EU Artificial Intelligence Act for Manufacturing
Industry-specific guidance on EU Artificial Intelligence Act compliance for manufacturing organisations. Understand the requirements, risk level, and key obligations that apply to your sector.
Compliance Risk Level
This industry has moderate regulatory obligations with sector-specific requirements.
About EU Artificial Intelligence Act
The world's first comprehensive AI regulation, establishing a risk-based framework for the development, deployment, and use of artificial intelligence systems within the EU.
EU Artificial Intelligence Act Impact on Manufacturing
Manufacturing is classified as an important sector under NIS2, bringing cybersecurity obligations to a sector that has traditionally focused on operational technology (OT) safety rather than IT security. The convergence of IT and OT systems, Industry 4.0 initiatives, and IoT-connected manufacturing processes create new attack surfaces and data protection challenges. Manufacturers must protect employee data, customer data, and increasingly the data generated by smart factory systems. AI systems used in quality control, predictive maintenance, and supply chain optimisation may fall under AI Act requirements depending on their specific use cases and risk profiles.
Key EU Artificial Intelligence Act Requirements for Manufacturing
Key EU Artificial Intelligence Act Articles for Manufacturing
Prohibited AI practices
Bans social scoring, manipulative subliminal techniques, exploitation of vulnerabilities, real-time remote biometric identification in public spaces (with limited law enforcement exceptions), and workplace/education emotion recognition.
Classification rules for high-risk AI systems
Defines high-risk AI by reference to Annex III categories (biometrics, critical infrastructure, education, employment, essential services, law enforcement, migration, justice) and products regulated under EU harmonised legislation.
Requirements for high-risk AI systems
Mandates risk management, data governance, technical documentation, record-keeping, transparency, human oversight, accuracy, robustness, and cybersecurity for high-risk systems.
Transparency obligations
Requires providers to ensure AI systems interacting with persons disclose their AI nature. Deployers of deepfakes and AI-generated text on public interest matters must label content as AI-generated.
General-purpose AI models
GPAI providers must maintain technical documentation, comply with copyright law, and publish training data summaries. Systemic risk models (10^25+ FLOPs) face additional evaluation, testing, and reporting duties.
Check Your Compliance Status
Take our free assessment to evaluate your organisation's compliance posture. Get a personalised report with actionable recommendations in minutes — no sign-up required.
Start Free AssessmentDisclaimer: The information on this page is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. For specific compliance guidance, consult a qualified legal professional in your jurisdiction.
Other Regulations Affecting Manufacturing
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
The EU's landmark data protection law that governs how organisations collect, store, process, and transfer personal data of individuals in the European Economic Area.
Network and Information Security Directive (NIS2)
The updated EU cybersecurity directive that expands security requirements to a broader range of sectors and imposes stricter obligations on essential and important entities.