A cyber-attack has “severely disrupted” Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) automobile manufacturing, together with at its two principal UK vegetation.
The agency, which is owned by India’s Tata Motors, says it took quick motion to minimize the impact of the hack and is working shortly to restart operations.
JLR’s retail enterprise has additionally been badly hit however there is no such thing as a proof any buyer information had been stolen, it mentioned.
The assault started on Sunday and comes at a major time for UK automotive gross sales, as the most recent batch of latest registration plates turned out there on Monday 1 September.
It is historically a preferred time for customers to take supply of a brand new automobile.
The BBC understands that the assault was detected whereas in progress, and the corporate shut down its IT methods in an effort to minimise the harm being finished.
Staff on the firm’s Halewood plant in Merseyside had been advised by electronic mail early on Monday morning to not come into work, with others despatched house – as first reported by the Liverpool Echo.
The BBC understands the assault has additionally hit the agency’s different principal UK manufacturing plant at Solihull, with employees there additionally despatched house.
It isn’t but recognized who’s liable for the assault, nevertheless it comes within the wake of crippling assaults on distinguished UK retail companies together with the Co-op and Marks and Spencer.
In each circumstances the hackers sought to extort cash.
In 2023, as a part of an effort to “speed up digital transformation throughout its enterprise”, JLR signed a 5 12 months, £800 million ($1070 million) take care of company stablemate Tata Consultancy Companies to supply cybersecurity and a variety of different IT providers.
In an announcement the automotive maker wrote: “JLR has been impacted by a cyber incident. We took quick motion to mitigate its impression by proactively shutting down our methods.
“We are actually working at tempo to restart our international functions in a managed method.
“At this stage there is no such thing as a proof any buyer information has been stolen however our retail and manufacturing actions have been severely disrupted”
Whereas JLR’s assertion makes no point out of a cyber-attack, a separate submitting by mother or father firm Tata Motors to the Bombay Inventory Change referred to an “IT safety incidence” inflicting “international” points.
The halt in manufacturing is a recent blow to the agency which just lately revealed a stoop in earnings attributed to growing in prices brought on by US tariffs.

