Interos, the AI supply chain risk intelligence company, today released a comprehensive analysis of the CrowdStrike outage on enterprise customers, revealing the incident's far-reaching consequences on international trade and business operational ecosystems.
The data shows the impact extends far beyond CrowdStrike's and Microsoft's immediate enterprise customers, potentially affecting millions of additional organizations who rely on Microsoft's O365 software. The outage involved a CrowdStrike update which the company subsequently resolved.
Key Findings:
The outage impacted 674,620 direct (tier-1) enterprise customers of either Microsoft or CrowdStrike.
41% of affected entities were in the U.S., with significant impact across Europe.
When analyzing extended supply chain relationships (tier-3), this figure expands to over 49 million additional customer relationships at risk for potential operational disruptions.
Major closures and delays occurred at ports and air freight hubs worldwide, including temporary shutdowns at ports from New York to Rotterdam.
Air freight was severely affected, with thousands of flights grounded or delayed at major hubs in Europe, Asia, and North America.
The outage exacerbates existing supply chain challenges amid rising global demand and freight costs.
The analysis highlights the vulnerability of interconnected global supply chains and the potential long-term economic implications. Analysts are concerned it may be weeks before airlines and freight companies are fully back in service.
This incident is a stark reminder of the fragility of our interconnected global economy.
"Our analysis demonstrates the critical need for anticipation and speed in supply chain risk management. Considering the scale of this incident, organizations must be extra vigilant as bad actors may have taken the opportunity to access secure systems over the last 24 hours, meaning this single incident may evolve into a new series of vulnerabilities weeks or months from now." - Ted Krantz (Interos CEO)
The report also details the extensive industry ripple effect beyond technology and airlines – with multiple manufacturing sectors, including electronics and semiconductor production, and professional services, experiencing disruptions. Additionally, the widespread use of the affected software by U.S. state and local governments raises concerns about potential impacts on public services and cybersecurity.
Interos' data shows ongoing supply chain disruptions cost enterprises $100 million in annual losses on average. The company's critical risk intelligence platform helps companies mitigate the financial impacts of multi-tier risks by continuously mapping and monitoring extended supply chains at speed and scale.
Source: PR Newswire
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