Cloud Storage Briefing — May 27, 2026

Weekly Intelligence May 27, 2026

Cloud Storage Briefing

Pricing trends, capacity signals, and competitive intelligence across AWS S3 & EBS, Azure Blob & Managed Disks, and GCP Cloud Storage.

▶ So What — Three Takeaways This Week
1. GCP’s Cloud Storage Rapid Redraws the AI Training Benchmark — 15 TB/s from a Single Bucket Changes the Cost Math for GPU Utilization

Google’s Cloud Storage Rapid (GA April 2026) delivers 15+ TB/s of bandwidth, 20 million requests per second, and sub-millisecond latency from a single zonal bucket — powered by Colossus, the same distributed storage system behind Gemini and YouTube. Checkpoint restores are 5x faster than traditional object storage, meaning training clusters recover faster from interruptions and expensive GPU time isn’t lost waiting on checkpoints. This is the most consequential AI storage announcement of the quarter: GCP is turning its internal infrastructure advantage into a marketable moat that AWS and Azure cannot easily replicate at this performance level.

2. S3 Files GA Converges Object and File Storage — The EFS Tax Is Now Optional for Many Workloads

AWS’s S3 Files (GA April 2026, 34 regions) gives any S3 bucket full NFS v4.1+ file system semantics — accessible from EC2, ECS, EKS, Lambda, and Fargate simultaneously with up to 25,000 active connections. For teams maintaining parallel S3 + EFS architectures for AI agents or legacy apps, S3 Files eliminates the cost and operational overhead of running separate file systems. The strategic implication: S3 is no longer just object storage — it is becoming the unified data plane for both structured and unstructured AI workloads, closing a gap GCP and Azure have exploited in enterprise NAS migration pitches.

3. GCP Doubled Peering Egress Rates on May 1 — The Quiet Tax That Compounds Across CDN and Carrier Architectures

Google Cloud doubled CDN Interconnect rates in North America (from $0.04 to $0.08/GB) and raised Direct and Carrier Peering rates in all major regions effective May 1, 2026. For GCP storage customers who route data through Cloudflare, Akamai, or Fastly — or operate any carrier-peered network — this is a material cost increase that arrived with minimal fanfare. Enterprise architects should model the full blast radius: CDN delivery costs, inter-region analytics, and multicloud egress patterns are all affected. The stated rationale is “significant investments in global infrastructure” — a signal that GCP sees network margin as a leakable revenue line it intends to protect.

AWS Storage

AWS
Tier 1 S3 Files GA: AWS Makes Every S3 Bucket a Native File System — 25,000 Concurrent Connections, No EFS Required Apr 7, 2026

Amazon S3 Files delivers full NFS v4.1+ file system semantics directly on any general-purpose S3 bucket, accessible from EC2, ECS, EKS, Lambda, and Fargate with up to 25,000 simultaneous active connections. S3 is now the first cloud object store with native high-performance file system access — without data ever leaving S3. For enterprises running parallel S3 + EFS architectures, this eliminates a significant operational and cost layer. AI agents, legacy file-based applications, and HPC workloads can all connect to the same data without architecture bifurcation. GA in 34 AWS Regions.

AWS →
Tier 1 S3 Vectors Scales to 2 Billion Vectors Per Index — 90% TCO Reduction Targets Enterprise RAG at Hyperscale Jan 2026

AWS expanded S3 Vectors capacity forty-fold to 2 billion vectors per index in its GA release, introducing a “Storage-First” architecture that decouples vector compute from storage. By natively integrating vector search into S3’s storage engine, AWS claims up to 90% TCO reduction versus standalone vector databases for large-scale RAG workloads. The strategic move positions S3 as the default vector store for AWS-native AI pipelines, directly threatening Pinecone, Weaviate, and other vector database vendors competing in the retrieval layer.

InfoQ →
Tier 2 S3 Turns 20: AWS Reports “Hundreds of Exabytes” Stored — Storage Revenue Now Accounts for Estimated 20%+ of AWS Mar 16, 2026

Amazon S3 marked its 20th anniversary in March 2026, with AWS disclosing that “hundreds of exabytes” of customer data now reside in S3. While AWS does not break out storage revenue specifically, analyst estimates put storage at 20-25% of total AWS revenue — roughly $7-9B quarterly. The anniversary framing signals confidence: S3’s expansion from object store to AI data platform (S3 Tables, S3 Vectors, S3 Files) is the bet that storage economics will compound as AI workloads scale, not commoditize.

The Register →

Azure Storage

AZURE
Tier 1 Azure Storage “Beyond Boundaries”: Agentic Scale, Elastic SAN as Multi-Tenant Building Block, Foundry IQ Integration May 2026

Microsoft’s 2026 Azure Storage vision explicitly separates frontier model training (25 PiB AMLFS namespaces, multi-TB/s sequential throughput) from agentic applications (thousands of concurrent agents generating an order of magnitude more I/O than human-driven systems). Elastic SAN becomes a core multi-tenant block storage pool shared across workloads with provisioned guardrails. Native Blob Storage integration into Foundry IQ makes Azure Blob the grounding layer for enterprise knowledge, fine-tuning, and low-latency context serving. Partnerships with ServiceNow, Databricks, and Elastic anchor the agentic scale narrative.

Microsoft Azure Blog →
Tier 2 Azure Storage Discovery GA: Enterprise-Wide Visibility Across the Blob Data Estate — Zero-Config Dashboard May 2026

Microsoft launched Azure Storage Discovery as a fully managed service providing enterprise-wide visibility into Azure Blob Storage data estates. The zero-configuration dashboard surfaces cost anomalies, data governance signals from Security Command Center’s DSPM, and storage utilization patterns across billions of objects. 70% of Azure’s largest cloud storage customers already use Storage Intelligence — Discovery extends those capabilities with automated annotation and unified reporting. For cloud storage buyers managing multi-region or multi-subscription data estates, this addresses the operational blind-spot problem without custom tooling.

Azure Updates →
Tier 2 Storage Mover Adds Blob-to-Blob Transfers and Schedule Updates — Azure Migration Tooling Matures May 2026

Azure Storage Mover gained blob-to-blob transfer support and enhanced scheduling capabilities in May 2026 updates, alongside a new Blob Storage SDK for Rust and Storage Action mock runs for testing automation before deployment. These are developer-experience improvements rather than pricing events, but they signal Microsoft’s intent to own the end-to-end migration and automation stack — reducing the need for third-party tools like Rclone or NetApp XCP for Azure-native data movement. The Rust SDK particularly targets performance-sensitive workloads and emerging AI inference frameworks.

Azure Updates →

GCP Storage

GCP
Tier 1 Cloud Storage Rapid GA: 15 TB/s, 20M Requests/Second, Sub-ms Latency from a Single Bucket — Powered by Colossus Apr 22, 2026

Google’s Cloud Storage Rapid is now generally available, delivering 15+ TB/s of bandwidth, 20 million requests per second, and sub-millisecond latency from a single zonal bucket — leveraging Colossus, the distributed storage system powering Gemini and YouTube. Rapid Bucket delivers 50% reduced GPU blocked time and 2.5x faster data loading versus traditional object storage. Checkpoint restores are 5x faster and writes 3.2x faster, directly reducing wasted GPU time during training interruptions. Native integrations into PyTorch and JAX mean no code changes required. Rapid Cache (formerly Anywhere Cache) adds 2.5 TB/s aggregate read throughput with 2.2x faster checkpoint restores for existing buckets.

Google Cloud Blog →
Tier 1 GCP Managed Lustre Hits 10 TB/s — New $0.06/GB Dynamic Tier Eliminates Performance Cliff Apr 22, 2026

Google Cloud Managed Lustre now delivers 10 TB/s of throughput — 10x higher than a year ago and 4–20x higher than any competing managed Lustre offering. Powered by C4NX VMs and Hyperdisk Exapools, checkpoints write and restore 2.6x faster than other GCP storage solutions. The new Dynamic tier at $0.06/GB-month serves data from persistent disk rather than object-based caching, eliminating the performance cliff that causes accelerator stalls. A single predictable SKU removes billing complexity. Salesforce’s production deployment confirms B200 GPUs stay fully saturated, translating to faster LLM inference response for agentic workloads.

Google Cloud Blog →
Tier 1 GCP Doubles CDN Interconnect Egress Rates May 1 — North America Goes from $0.04 to $0.08/GB May 1, 2026

Google Cloud doubled CDN Interconnect peering egress rates effective May 1, 2026, with North America jumping from $0.04 to $0.08/GB, Europe from $0.05 to $0.08/GB, and Asia from $0.06 to $0.085/GB. Direct Peering and Carrier Peering rates are also increasing. For GCP storage customers using Cloudflare, Akamai, or Fastly as CDNs — or operating carrier-peered networks — this is an immediate cost increase that arrives automatically on May 2026 invoices. Google’s rationale: “significant investments in global infrastructure.” Cloud architects should model total egress exposure across CDN delivery, inter-region analytics, and multicloud data movement paths.

Akave →

Industry

CROSS-CLOUD
Tier 1 CoreWeave Zero Egress Migration (0EM): Covers Hyperscaler Exit Fees, No Ongoing Egress Charges on CoreWeave AI Object Storage Nov 2025 / Active 2026

CoreWeave’s Zero Egress Migration (0EM) program covers the hyperscaler egress fees when migrating large-scale datasets to CoreWeave AI Object Storage — with typical savings up to $1M per migration. Once on CoreWeave, customers pay no egress fees regardless of where data is consumed. CoreWeave’s LOTA technology delivers 7 GB/s per GPU throughput. Customers retain active accounts at AWS, Azure, or GCP — no lock-in penalty. For AI labs and enterprises moving GPU workloads to neoclouds, 0EM removes the last major financial barrier to data portability. This is a direct attack on hyperscaler storage lock-in strategy and compounds competitive pressure on AWS/Azure/GCP to match egress pricing.

CoreWeave →
Tier 1 Cloud Storage Market Forecast: $173B in 2026 to $380B by 2031 — Object Storage Leading at 24.4% CAGR May 19, 2026

The global cloud storage market is forecast to grow from $173B in 2026 to $380B by 2031 at a 17.1% CAGR, with object storage outpacing at 24.4% CAGR and already representing 51% of total cloud storage revenue. Public cloud accounts for 63.7% of deployment. The growth drivers are AI/ML workload expansion, hybrid cloud adoption, and enterprise data governance requirements. Critically, roughly half of public cloud storage spend currently goes to non-capacity fees (egress, API calls, retrieval charges) — a structural inefficiency that alternative providers like Wasabi, Backblaze B2, and Cloudflare R2 are actively monetizing against the hyperscaler model.

GlobeNewswire →
Tier 2 Multicloud AI Data Movement Costs $80K Per Petabyte in Egress — Enterprise AI Architects Face a Data Gravity Crisis May 2026

Enterprise AI initiatives are colliding with data gravity: AI training workloads require massive data co-location with GPU compute, but multi-cloud data estates scatter data across providers. Moving a petabyte between clouds costs up to $80,000 in egress fees alone, creating a hard economic constraint on multicloud AI strategy. Organizations that assumed they could freely move data between AWS, Azure, and GCP for AI training are discovering that data portability is theoretical — practical portability requires either S3-compatible object storage (Wasabi, Cloudflare R2) or explicit egress waiver programs like CoreWeave 0EM. Data architecture decisions made 3–5 years ago are now creating expensive AI bottlenecks.

Computer Weekly →
Total Cloud Market
$119B
(+30% YoY)
Q4 2025 quarterly revenue — Synergy Research
AWS
28% share
(-2pp YoY)
$35.6B
(+19% YoY)
Azure
21% share
(flat YoY)
$32.9B
(+33% YoY)
GCP
14% share
(+2pp YoY)
$12.3B
(+48% YoY)
Block Storage — General-Purpose SSD
Metric EBS gp3 Premium SSD v2 pd-balanced
Storage $/GB/mo $0.08020% cheaper than gp2 $0.100/GiBHourly billing $0.100Default disk type
Baseline IOPS 3,000Free — independent of size 3,000Free — independent of size 6/GBScales with disk size (500 GB = 3K)
Baseline Throughput 125 MB/sFree — independent of size 125 MB/sFree — independent of size 0.28 MB/s/GBScales with disk size
IOPS Provisioning Independent$0.005/IOPS/mo · up to 16K IndependentSeparately provisionable · up to 80K Tied to sizeNo independent IOPS control
Max IOPS (family) 256,000io2 Block Express 400,000Ultra Disk 120,000pd-extreme
Snapshots Incremental, S3-backedFast Snapshot Restore available Instant Access (Pv2/Ultra)Instant creation + restore · free until Jul ’26 IncrementalCloud Storage-backed · regional
Block Storage — Head-to-Head
Dimension AWS EBS Azure Managed Disks GCP Persistent Disk
Price Leader gp3 at $0.08/GB Cheapest Pv2 at $0.10/GiB pd-balanced at $0.10/GB
IOPS Flexibility Independent (gp3) Winner Independent (Pv2) Winner Scales with disk size only
Latency io2: sub-ms Ultra: sub-500µs avg Winner pd-ssd: single-digit ms
Snapshots Incremental + Fast Restore Instant Access (Pv2/Ultra) Winner Incremental, Cloud Storage-backed
Shared/Multi-Attach io2 multi-attach (16 instances) Broadest: Ultra/Premium/Standard SSD Winner Multi-writer (up to 2 VMs)
Cold Block $/GB sc1: $0.015/GB Cheapest Std HDD: ~$0.04/GB pd-standard: $0.040/GB
What Does It Actually Cost?
PostgreSQL Database
500 GB · 10,000 IOPS · 250 MB/s
Azure
Premium SSD v2
$56.50Winner
GCP
Hyperdisk Balanced
$79.40
AWS
gp3
$80.00
Analytics / Data Warehouse
2 TB · 3,000 IOPS · 500 MB/s
GCP
Hyperdisk Balanced
$178.24Winner
AWS
gp3
$178.84
Azure
Premium SSD v2
$211.61
AI Training Scratch
1 TB · 64,000 IOPS · 1,000 MB/s
Azure
Premium SSD v2
$163.80Winner
GCP
Hyperdisk Extreme
$793.60
AWS
io2 Block Express
$4,288
General Web App
100 GB · 3,000 IOPS · 125 MB/s
AWS
gp3
$8.00Tied
GCP
Hyperdisk Balanced
$8.00Tied
Azure
Premium SSD v2
$9.60
The IOPS Pricing Gap
The Single Most Impactful Pricing Difference in Cloud Block Storage

Azure Premium SSD v2 charges $0.0005/IOPS/month above its 3K baseline — that’s 130x cheaper than AWS io2 Block Express ($0.065) and 10x cheaper than AWS gp3 and GCP Hyperdisk ($0.005). At 64,000 IOPS, the gap is staggering: Azure Pv2 costs $30.50/mo for IOPS alone, while AWS io2 charges $4,160/mo and GCP Hyperdisk Extreme charges $640/mo. If your workload is IOPS-intensive and you’re not on Azure, you’re leaving significant money on the table.

IOPS Level AWS gp3 AWS io2 BE Azure Pv2 GCP HDB GCP HD-Ext
3,000$0 (free)$195$0 (free)$0 (free)$30
10,000$35$650$3.50$35$100
64,000$305$4,160$30.50$305$640
256,000N/A (80K max)$16,640N/A (80K max)N/A (160K max)$2,560
io2 Block Express vs Ultra Disk vs Hyperdisk Extreme
io2 Block Express
Most Expensive
256K IOPS · 4 GB/s
1 TB + 256K IOPS
Ultra Disk
Highest Raw Specs
400K IOPS · 10 GB/s
1 TB + 400K IOPS
Hyperdisk Extreme
84% Cheaper
350K IOPS · 5 GB/s
1 TB + 350K IOPS
Snapshot & Backup Pricing

Scenario: 1 TB volume, daily snapshots, 30-day retention, ~5% daily change rate

Metric AWS EBS Azure Managed Disks GCP Persistent Disk
Standard $/GB/mo$0.050$0.050$0.050
BehaviorIncremental, S3-backedIncremental (recommended)Incremental, auto-compressed
Same-Region Monthly$75–$115$75–$115$60–$80Compression advantage
Cross-Region Monthly$130–$145$120–$140$100–$110
Archive Tier$0.0125/GB75% cheaper than standardNot available$0.019/GB
What Practitioners Are Saying
Lucidity / Cross-CloudCritical
Cross-cloud analysis of 17+ PB under management finds average enterprise block utilization at 15–30%. Higher performance ceilings, forced migrations, and new tiers are all increasing provisioned capacity without reducing waste. “Faster storage does not save you money. Smarter storage does.”
“AI workloads are accelerating that waste, not fixing it”
Wasabi / Industry SurveyNegative
2026 Global Cloud Storage Index (1,700 IT decision-makers): half of public cloud storage spend goes to fees, not storage itself. 72% estimate 25%+ of their data is “dark data” that costs money but generates zero value. Only 32% report positive AI ROI despite 60% increasing AI infrastructure spend.
“Fee complexity continues to undermine cloud storage cost predictability”
Dell Technologies WorldPositive
15-year Dell partnership now powering LillyPod DGX SuperPOD at nearly 2 TB/sec read bandwidth. Mazda consolidated 30 years of CAD data into 10 PB PowerScale AI data lake, achieving 90% cost/unit reduction and eliminating tape. Reference architectures for on-prem AI storage at hyperscale.
Seagate / WDPositive
Seagate and Western Digital report AI-driven demand now visible in pricing power. WD survey: 87% prioritize capacity expansion and TCO optimization, 74% cite TCO as key HDD advantage, 66% deprioritize newer tech in favor of proven infrastructure at scale. “Even as SSDs dominate performance workloads, HDDs remain unmatched for bulk storage.”
InfoWorld / AnalystMixed
Analysis shows comparable AI compute at ~$2.01/hr on alternative providers vs ~$6.88/hr on AWS (3.4x difference). Neoclouds (CoreWeave, Spheron, Crusoe) growing fast by targeting GPU-optimized infrastructure. The implicit challenge: if compute leaves hyperscalers, storage follows.
“The hyperscalers are pricing themselves out of AI workloads”
Finout / FinOpsInformational
2026 pricing analysis confirms that retrieval fees, egress charges, API operation costs, and replication overhead routinely push actual storage spend 2–5x above raw $/GB rates. The headline price per gigabyte is “only a fraction of what you actually pay.” Architectures optimized on listed price alone systematically underbudget.
Block Storage Analysis

Workload cost scenarios, premium tier comparison, snapshot costs, and community sentiment — loading…

Quick Reference
AWS S3Azure BlobGCP Cloud Storage
Hot Tier $/GB/mo $0.023 $0.018 $0.020
Archive $/GB/mo $0.00099 $0.00099 $0.0012
Egress $/GB (first 10 TB) $0.09 $0.087 $0.12
Min Object Billing None 128 KiB (Cool/Cold/Archive) None
Key Moves This Week
  • S3 Tables + I-T — Intelligent-Tiering now native for Apache Iceberg tables in S3 Tables; auto-optimizes lakehouse storage costs up to 80%.
  • Azure 128 KiB Min Billing — New minimum billable object size for Cool/Cold/Archive. Small-object workloads pay more effective immediately.
  • Azure Blob SFTP + Entra ID — SFTP access now supports Entra ID authentication in preview. Passwordless, identity-driven file transfer.
  • GCP Storage Intelligence — Agentic Data Cloud integration at Google I/O. Zero-config dashboards + agent-accessible storage via MCP.
File Storage Snapshot
AWS EFSAzure FilesGCP Filestore
Standard $/GB/mo $0.30 ~$0.10 $0.16
Model Serverless, elastic Provisioned v2 Instance-based
Key Advantage Sub-ms latency, auto-scales SMB + NFS, cheapest GKE-native, custom perf
AWS · Azure · GCP
Amazon Web Services
S3 · EBS · EFS
S3 Tables + Intelligent-Tiering GA — lakehouse storage auto-optimizes costs up to 80%
AI/ML
ECS + EBS in GovCloud — serverless containers get persistent block storage in sovereign regions
Strategic
Local Zone Istanbul GA — EBS/S3 with single-digit ms latency for Türkiye data residency
Security
Microsoft Azure
Blob · Managed Disks · Files
128 KiB minimum billing for Cool/Cold/Archive — small-object architectures hit with cost increase
Cost
Blob SFTP + Entra ID preview — passwordless file transfer using organizational identity
Security
Unmanaged Disks fully retired Mar 31 — forced migration to Managed Disks complete
Strategic
Google Cloud
Cloud Storage · PD · Filestore
Storage Intelligence + Agentic Data Cloud — agent-accessible storage management at I/O 2026
AI/ML
Alluxio AI v3.9 — 49.5 GB/s RDMA reads + 7.6 GB/s POSIX write cache for training workloads
Performance
Kioxia record revenues + US listing — AI storage demand validates NAND investment thesis
Strategic
Industry Trends & Macro
The “Storage Bill Reset” — AI Workloads Multiplying Spend
All three hyperscalers raised block storage performance ceilings in H1 2026, but enterprise utilization remains 15–30%. Higher ceilings license bigger provisioning buffers. Wasabi’s 2026 index: 49% exceeded budgets, 91% cite fee complexity as the cause. The structural fix isn’t faster storage — it’s autonomous right-sizing.
AI Infrastructure Split: Training Scale vs Agentic Scale
Azure explicitly separates frontier model training (25 PiB AMLFS, multi-TB/s sequential) from agentic apps (thousands of agents, random I/O). GCP splits between Alluxio RDMA (training) and MCP server (agents). One storage architecture no longer serves all AI patterns — design explicitly for each pipeline stage.
Neocloud Threat: Compute Leaves, Storage Follows
CoreWeave, Spheron, Crusoe, Nebius offering AI compute at 3.4x cheaper than hyperscalers. If GPU workloads migrate to neoclouds, adjacent storage must follow. This pressures hyperscaler storage lock-in strategies and validates S3-compatible object storage portability (Wasabi, Backblaze, Cloudflare R2).
On-Prem AI Storage at Hyperscale Is Viable
Dell Tech World showed Eli Lilly running 2 TB/s to 1,000+ GPUs from PowerStore; Mazda achieved 90% cost/unit reduction moving to 10 PB PowerScale. KAYTUS’s all-QLC system delivers 10 TB/s at exabyte scale with 70% lower 5-year TCO than TLC. For steady-state AI training, on-prem economics increasingly challenge cloud.
Dark Data as Cost Multiplier
72% of organizations estimate 25%+ of their storage is dark data — information stored but never analyzed. This data costs money to retain, protect, and manage without generating value. As AI storage budgets grow, dark data becomes a compound tax. 91% of enterprises say operationalizing dark data is now a priority.
Cyber Resilience Becoming Storage-Layer Concern
44% of enterprises in Wasabi’s survey experienced a cyberattack resulting in loss of cloud data access. 41% believe their cloud vendor doesn’t provide sufficient protection tools. Object lock adoption at 63%. Storage-layer resilience (immutability, MUA, covert copy) becoming baseline, not optional. Object First reports 118% YoY bookings growth in immutable backup appliances.