Mackay Sugar Cyber Incident Highlights a New Risk for Farm Businesses
Digital disruption is now a practical insurance issue for growers, processors and rural supply chains
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A reported ransomware incident affecting Mackay Sugar has put agricultural cyber risk back in the spotlight, this time with a clear lesson for producers who depend on processors, contractors and shared infrastructure.
ABC Rural reported on 18 June 2026 that a Russian-speaking ransomware operation known as The Gentlemen had claimed responsibility for a cyber attack that disrupted two Mackay Sugar mills, with the company working to verify the claim and restart Farleigh and Racecourse mills in stages.
The report noted that many of the 1,300 farms supplying Mackay Sugar had paused harvesting while operations were affected.
For farm owners, the concern is not only whether their own office computer, payroll system or cloud records are secure. The bigger issue is interdependence. A grower may have functioning machinery, available staff and a crop ready to go, yet still suffer financial pressure if a mill, packing shed, depot, saleyard platform, freight provider or water management system is offline. In the Mackay case, the disruption came during the crushing season, meaning delays could affect timing, logistics and the value of cane delivered later in the season.
This story is an extension of the broader cybersecurity warnings already emerging across Australian agriculture. It shows why farm insurance conversations need to move beyond fire, flood, theft and machinery damage. Cyber cover, business interruption extensions and contingent business interruption protection can all be relevant, but they are not automatic inclusions in many farm insurance policies. Some policies may respond only when the insured business's own systems are directly compromised, while others may have exclusions, waiting periods, sub-limits or strict security conditions.
Australian Government cyber guidance reinforces that resilience starts before a claim. The Australian Cyber Security Centre advises businesses to protect against ransomware with measures such as unaffected backups, multi-factor authentication and securing internet-exposed services. For smaller rural operators, business.gov.au also points to free tailored cyber resilience support for eligible small businesses with 19 or fewer full-time equivalent employees.
Practical next steps for growers include mapping the digital systems and third parties they rely on, confirming whether cyber-related income loss is covered, checking claims notification requirements, and asking their broker how policy wording treats supplier or processor outages. Farmers should also document downtime, lost production opportunities, additional transport costs and communications with affected supply-chain partners. As agriculture becomes more connected, a farm insurance review should treat cyber disruption as an operational risk, not an IT problem. If your policy has not been reviewed with this in mind, now is a sensible time to request a free farm insurance quote and compare options.
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