Geo Focus: The United Kingdom
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Geo-Specific
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Governance & Risk Management
Company Says No Evidence of Customer Data Exfiltration

British carmaker Jaguar Land Rover shut down its Liverpool assembly line Tuesday following a cyberattack.
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The luxury automaker, a subsidiary of India’s Tata Motors, said it has been “impacted by a cyber incident” and shut down affected systems. “At this stage, there is no evidence any customer data has been stolen, but our retail and production activities have been severely disrupted,” the company said.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment. British newspaper Liverpool Echo reported that employees at the Merseyside plant near Liverpool were told not to report for work.
Production and retail operations may be offline for an indefinite period, with the attack affecting both car manufacturing and dealerships. The company dealers have been unable to book sales since Monday, the same day that Tata Motors disclosed to Indian stock exchanges that its British unit experienced a “global IT issues impacting our business.”
Jaguar Land Rover produces more than 400,000 vehicles annually and reported revenues of 29 billion pounds in 2024.
The disruption comes at the start of the fall car selling season, a peak period of sales for automakers – although Jaguar sales have already plummeted following its 2024 decision to suspend production and convert its lineup into an all-electric editions.
The disruption suggests hackers may have penetrated Jaguar Land Rover’s production line operational technology, said Mark Tibbs, partner for cyber risk and complex investigations at British law firm Mishcon.”Companies may be forced to switch off OT systems as a precaution to prevent the attack from spreading or causing physical damage. This can lead to delays, supply chain interruptions and challenges for deliveries to customers and retailers,” Tibbs added.
The incident follows a March breach in which ransomware group Hellcat leaked automaker data after compromising employee Jira credentials to deploy infostealers.
With reporting by Information Security Media Group’s David Perera in Northern Virginia.
