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: Fear of attacks strikes global transport & logistics industryJun 21, 2011 (M2 PRESSWIRE via COMTEX) -- Cyber, hacker, pirate and terrorist attacks are expected to rise across the global supply chain over the next 20 years and firms should plan now to protect their assets, says a new PwC report. PwCs Volume 4 of the Transport & Logistics 2030 series: Securing the Supply Chain, warns that cyber attacks are now so sophisticated that any business, or even country, could be at risk. The report, undertaken jointly with the Supply Chain Management Institute (SMI) at EBS Business School in Germany, surveyed 80 executives across business, science and government. Participants were asked to assess the probability of a variety of hypotheses on a scale of 0-100%. On average those surveyed said there was a 56 % probability of a rise in attacks in some form. It is not just cyber attacks that firms need to prepare for, the report says, they also need to be prepared to handle natural or man-made disasters. Overall, those surveyed said they were even more concerned with hacker attacks affecting their supply chains than they were actual physical attacks. Recent research also shows that the German internet, for example, is attacked every two seconds. Klaus-Dieter Ruske, partner and Global Transportation and Logistics Industry Leader at PwC, said: The supply relationships between producers, suppliers and consumers have become more complex and more accident-sensitive in the last few years. Today 90 per cent of the worldwide trading volume is concentrating on about 39 gateway regions. If only a single one of these hubs fails, the economic consequences could be enormous after just a short period of time, and affect most economies around the globe. As a consequence of the increasing threat, the transportation and logistics companies' expenditures on security will broadly rise. Thus, capital investment on security, also on security of IT systems, will be one of the most important cost drivers of the logistics industry. Businesses are urged to devise and execute contingency plans now as the economic impact of such attacks could be devastating, the report says. Assaults on certain, highly-frequented chokepoints, a geographic bottleneck with only one narrow transport link across a valley or bridge, are predicted to be potential targets. Some examples of chokepoints in global shipping include the Strait of Homuz, the Suez Canal and the Panama Canal. Egypt, for example, already loses more than $640mn each year because shipping companies are avoiding the passage through the piracy-threatened Gulf of Aden and the Suez Canal. In spite of the rising risk there will not be any renunciation of highly diversified international division of work, according to the report. Survey respondents said there was a 70 % probability of logistics companies having to perform obligatory security checks on their whole supply chain, and they said there was a 60% probability that modern technology would offer businesses better protection. Freight screening as well as risk profiling of employees, and using trusted shipping operators, will also help businesses stay ahead of the hackers, the report adds. Klaus-Dieter Ruske, partner and Global Transportation and Logistics Industry Leader at PwC, added: Enterprises will have to analyse and counteract every possible scenario of danger to protect their supply chains. It is not just about prevention, but also about developing alternatives for the case of emergency. Thus every enterprise should be prepared to quickly compensate any drop out of a supplier. Attacks can be due to a natural disaster. Icelands volcanic eruption in 2010 caused a ripple effect across the world. The airline industry lost around $1.7bn in revenues when over 100,000 flights were cancelled in six days. Notes For a copy of the study Transportation & Logistics 2030 - Volume 4 Securing the supply chain please visit www.pwc.com/tl2030 1. For all interview requests please contact either Rita Congera on +44 (0)7425 141510 or +44 (0)207 2121231. Email [email protected] 2. PwC and SMI surveyed 80 experts from 25 countries from 5 continents using an online Real-time Delphi method. Over a time period of 8 weeks the expert panel discussed and assessed different scenarios for the T&L industry in a multi-staged procedure. 3. PwC firms provide industry-focused assurance, tax and advisory services to enhance value for their clients. More than 161,000 people in 154 countries in firms across the PwC network share their thinking, experience and solutions to develop fresh perspectives and practical advice. See pwc.com for more information. Rita Congera PwC | PR Manager Automotive & Industrial Products Direct: +44 (0)20 7212 1231 Mob: +44 (0)7425 141510 Email: [email protected] | Web: www.ukmediacentre.pwc.com PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP 1 Embankment Place, London WC2N 6RH ((M2 Communications disclaims all liability for information provided within M2 PressWIRE. Data supplied by named party/parties. Further information on M2 PressWIRE can be obtained at http://www.presswire.net on the world wide web. Inquiries to [email protected]. |
