The Commission welcomes the political agreement reached by the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union on a new Machinery Regulation. It revises the existing Machinery Directive and adapts the rules to address the emerging risks and challenges posed by new technologies to machinery products and ensure these can be operated safely.
The Regulation covers machinery consumer products and industrial machinery, ranging from heavy-duty construction machines to entire industrial production lines, as well as highly digitalised products like robots or manufacturing 3D-printers. The new rules will reinforce people's trust in the next generation of machines, foster innovation and boost the machinery sector's competitiveness in the single market and globally.
The new Machinery Regulation will:
The European Parliament and the Council will now formally have to adopt the new Machinery Regulation. The Regulation will enter into force on the twentieth day following that of its publication in the Official Journal of the European Union. It will apply 42 months after the date of its entry into force.
Machines are indispensable in our daily lives and are needed for the good functioning of our industry and the wellbeing of EU citizens. However, the emergence of new digital technologies raises new challenges for products' safety, including ensuring their safe connectivity, autonomy, data dependency, or opacity.
The EU industry is a world leader in the manufacturing of machinery. The machinery sector records a yearly turnover of over €740 billion, 9.4% of the total EU manufacturing turnover. In the EU, it employs 2.8 million people, 9.9% of all people employed in manufacturing, and includes over 80,000 companies, 4.1% of all manufacturing companies. The EU has consistently registered a positive trade balance in the sector, with exports of over €276 billion to non-EU countries in 2019.
Since 1989, the EU machinery directive, revised several times, promotes the free movement of machinery within the single market and guarantees a high level of protection for EU workers and citizens. However, a REFIT exercise in 2018 established many areas for improvement and a need for a revision. The Commission also published in 2020 a Report on the safety and liability implications of Artificial Intelligence, the Internet of Things and robotics, accompanying a white paper on Artificial Intelligence, concluding that a number of gaps in the existing legislative framework needed to be addressed.
The Commission presented the new machinery regulation, revising the directive, in April 2021, as part of the bigger AI package. This also included a proposal for a regulation laying down harmonised rules on Artificial Intelligence (AI Act), a Communication on fostering a European approach to Artificial Intelligence, and a review of the Coordinated Plan on Artificial Intelligence.
Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on machinery products