Daily Mail

Sellafield security probe over fears nuclear plant is open to cyber attack

- By Rebecca Camber Crime and Security Editor

THE UK’s most hazardous nuclear site is being investigat­ed amid concerns over its vulnerabil­ity to cyber attack.

Sellafield, home to the largest store of plutonium on the planet, has been placed into ‘special measures’ by regulators because its cyber security does not meet standards. But yesterday the nuclear site denied reports it has ever been hacked by a hostile state group.

A report in The Guardian claimed that cyber groups linked to Russia and China had infiltrate­d its IT systems as far back as 2015, citing sources suggesting that foreign hackers had likely ‘accessed the highest echelons of confidenti­al material’.

But both Sellafield and the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) denied any breach yesterday. The regulator acknowledg­ed that cyber security has been a concern at the Cumbrian site. But sources said there was no evidence to suggest an attack by a foreign state had ever taken place.

Last year the watchdog was forced to take ‘enforcemen­t action’ due to cyber security ‘shortfalls’. A report revealed: ‘Sellafield made limited progress in ensuring adequate cyber security arrangemen­ts and we took enforcemen­t action.’

The ONR is now said to be considerin­g prosecutio­n for cyber failings. In one blunder, a password for a secure nuclear IT system was broadcast on TV by the BBC1 nature series Countryfil­e when crews were invited into the secure site for a report on rural communitie­s and the nuclear industry.

Claims that public safety is at risk due to sleeper malware – software that can lurk and be used to spy or attack systems – being embedded in Sellafield’s computer networks by a hostile state were denied.

A Sellafield spokesman said: ‘Our monitoring systems are robust and we have a high degree of confidence that no such malware exists on our system.

‘We take cyber security extremely seriously at Sellafield.’

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 ?? ?? Hostile hacking threat: Bosses at Sellafield in Cumbria have dismissed claims their IT security systems were breached
Hostile hacking threat: Bosses at Sellafield in Cumbria have dismissed claims their IT security systems were breached

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