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American Water Suffers Network Disruptions After Cyberattack

The largest publicly traded water utility in the US was forced to disconnect some of its online systems, and its website and telecommunications system remained unavailable as of Tuesday morning, Oct. 8.

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Source: Juri Samsonov via Alamy Stock Photo

The website of the largest publicly traded water utility in the US remained offline this morning after a cyberattack Oct. 3 forced the company to shut down some of its connected systems and services.

American Water is a significant supplier of water in the US, serving more than 14 million customers across 14 states and 18 military installations. The company employees about 6,500 people across its facilities. It discovered “unauthorized activity within its computer networks and systems” on Oct. 3 that turned out to be the result of a cybersecurity incident, the company reported in a Form 8-K filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

The company activated incident-response protocols and enlisted third-party cybersecurity experts to help it contain and mitigate the attack, which included disconnecting and deactivating “certain” systems to “protect” systems and data, it reported.

Online, Telecom Systems Affected

The outages appear to have included the company’s online customer-facing sites, as the American Water website as well as its “MyWater” customer portal served up white pages with “Forbidden 403” text today.

An attendant who answered a Dark Reading phone call to American Water’s headquarters in Camden, N.J., early on Oct. 8 said she was unable to connect to a member of the media relations team, nor leave a message for anyone because the telecommunications system also “is down.”

At this time, it seems that none of the company’s water or wastewater facilities or operations have been negatively affected by the incident, although it’s too soon to predict the full impact and material effect it will have on the company, according to the filing. An investigation alongside law enforcement officials remains ongoing as to the exact cause and extent of the damage.

Utilities Under Attack

Critical infrastructure such as the public water supply and electricity grid both in the US and overseas face increasing risk of attack from threat actors, incidents that have the potential to not only affect network infrastructure or financial coffers, but also cause supply shortages or even physical harm.

The now-infamous May 2021 ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline is a prime example of the former, while a February 2021 attack on a Florida water-treatment facility, which potentially could have poisoned the water supply if an employee hadn’t acted quickly, demonstrates the latter.

“We often overlook how vulnerable our everyday essentials are to digital threats," observes Akhil Mittal, senior manager of cybersecurity strategy and solutions at Black Duck (formerly known as Synopsys Software Integrity Group). “We’re not just talking about data breaches — this is about the safety of millions of people who rely on clean water every day. A cyber incident like this could disrupt water services, delay safety checks, and potentially risk public health.”

Regulatory Effort Stalled

Unsurprisingly concerned, US federal authorities have put a concerted effort into to doing more to ensure cybersecurity measures at water utilities are a mandatory effort, as nearly 70% of the United States’ community drinking water systems fails to comply with the Safe Drinking Water Act, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

In fact, the EPA planned to ramp up efforts to enforce the act and other regulatory efforts to ensure better cybersecurity safety across water utilities in May. However, the agency had to roll back these actions last year after it faced litigation from Republican lawmakers and industry groups. Other agencies like CISA have advanced cybersecurity guides for the water sector in the wake of that failed effort.

Prevention of cybersecurity attacks through infrastructure security is indeed the key to ensuring critical services such as the ones utilities offer remain safe, as “protecting these systems is no longer optional now,” but “critical to keep things running smoothly and safely,” Mittal says.

As this is too late in the case of American Water, he adds, the key to recovering quickly from the incident now will be in taking quick actions to contain the attack, getting all systems back online in a reasonable time frame, and being transparent with the public about what happened.

About the Author

Elizabeth Montalbano is a freelance writer, journalist, and therapeutic writing mentor with more than 25 years of professional experience. Her areas of expertise include technology, business, and culture. Elizabeth previously lived and worked as a full-time journalist in Phoenix, San Francisco, and New York City; she currently resides in a village on the southwest coast of Portugal. In her free time, she enjoys surfing, hiking with her dogs, traveling, playing music, yoga, and cooking.

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