Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CEO defends shutting pipeline

Put the country first, he says of decision to pay ransom

- ERIC TUCKER AND BEN FOX

WASHINGTON — A pipeline company chief executive made no apologies Tuesday for his decisions to abruptly halt fuel distributi­on for much of the East Coast and pay millions to a criminal gang in Russia as he faced down one of the most disruptive ransomware attacks in U.S. history.

Colonial Pipeline CEO Joseph Blount said he had no choice, telling senators uneasy with his actions that he feared far worse consequenc­es given the uncertaint­y the company was confrontin­g as the attack unfolded last month.

“I know how critical our pipeline is to the country,” Blount said, “and I put the interests of the country first.”

His testimony to the Senate Homeland Security Committee on the May 7 cyberattac­k provided a rare window into the dilemma faced by the private sector amid a storm of ransomware attacks in which overseas hackers breach a company’s network and encrypt its data, demanding a ransom to release it back to them.

U.S. authoritie­s tell companies not to pay the ransom, arguing the crooks may not provide the keys to unencrypt the data and that the payments will encourage future attacks and help sustain criminal networks typically based in Russia and Eastern Europe. Blount chose to disregard that advice within

the first 24 hours of the attack and paid the equivalent of $4.4 million in bitcoin to retrieve the company’s data. U.S. officials said Monday they had recovered much of the payment.

“I made the decision to pay, and I made the decision to keep the informatio­n about the payment as confidenti­al as possible,” Blount said. “It was the hardest decision I’ve made in my 39 years in the energy industry.”

The company, he said, had to act fast as it worked feverishly to determine whether the criminal gang had compromise­d the operationa­l systems or physical security of the 5,500-mile pipeline — and to try to avoid a more sustained shutdown.

Asked how much worse it would have been if the company hadn’t paid to get its data back, Blount said, “That’s an unknown we probably don’t want to know. And it may be an unknown we probably don’t want to play out in a public forum.”

His appearance before the Senate comes as lawmakers consider possible measures to address the ransomware attacks that have been launched against thousands of businesses as well as state and local government agencies.

“We’ve got to recognize these ransomware attacks for what they are. It’s a serious national security threat,” said Sen. Rob Portman, a Republican from Ohio. “Attacks against critical infrastruc­ture are not just attacks on companies. They are attacks on our country itself.”

85% OF RANSOM SEIZED

Already, the Justice Department and FBI have establishe­d a task force to deal with ransomware with some success, including managing to seize 85% of the bitcoin that Colonial paid as ransom. But many of the criminals behind the attacks are beyond their reach in Russia or other countries that will not extradite suspects to the U.S.

The Biden administra­tion has also made ransomware, and cybersecur­ity more broadly, a national priority in the wake of a series of highprofil­e intrusions.

Last month, the administra­tion issued new regulation­s for the pipeline industry, requiring companies to conduct cybersecur­ity assessment­s and immediatel­y report any breaches to the federal government. The industry has until now operated under voluntary guidelines.

Blount disputed a media report that his company had refused to participat­e in one of the voluntary assessment­s, conducted by the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, earlier this year, saying it had merely been delayed because of covid-19 and other issues. “That was quite a shock to me,” he said of the account.

RUSSIA-BASED CULPRITS

The attack on Colonial Pipeline — which supplies roughly 45% of the fuel consumed on the East Coast — has been attributed to a Russia-based gang of cybercrimi­nals using the DarkSide ransomware variant, one of more than 100 variants the FBI is currently investigat­ing. The attack began after hackers used a company virtual private network that was no longer in active use, Blount said.

“The ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline affected millions of Americans, ” said Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich. “The next time an incident like this happens, unfortunat­ely, it could be even worse.”

Blount said the Georgiabas­ed company began negotiatin­g with the hackers on the evening of the May 7 attack and paid a ransom of 75 bitcoin — then valued at roughly $4.4 million — the next day. The hack prompted the company to halt operations before the ransomware could spread to its operating systems.

The encryption tool the hackers provided the company in exchange for the payment helped “to some degree” but was not perfect, with Colonial still in the process of fully restoring its systems while working with consultant­s to assess the damage and improve cybersecur­ity, Blount said.

It took the company five days to resume pipeline operations. What took place in that time illustrate­d why they needed to quickly pay the ransom, he told the lawmakers.

“We already started to see pandemoniu­m going on in the markets, people doing unsafe things like filling garbage bags full of gasoline or people fist-fighting in line at the fuel pump,” he said. “The concern would be what would happen if it had stretched on beyond that amount of time.”

 ?? (AP/Graeme Jennings) ?? “I made the decision to pay, and I made the decision to keep the informatio­n about the payment as confidenti­al as possible,” Colonial Pipeline CEO Joseph Blount said Tuesday. In testimony to the Senate Homeland Security Committee, he called it “the hardest decision I’ve made in my 39 years in the energy industry.”
(AP/Graeme Jennings) “I made the decision to pay, and I made the decision to keep the informatio­n about the payment as confidenti­al as possible,” Colonial Pipeline CEO Joseph Blount said Tuesday. In testimony to the Senate Homeland Security Committee, he called it “the hardest decision I’ve made in my 39 years in the energy industry.”

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