U.S. oilfield services firm Halliburton HAL-N said on Tuesday an unauthorized third party had accessed and removed data from its systems, providing details regarding the cyberattack in August first reported by Reuters.
The company said it is evaluating the nature and scope of information that was removed, but added that the incident is not reasonably likely to have a material impact.
Halliburton declined to comment in response to Reuters’ requests for additional information on the nature of data removed and expenses incurred due to the cyber incident.
It also did not immediately confirm whether it had been contacted by the hackers.
U.S energy firms have suffered multiple cyberattacks, including ransomware attacks, in recent years. In 2021, Colonial Pipeline was forced to pay $4.4-million in ransom as its executives were not sure about the severity of the breach.
Halliburton’s shares were down 1.1 per cent premarket.
The incident had caused disruptions and limited access to portions of its business applications, the Houston-based company said.
The company activated its cybersecurity response plan and launched an investigation internally with the support of external advisors to assess and remediate the unauthorized activity once it became aware of the issue, it said.