A cyber security “incident” has brought the Mackay region’s sugar crush to a halt.
In a statement to growers and harvesting contractors, mill operator Mackay Sugar said it was responding to a “cyber security incident affecting operations”.
Advocacy group Canegrowers confirmed on Wednesday the incident had shut down sugar milling and cane haulage across the Farleigh and Racecourse mills just outside Mackay, both of which had started crushing within the past week.
Mackay Sugar said there would be “some disruption while recovery activities occur” but was yet to provide a timeline to restart the mills.
A Farleigh Mill cane train with loaded bins at Mandarana. (ABC Tropical North: Danielle Jesser)
It said its focus was staff safety and “ensuring business continuity”.
Canegrowers Mackay chairman Joseph Borg said many growers were issued with “cease harvesting” advice by Mackay Sugar early on Wednesday morning.
He said the cyber incident had affected multiple parts of the business.
“For trains on the tracks, they have fallback measures to get them back to the factories, and they’re doing that,” he said.
“From my understanding, there’ll be more communication when that information comes out.”
Jospeh Borg says growers were alerted in the early hours of Wednesday morning. (ABC Tropical North: Liam O’Connell)
Mackay Sugar’s other mill was due to start crushing next week.
Growers in that region were not affected by Wednesday’s incident.
Mackay Sugar is Australia’s second-largest raw sugar producer, with almost 1,300 mainly family owned farms supplying its three mills.
The company typically processes about 700,000 tonnes of raw sugar a year.