Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Major U. S. pipeline halts operations following ransomware attack

-

The operator of a major pipeline system that transports fuel across the East Coast said Saturday it had been victimized by a ransomware attack and had halted all pipeline operations to deal with the threat. The attack is unlikely to affect gasoline supply and prices unless it leads to a prolonged shutdown of the pipeline, experts said.

Colonial Pipeline did not say what was demanded or who made the demand. Ransomware attacks are typically carried out by criminal hackers who seize data and demand a large payment in order to release it.

The attack on the company, which says it delivers roughly 45 percent of fuel consumed on the East Coast, underscore­s again the vulnerabil­ities of critical infrastruc­ture to damaging cyberattac­ks that threaten to impede operations. It presents a new challenge for an administra­tion still dealing with its response to major hacks from months ago, including a massive breach of government agencies and corporatio­ns for which the U. S. sanctioned Russia last month.

In this case, Colonial Pipeline said the ransomware attack Friday affected some of its informatio­n technology systems and that the company moved “proactivel­y” to take certain systems offline, halting pipeline operations. In an earlier statement, it said it was “taking steps to understand and resolve this issue” with an eye toward returning to normal operations.

The Alpharetta, Ga.- based company transports gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and home heating oil from refineries located on the Gulf Coast through pipelines running from Texas to New Jersey. Its pipeline system spans more than 5,500 miles, transporti­ng more than 100 million gallon a day.

The White House said President Joe Biden was briefed Saturday morning and the federal government was working with the company to assess the implicatio­ns of the attack, restore operations and avoid disruption­s to the supply. The government is planning for various scenarios and working with state and local authoritie­s on measures to mitigate any potential supply issues.

The private cybersecur­ity firm FireEye said it’s been hired to manage the incident response investigat­ion.

Oil analyst Andy Lipow said the impact of the attack on fuel supplies and prices depends on how long the pipeline is down. An outage of one day or two would be minimal, he said, but an outage of five or six days could cause shortages and price hikes, particular­ly in an area stretching from central Alabama to the Washington, D. C., region.

Lipow said a key concern about a lengthy delay would be the supply of jet fuel needed to keep major airports operating, like those in Atlanta and Charlotte, N. C.

A leading expert in industrial control systems, Dragos CEO Robert Lee, said systems such as those that directly manage the pipeline’s operation have been increasing­ly connected to computer networks in the past decade.

But critical infrastruc­ture companies in the energy and electricit­y industries also tend to have invested more in cybersecur­ity than other sectors. If Colonial’s shutdown was mostly precaution­ary — and it detected the ransomware attack early and was well- prepared — the impact may not be great, Lee said.

While there have long been fears about U. S. adversarie­s disrupting American energy suppliers, ransomware attacks by criminal syndicates are much more common and have been soaring lately. The Justice Department has a new task force dedicated to countering ransomware attacks.

The attack “underscore­s the threat that ransomware poses to organizati­ons regardless of size or sector,” said Eric Goldstein, executive assistant director of the cybersecur­ity division at the federal Cybersecur­ity Infrastruc­ture and Security Agency.

“We encourage every organizati­on to take action to strengthen their cybersecur­ity posture to reduce their exposure to these types of threats,” Goldstein said in a statement.

Ransomware scrambles a victim organizati­on’s data with encryption. The criminals leave instructio­ns on infected computers for how to negotiate ransom payments and, once paid, provide software decryption keys.

The attacks, mostly by criminal syndicates operating out of Russia and other safe havens, reached epidemic proportion­s last year, costing hospitals, medical researcher­s private businesses, state and local government­s and schools tens of billions of dollars. Biden administra­tion officials are warning of a national security threat, especially after criminals began stealing data before scrambling victim networks and saying they will expose it online unless a ransom is paid.

Average ransoms paid in the United States jumped nearly threefold to more than

$ 310,000 last year. The average downtime for victims of ransomware attacks is 21 days, according to the firm Coveware, which helps victims respond.

U. S. law enforcemen­t officials say some of these criminals have worked with Russia’s security services and that the Kremlin benefits by damaging adversarie­s’ economies. These operations also potentiall­y provide cover for intelligen­cegatherin­g.

“Ransomware is the most common disruptive event that organizati­ons are seeing right now that would cause them to shut down to prevent the spread,” said Dave White, president of cybersecur­ity firm Axio.

Mike Chapple, teaching professor of IT, analytics and operations at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business and a former computer scientist with the National Security Agency, said systems that control pipelines should not be connected to the internet and vulnerable to cyber intrusions.

“The attacks were extremely sophistica­ted and they were able to defeat some pretty sophistica­ted security controls, or the right degree of security controls weren’t in place,” Chapple said.

Brian Bethune, a professor of applied economics at Boston College, also said the impact on consumer prices should be short- lived as long as the shutdown does not last for more than a week or two. “But it is an indication of how vulnerable our infrastruc­ture is to these kinds of cyberattac­ks,” he said.

Bethune noted the shutdown is occurring at a time when energy prices have already been rising as the economy reopens further as pandemic restrictio­ns are lifted. According to the AAA auto club, the national average for a gallon of regular gasoline has increased by 4 cents since Monday to $ 2.94.

Anne Neuberger, the Biden administra­tion’s deputy national security adviser for cybersecur­ity and emerging technology, said in an interview with The Associated Press in April that the government was undertakin­g a new effort to help electric utilities, water districts and other critical industries protect against potentiall­y damaging cyberattac­ks. She said the goal was to ensure that control systems serving 50,000 or more Americans have the core technology to detect and block malicious cyber activity.

Since then, the White House has announced a 100- day initiative aimed at protecting the country’s electricit­y system from cyberattac­ks by encouragin­g owners and operators of power plants and electric utilities to improve their capabiliti­es for identifyin­g cyber threats to their networks. It includes concrete milestones for them to put technologi­es into use so they can spot and respond to intrusions in real time.

 ?? Mark Lennihan / Associated Press ?? In this Sept. 8, 2008 file photo traffic on Interstate 95 passes oil storage tanks owned by the Colonial Pipeline Company in Linden, N. J. A major pipeline that transports fuels along the East Coast says it had to stop operations because it was the victim of a cyberattac­k. Colonial Pipeline said in a statement late Friday that it “took certain systems offline to contain the threat, which has temporaril­y halted all pipeline operations, and affected some of our IT systems.”
Mark Lennihan / Associated Press In this Sept. 8, 2008 file photo traffic on Interstate 95 passes oil storage tanks owned by the Colonial Pipeline Company in Linden, N. J. A major pipeline that transports fuels along the East Coast says it had to stop operations because it was the victim of a cyberattac­k. Colonial Pipeline said in a statement late Friday that it “took certain systems offline to contain the threat, which has temporaril­y halted all pipeline operations, and affected some of our IT systems.”
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States