over €23 million in 60 OSS projects in its first two years of operation (2022-2024), the EU-STF should have five main areas of activity:
The study proposes two alternative institutional setups for the EU-STF: either the creation of a centralized EU institution (the moonshot model), or a consortium of EU member states that provide the initial funding and apply for additional resources from the EU budget (the pragmatic model). In both cases, to make the fund a success, the minimum contribution from the upcoming EU multiannual budget should be no less than €350 million. This would not be enough to meet the open source maintenance need, but it could form the basis for leveraging industry and national government co-financing that would make a lasting impact.
Equipped with the learnings from the German Sovereign Tech Agency and other government open source programs, such as the US Open Technology Fund or the EU’s Next Generation Internet initiative, the study identified seven design criteria that the EU-STF must meet:
Right now, the European Union is ramping up the negotiations on its new multi-year budget for the period of 2028-2035, the Multiannual Financial Framework. GitHub’s developer policy team is presenting the findings of the study to EU legislators and mobilizing the support of industry partners to demonstrate the need for a novel instrument that allows the public and private sectors to work together on securing our open source infrastructure. We are delighted to partner with Mercedes-Benz, who contributed a foreword to the study and have been vocal supporters of the idea of an EU Sovereign Tech Fund from its inception.
Without sustainable funding and support, it is entirely foreseeable that ever more open source software projects will not receive the diligence and scrutiny appropriate for software of such criticality.
Magnus Östberg, Chief Software Officer, Mercedes-Benz AG; Markus Rettstatt, Vice President Software Defined Car, Tech Innovation GmbH
The first legislative proposals for the EU budget have just hit the desks of the European Parliament and the national governments in the Council of Ministers. Whether you are an individual, a member of an open source organization, or a company representative, you can voice your support for the creation of the EU-STF to the European Commission, your elected representatives in the European Parliament, and your national government. If you’re at EU Open Source Summit Europe on August 26, you can join us for a presentation of the study and community discussion.
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