EU AI Act compliance is no longer a distant concern — it is a present-day strategic priority. With the regulation moving forward under the oversight of the European Commission and the Digital Omnibus creating uncertainty around timelines and requirements, organisations across manufacturing, industrial, and technology sectors are asking a critical question: should you act now, or wait for more clarity?
Waiting for the Digital Omnibus is a risk, not a strategy. While it may delay some high-risk deadlines, core obligations still take effect in August 2026. True EU AI Act compliance requires foundational work that must begin now across the full compliance lifecycle. Here are three critical steps you can take today:
Create a team across legal, engineering, product, and compliance to align technical and regulatory perspectives. Their role is to interpret Omnibus updates, follow emerging AI Office guidance, and set up a clear AI governance framework. Align early on tools, workflows, and regulatory approaches to operationalise governance and manage risk efficiently.
Map all AI systems in use or development, including third-party tools and prototypes. Document their purpose, data sources, and context to ensure visibility and support future compliance and registration. Define your data management approach (use, lifecycle, governance) and assess whether your data is AI-ready for documentation and conformity requirements.
Classify AI systems based on EU AI Act risk levels (prohibited, high, limited, minimal). Identify prohibited and high-risk systems early to prioritise actions, allocate resources, and prepare for conformity requirements while staying adaptable to Omnibus changes.
Many organisations benefit from an internal (lightweight) AI Act compliance checker to standardise triage, support a service desk, and maintain visibility across business units—especially where AI governance, privacy, and cybersecurity intersect.
On April 21st at 15:00h CET, Nemko Digital is hosting a live EU AI Act webinar to answer your compliance questions—covering practical implementation, tech sovereignty considerations, and how to prepare for increased scrutiny (including potential big tech lobbying dynamics that can influence interpretation and market expectations).
While the Omnibus proposes delaying some high-risk deadlines, core obligations remain set for August 2026. We will clarify these timelines and what they mean for your end-to-end compliance lifecycle.
Yes. We focus on practical applications for manufacturers, industrial environments, and digital product companies—including European digital solutions providers and organisations balancing compliance with tech risk and Europe cybersecurity requirements.
No. This webinar is designed for professionals at all stages of compliance awareness, including teams looking for an extensive set of practical steps and featured products-style checklists (without the sales pitch) to guide early action.
All registered attendees will receive the recording and presentation slides within 24 hours.