IN Brief:
- GXO has implemented Europe’s first Autoload system for Grupa Żywiec in Poland.
- The system moves a full trailer load in one cycle, reducing loading time to around two minutes.
- The deployment targets throughput, safety, process consistency, and dock efficiency in food and beverage logistics.
GXO has implemented an Autoload automated truck loading system for Grupa Żywiec at Elbląg in Poland, introducing a dock automation process designed to cut loading times, reduce manual handling exposure, and improve repeatability in food and beverage logistics.
The system replaces conventional forklift-led trailer loading with a one-shot loading cycle. Instead of moving pallets individually, Autoload transfers a full trailer load in a single movement, reducing the operation to around two minutes.
The process is designed to improve throughput, reduce the risk of human error, lower material handling equipment activity around loading docks, and create a more stable loading sequence. GXO has described the installation as Europe’s first Autoload system.
The deployment builds on the company’s long-running partnership with Grupa Żywiec, one of Poland’s leading beer producers. It follows earlier automation and process improvement work across the operation, extending automation from warehouse activity into the dispatch interface.
The loading dock remains one of the most persistent bottlenecks in warehousing and distribution. Many warehouse automation investments focus on picking, goods-to-person systems, mobile robots, sortation, or automated storage. A highly automated warehouse can still lose efficiency if finished pallets queue at the dock, trailers are loaded manually, or forklift movements create congestion around dispatch lanes.
Food and beverage logistics is especially exposed to dock performance. Outbound volumes can be high, product flows are heavily palletised, and dispatch windows are closely linked to production output, retail replenishment, and vehicle availability. A delay at the dock can push back staging, reduce trailer utilisation, and affect downstream delivery schedules.
Automated trailer loading also changes the safety profile of the dock environment. Forklift operations near trailers, staging lanes, dock doors, and pedestrians remain a high-risk area in many facilities. Reducing vehicle movements at the dock can simplify traffic flows, improve separation between people and equipment, and create more predictable loading patterns.
The technology is strongest where flows are standardised. Trailer compatibility, pallet configuration, product stability, and system integration all determine whether automated loading can deliver repeatable results. Mixed loads, varied trailer fleets, changing pallet profiles, and customer-specific loading requirements can make wider deployment more complex.
Beverage operations offer a strong operating case. Loads are typically palletised, heavy, and repetitive, while trailer loading is frequent enough for small time savings to accumulate quickly. A two-minute loading cycle can release dock capacity, reduce waiting time, and allow the same infrastructure to handle greater volume without expanding the physical footprint.
The deployment reflects a broader change in warehouse automation priorities. Productivity gains are no longer being pursued only inside picking aisles or storage zones. Operators are looking at end-to-end flow, from production line and storage through to trailer departure. Dock automation, yard visibility, automated loading, and transport planning are becoming connected parts of the same operational system.
GXO’s Autoload installation in Elbląg gives automated loading a practical food and beverage reference point. The next stage for the technology will be its ability to move from specialised, high-volume applications into broader warehouse environments where safety, speed, and dispatch reliability are under equal pressure.



