Increased digitalisation of the Australian agricultural sector is putting it at risk of major cyberattacks, warns the nation’s rural research body.
The warning comes following a crippling ransomware attack that effectively paralysed the world’s largest meat producer, JBS’s operations in Australia and the United States.
AgriFutures Australia, along with auditing firm BDO, released guidelines on July 5 outlining how agribusinesses can shore up their cybersecurity against future threats.
In the last five years, US$6.7 billion was invested in agtech, with over US$1.9 billion in the last 18 months.
“The health sector saw the risk that came with the digitisation of records and moved to rapidly improve and standardise cyber security risks. This included allocating sufficient funds and focusing on the fundamentals of cyber security, whilst outsourcing functions that could not be performed in-house,” John Borchi, partner of cybersecurity at BDO Australia said.
“Australia’s rural industries are at the beginning of the cyber security journey. In recent years there has been a rapid uptake of technology, and with this, an increased risk of digital attacks. Now is the time for industries to act.”
A survey conducted by AgriFutures and BDO found that only 16 percent of rural business owners had a response plan in place in case a cyberattack hit their businesses.
“Cyber security threats on farm can be far-reaching and span personal privacy, sensitive farm information, and even IP related to skills, knowledge and data from farming systems,” Georgina Townsend, manager of national rural issues at AgriFutures Australia said.
“The 2020 malware attack that shut down Australian and New Zealand wool sales and the 2021 cyberattack on global meat processing giant, JBS, are two high profile incidents that have cost the Australian agricultural sector dearly,” she added.
In Australia, six sites had to close, including meat processing plants in Queensland, Victoria, New South Wales, and Tasmania. Thousands of workers were stood down as well.
The FBI attributed the attack to Russian-linked hacking group REvil, also known as Sodinokibi.