11 May 2026
Article Series
Logistics plant engineering is currently undergoing the most radical transformation in its history. Whereas mechanics, steel construction and simple programmable logic controllers (PLCs) once dominated the landscape, today neural networks, computer vision and autonomous decision-making algorithms determine the efficiency of modern distribution centres. However, as technical complexity grows, so does legal exposure. With the new EU Product Liability Directive (Directive (EU) 2024/2853), which must be transposed into German law by 9 December 2026, the European legislator is responding to the challenges of digitalisation. For plant manufacturers, system integrators and importers of AI hardware, the boundaries of liability are shifting towards increased risk responsibility.
One of the central tenets of previous product liability law was the fundamental restriction to physical objects, meaning that the extension of the Product Liability Act to software was contentious. Software was often regarded as a service or merely an accessory, and victims were denied recourse under product liability law.
The new Directive breaks with this tradition. Software is now explicitly a product. This applies regardless of whether it:
The product status of software applies regardless of whether it is stored on a device or accessed via cloud or software-as-a-service technologies. (Open-source software developed or provided outside the scope of a business activity is expressly excluded from the legal definition of a product.)
For plant engineering, this means a software error leading to damage1 (e.g. a collapsed shelving system due to faulty loading logic) can now, in principle, trigger strict liability. The claimant no longer needs to prove fault on the part of the manufacturer; it is sufficient to prove that the product was defective and that this defect caused the damage.
This means: If damage occurs because the AI makes a wrong decision (e.g. an autonomous vehicle crashes into a shelf because object recognition fails), the manufacturer is liable even if they programmed it ‘to the best of their knowledge.’ Liability is based solely on the defectiveness of the product, not on any personal misconduct on the part of the developers.
In traditional mechanical engineering, a product was considered safe if it corresponded to the state of the art at the time it left the factory floor. With AI systems that continuously adapt their behaviour during operation through machine learning, this static approach falls short.
Until now, plaintiffs had to prove precisely which technical defect caused the damage. In the world of AI, this is often impossible. The directive introduces a reversal of the burden of proof here:
Despite these stricter requirements, the manufacturer is not without protection. The Directive provides for specific defences (exculpation) that are of crucial importance in the logistics sector.
The new EU Product Liability Directive is not an obstacle to innovation, but a guide to safer and more transparent automation. For operators of logistics facilities, it offers the opportunity to safeguard the technical complexity of their systems through clear contractual guidelines.
Liability security is becoming a quality feature: operators who prioritise transparency and a precise division of roles with their plant manufacturers not only minimise their legal risks but also create the basis of trust necessary for the success of Logistics 4.0. By 2026, legal resilience will be just as important as the mechanical resilience of the plant itself.
Implementation into German law remains to be seen by 9 December 2026 at the latest, but a broad interpretation and a significant tightening of liability are to be expected. Companies in the logistics plant engineering sector should take early action on compliance initiatives.
1 Under section 1(1), second sentence, of the Product Liability Act (ProdHaftG), only damage to property used for private purposes is eligible for compensation under the Product Liability Act. Personal injury is therefore particularly relevant in this context.
11 May 2026
5 March 2026