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The more manufacturing is digitised, the more it is at risk of cyber attacks; 80% of UK manufacturers have had cyber attacks in one year

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Nearly 80 per cent of British manufacturers say they’ve been hit by a cyber incident in the past year, as new research suggests disruption on the factory floor is no longer an exception but business as usual.

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UK Manufacturers Under Cyber Fire With 80% Reporting Attacks

By Carly Page, as published by The Register on 1 April 2026

According to security outfit ESET, 78 per cent of UK manufacturers admit to suffering at least one cyber incident in the last 12 months, with more than half reporting lost revenue as a result. These aren’t minor hiccups either. In more than half of the worst incidents, losses surpassed £250,000, because when something breaks digitally, the production line usually follows suit.

The sector got a high-profile reminder of the stakes last year when Jaguar Land Rover was forced to halt production following a cyberattack that rippled across its supply chain. The disruption dragged on for weeks, with estimates putting the wider economic hit at around £1.9 billion once suppliers, delays and lost output were factored in.

ESET’s numbers suggest this kind of fallout is increasingly common. Almost all respondents said incidents had a direct operational impact, with supply chain disruption and missed commitments near the top of the list. And when things do go down, they don’t bounce back quickly. Most outages stretch into days, sometimes close to a week, with the knock-on effects lingering well after systems are back up and running.

More context:

Despite that, visibility into risk remains patchy. One in five manufacturers said they have limited or no insight into the cybersecurity threats that could knock production offline, a blind spot that’s increasingly hard to justify as attacks evolve. Nearly half of respondents now see AI-assisted attacks as the top threats over the next year, ahead of phishing and ransomware – a sign that the tooling on both sides of the fence is getting more sophisticated.

“If the JLR attack showed us anything, it’s how quickly a cyber incident can shut down production at scale and have major consequences for the business and the wider economy,” said Matt Knell, UK country manager at ESET. “The real challenge is that many organisations still treat cybersecurity as an IT issue rather than a strategic business decision. When it sits outside the boardroom, it’s harder to prioritise appropriately.”

Cyber incidents might be a production problem now, but ownership still mostly sits in IT. Only 22 per cent of firms put it at the executive level, even though the damage is clearly big enough to warrant board attention. Despite that, more than a fifth still lean toward reacting after the fact rather than trying to stop incidents in the first place. 

[Note from The Exposé:  How about companies relying less on digital operators and more on human operators?]

Expose News: As manufacturing goes digital, watch out! 80% of UK firms faced cyber attacks last year. Stay alert!

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Rhoda Wilson
While previously it was a hobby culminating in writing articles for Wikipedia (until things made a drastic and undeniable turn in 2020) and a few books for private consumption, since March 2020 I have become a full-time researcher and writer in reaction to the global takeover that came into full view with the introduction of covid-19. For most of my life, I have tried to raise awareness that a small group of people planned to take over the world for their own benefit. There was no way I was going to sit back quietly and simply let them do it once they made their final move.
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John Blundell
John Blundell
3 hours ago

The banks use multiple backup systems. Multiple copies every day to ensure the ability to return to a known stable, uncorrupted previous version, as do large corporates
Executives and managers in small to medium buisnesses need to wise up to an ever increasing threat from hackers, software disruption, and especially confidential data loss of credit card details.

There is over-reliance using antimalware, however the real protection comes from uncorrupted multiple daily backups of data and software, not just for an IT department but for the executives who often work from home using vulnerable personal computers.