What’s the matter?
The University of Minnesota’s Food Protection and Defense Institute (FPDI) has published a new report titled “Adulterating More Than Food: The Cyber Risk to Food Processing and Manufacturing”.
Key Highlights
This report highlights that cyberattacks pose an increasing threat to the food industry.
“In 2011 alone, researchers and manufacturers revealed over 200 ICS vulnerabilities. The numbers increased every year afterward to early 2016, the end of the study period. So, industrial control system vulnerabilities exist and are plentiful,” researchers said in the report.
Apart from vulnerabilities, researchers have also noted other factors that concern cybersecurity such as:
“The food industry has not been a target of costly cyberattacks like financial, energy, and health care companies have. However, as companies in those sectors learn to harden their defenses, the attackers will begin looking for easier victims,” Stephen Streng, lead author on the report said.
Consequences
The potential consequences of a cyberattack against the ICS systems used in the food industry include adulterated food that threatens public health, physical harm to workers, destroyed equipment, environmental damage, and massive financial losses for food companies.
Recommendations
The researchers also provide recommendations to the food industry to prevent cyberattacks against the industry, which include:
“Cyberattacks could have financially devastating consequences for the food industry, particularly among smaller companies, and in the worst case can threaten the public’s health. We hope this report will raise awareness among food industry executives of this potentially severe risk and will inspire them to start addressing it with the same care and urgency they apply to other aspects of food safety,” Amy Kircher, Director of FPDI said.
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