I'm almost certain there will be central authorities where you will have to register your full identity (AML/KYC and all).
So it will be more bureaucratic and cumbersome to use, and thus also more expensive (albeit that part will be probably subsidized).
Hmm... I guess you are correct about that they will require registering personal information:
"The risk driver b), which concerns the anonymity of payers and payees could be addressed, at least within the EU, by requiring exchanges, and any other non-user market participants that interact with FC, to comply with CDD requirements. CDD requirements include the collection and verification of basic identity information; matching names against lists of known parties (such as ‘politically exposed persons’); determining the customer's risk in terms of likeliness to commit money laundering, terrorist finance or identity theft; and monitoring a customer's transactions against their expected behaviour and recorded profile, as well as that of the customer's peers."
What the heck is 'politically exposed persons'?
Sounds Orwellian.
Still, as said, who uses any of those gov-mail things over email?
The (unfair) advantage they will have is that mainstream financial services in the EU will use their virtual currency and perhaps refuse to accept Bitcoin.