Volkswagen restarts production after suffering major IT outage


FILE PHOTO: A Volkswagen logo is seen during the press day at the Los Angeles Auto Show in Los Angeles, California, U.S. November 17, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo

FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Volkswagen said on Thursday that a major IT outage, which had caused most of its German plants to halt production, was resolved overnight and its global production network was up and running again.

The incident, which VW said began at 1030 GMT on Wednesday and was disclosed late that evening, impacted the entire Volkswagen group, which includes the Porsche AG brand and Audi, highlighting the vulnerability of network infrastructure at Europe's largest carmaker.

"The IT infrastructure problems in the Volkswagen network were resolved during the course of the night and the network is stable again," Volkswagen said, without providing details on the impact or cause of the incident.

The company said it was unlikely that an external attack was the cause of the incident and declined to comment on the size and scope of the incident, affected production or potential financial implications.

Shares in the carmaker fell 1.2%.

"The affected applications are currently being restarted. The global production network is up and running, and production is expected to proceed as planned," it said, adding individual systems may still be affected during a transitional phase.

The incident comes a month after a production system malfunction brought domestic output at Japan's Toyota, the world's biggest-selling automaker, to a halt.

The outage affected Volkswagen's German sites in Wolfsburg, Emden, Osnabrueck, Hanover, Dresden and Zwickau, as well as component factories in Braunschweig, Kassel, Chemnitz and Salzgitter.

"There are still no indications that the disruption was caused by external influences," Volkswagen said.

The event puts a spotlight on the safety of infrastructure at Germany's top corporations and drew comments from Transport Minister Volker Wissing, who called for better protection.

"We need safety systems here that work," Wissing told broadcaster RTL/n-tv. "It must be clear to everyone that digital infrastructure is critical infrastructure."

(Reporting by Christoph Steitz, Writing by Miranda Murray; Editing by Kim Coghill, Elaine Hardcastle and Susan Fenton)

Subscribe now to our Premium Plan for an ad-free and unlimited reading experience!

   

Next In Tech News

Musk says conspiracy theorist Alex Jones will be reinstated on X after poll
WhatsApp now lets you hide locked chats to stop looking suspicious
Google upgrades Bard with 'most capable' AI model to date
PKT Logistics becomes first Malaysian company to join The Climate Pledge
'Grand Theft Auto': Controversy surrounds the popular gaming series
Review: Like a Dragon Gaiden: The Man Who Erased His Name is a fun game that falls short of series standards
Factbox-What are Europe's landmark AI regulations?
EU clinches deal on landmark AI Act - reaction
Working after-hours might not be as productive as you think
Meta tests new AI features across apps in bid to boost appeal

Others Also Read