JBS Meat Plants Reopen as White House Blames Russia-Linked Group Over Hack

JBS SA employees started returning to US meat plants on Wednesday, a day after the company’s beef operations stopped following a ransomware attack, disrupting meat production in North America and Australia.

A notorious Russia-linked hacking group is behind the cyberattack against JBS, a source familiar with the matter said.

Brazil’s JBS controls about 20 percent of the slaughtering capacity for US cattle and hogs, so the plants’ reopening should prevent a severe supply-chain disruption.

JBS, the world’s largest meatpacker, said most operations resumed on Wednesday, “including all of our pork, poultry and prepared foods facilities around the world and the majority of our beef facilities in the US and Australia.”

“We anticipate operating at close to full capacity across our global operations tomorrow,” JBS USA Chief Executive Andre Nogueira said in a statement.

The cyberattack followed one last month by a group with ties to Russia on Colonial Pipeline, the largest fuel pipeline in the United States, which crippled fuel delivery for several days in the US Southeast.

It is the third major attack this year tied to Russia, and White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Wednesday the JBS hack was expected to be discussed at President Joe Biden’s mid-June summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“We’re not taking any options off the table in terms of how we may respond, but of course there’s an internal policy review process to consider that. We’re in direct touch with the Russians, as well, to convey our concerns about these reports,” Psaki added.

“President Biden certainly thinks that President Putin and the Russian government has a role to play in stopping and preventing these attacks.”

The Russia-linked cyber gang goes by the name REvil and Sodinokibi, the source said.

Cybersecurity investigators have said they believe some members of the REvil ransomware team are based in Russia. The prolific ransomware group, which is perhaps best known for attacking an Apple Inc supplier named Quanta Computer earlier this year, previously posted in Russian on cyber-crime forums, marketing stolen data.

In the Quanta Computer case, the hackers sent extortion threats and demanded a payment of $50 million (roughly Rs. 365 crores) for the company to regain access to its systems.

Over the past few years, ransomware has evolved into a pressing national security issue. A number of gangs, many of them Russian speakers, develop the software that encrypts files and then demand payment in cryptocurrency for keys that allow the owners to decipher and use them again.

Scrambling for beef

With North American operations headquartered in Greeley, Colorado, JBS sells beef and pork under the Swift brand, with retailers like Costco Wholesale Corp carrying its pork loins and tenderloins.

US beef and pork prices are already rising as China increases imports, animal feed costs rise and slaughterhouses have confronted a labor shortage since COVID-19 outbreaks shut down many US meat plants.

“It’s probably going to be pretty tight for the next few days because even though they (JBS) are going to start opening … who knows how they are going to run,” said Altin Kalo, economist at Steiner Consulting Group. “There’s a fair amount of people that are scrambling (for beef supplies).”

US meatpackers on Wednesday slaughtered 12.5 percent fewer cattle than a week earlier and 8 percent less than a year earlier, although slaughtering was up about 12 percent from Tuesday, according to estimates from the US Department of Agriculture.

Plants are expected to return to full capacity in the next couple days, said officials with the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) International Union, which represents over 25,000 JBS meatpacking workers.

JBS also owns most of chicken processor Pilgrim’s Pride, which sells organic chicken under the Just Bare brand.

The company’s operations in Brazil, Mexico and the UK were not affected by the attack, JBS said.

Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) cattle futures rose on Wednesday after tumbling on Tuesday as the JBS plant shutdowns prevented farmers from delivering their cattle to slaughter plants.

The attack drew attention to the concentrated beef sector in the United States, where four companies including JBS slaughter over 80 percent of fed cattle and shutdowns of slaughtering plants have a severe impact on prices that ranchers are paid for their cattle.

“The Justice Department needs to take a serious look into the meatpacking industry, and if they cannot, Congress needs to pass reforms that protect a fair and open cattle market,” US senators led by Republican Mike Rounds of South Dakota and Democrat Tina Smith of Minnesota wrote in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland.

© Thomson Reuters 2021
 


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