Last week, Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud announced a landmark collaboration: a jointly developed multicloud networking service that allows organisations to connect AWS and Google Cloud via private, high-speed links in minutes rather than weeks.
The initiative pairs AWS Interconnect – multicloud with Google Cloud’s Cross-Cloud Interconnect under a shared open specification for cloud-to-cloud networking. The aim is simple: enable enterprises to move applications and data between clouds with far less friction, and with far greater reliability.
This development arrives at a moment when cloud resilience is under sharper scrutiny than ever. Recent high-impact outages have shown just how fragile cloud-dependent ecosystems can be, and how quickly downtime can cascade into lost revenue, stalled operations and reputational damage. Against that backdrop, the AWS–Google partnership feels less like a convenience upgrade and more like a strategic shift towards truly resilient distributed architectures.
Connecting workloads across cloud providers has traditionally required physical circuits, complex configuration and long lead times. The new offering reduces that waiting period dramatically, enabling automated, cloud-native provisioning of private links through familiar consoles and APIs.

Beyond convenience, the architecture is designed for robustness. It includes multiple redundant facilities and edge routers to avoid single points of failure, encrypted links between cloud environments, and proactive monitoring and maintenance designed to minimise service interruptions.
Enterprises increasingly rely on hybrid and multicloud strategies for AI workloads, large-scale analytics and globally distributed applications. With predictable, high-bandwidth links, several scenarios become easier and more reliable:
Active-active or active-standby disaster-recovery configurations.
Continuous, secure data replication or migration flows between providers.
Latency-sensitive or high-volume workloads that benefit from private, high-throughput connectivity.
This partnership supports all of these, reducing the operational burden on teams and improving the baseline reliability of multicloud deployments.
For all its benefits, the partnership does not eliminate the challenges inherent in multicloud adoption. If anything, it highlights why strong governance and resilient architecture matter more now than ever.
Multicloud environments introduce complexity across security models, data governance, compliance, networking and operational practices. Without careful planning, organisations can end up with fragmented, difficult-to-manage systems that are vulnerable to outages or misconfigurations.
There’s also a risk that enterprises may begin relying on inter-cloud links for mission-critical operations without fully considering the consequences of failure. A faster link does not automatically equate to a safer one — and without proper disaster-recovery planning, the impact of a disrupted connection could be severe.
The partnership solves a key barrier to multicloud adoption — connectivity — but resilience, testing and recovery planning still require deliberate investment.

For senior decision-makers weighing the benefits of multicloud, this collaboration offers a compelling opportunity. But it should be approached with clear strategic intent.
Multicloud resilience doesn’t happen automatically. Organisations need strong disaster-recovery processes, regularly tested backup strategies and clearly defined business-continuity plans that reflect real-world scenarios.
Done well, this approach can significantly reduce the risk of downtime, data loss or service disruption — even when a major cloud provider encounters problems. As cloud workloads continue to scale and interdependencies deepen, this preparation becomes essential.
The partnership between Amazon and Google marks a significant step forward in the evolution of cloud infrastructure. It makes multicloud connectivity faster, more secure and more accessible, opening the door for more resilient architectures and reducing the risk of outages becoming business-critical failures.
But the increased ease of multicloud adoption also puts a spotlight on the need for strong disaster-recovery readiness. Without the right safeguards in place, multicloud systems can still be fragile — just in more complex ways.
If you’re exploring multicloud strategies or simply want to understand how well your organisation could withstand cloud outages, data loss or service disruption, now is the ideal time to evaluate your resilience posture.
Our free Downtime Defence assessment helps you assess your disaster-recovery readiness, backup strategies and business-continuity planning. You’ll receive a detailed report that highlights critical gaps and provides actionable recommendations tailored to your environment.
How prepared is your organisation for cloud outages, disasters and service disruptions? Start your Downtime Defence assessment today.