Ransomware Attack Halts Fairlife Production: Coca-Cola Faces Cybersecurity Crisis in Dairy Operations
Coca-Cola has temporarily suspended all production operations at its Fairlife dairy subsidiary in the United States following a ransomware attack, according to a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The cyber incident specifically targeted the company’s production systems, though Canadian operations remain unaffected. Fairlife, known for its ultra-filtered milk products with enhanced protein content and reduced sugar/lactose, represents a key revenue driver for Coca-Cola, with estimated annual sales of $4 billion by 2024. The company’s disclosure echoes past disruptions in the food and beverage sector, including Arizona Beverages (2019) and UNFI (2023), where similar attacks led to weeks-long production halts and empty supermarket shelves. Coca-Cola has not provided a timeline for system restoration.
Cyberattacks on critical infrastructure are no longer isolated tech sector concerns—they now directly influence supply chain dynamics and consumer markets. For aviation logistics, this incident could translate into reduced air freight volumes for dairy products and potential customs bottlenecks as companies seek alternative distribution channels. The urgency for robust digital security investments in manufacturing and logistics sectors cannot be overstated.