The Brazilian Critical Infrastructure Threat Landscape and Implications for Healthcare Organizations

Monthly Geopolitical Deep Dive: May 2025
This report, published once a month, is an in-depth analysis of a geopolitical trend whose cascading consequences adversely impact the healthcare sector. This report is a joint endeavor between RANE and Health-ISAC. The guidance and insight within are designed to help members navigate particularly complex geopolitical developments with healthcare-specific analysis and mitigation strategies.
The topic covered in this report is: The Brazilian Critical Infrastructure Threat Landscape and Implications for Healthcare Organizations
Key Judgements
- Fragmented care between rural and urban clinical environments has led to heightened risks of violence toward health sector employees. Brazilian centralized healthcare access requires large data stores, which threat actors have often targeted.
- Nation-state actors and financially-motivated criminals pose espionage, data breach and extortion risks: Brazilian critical infrastructure organizations face a broad array of cyber threats, including sophisticated foreign state-sponsored threats, as well as growing nonstate cybercriminal (and hacktivist) campaigns, which elevate a range of monetary and operational risks, including for healthcare entities.
- Petty criminals and organized criminal groups occasionally threaten critical services: Copper cable thefts are pervasive and sporadically result in blackouts or disruption to traffic light systems, while organized criminal groups damage or prevent maintenance of water stations and telecommunication antennas in low-income areas they control, posing operational risks to healthcare service providers in these regions.
- Protest activity and labor action will likely pick up ahead of 2026 elections: Brazil’s polarized political and social environments will fuel recurring protests and strikes over the coming 18 months, opening the door to sporadic violent and/or disruptive incidents.
- Terrorism risks will remain low, although isolated plots will persist: While Brazil has not recorded terrorist incidents in recent decades, police have thwarted multiple plots in recent years, highlighting underlying risks of religiously – or politically-motivated attacks.
- Increasingly frequent extreme weather events threaten to disrupt transportation and utilities: Intense droughts have become more frequent and will threaten hydroelectric power generation and water transportation, while heavy rains will result in flash floods and landslides, causing significant damage to urban and road infrastructure.
Brazil Threat Landscape Flattened
Size : 8.7 MB Format : PDF
Link to the Behavioral Incident Response Strategies in Clinical Settings white paper mentioned in the Report. Click Here
Para quem prefere ler este relatório em português.
Portuguese Brazil Threat Landscape
Size : 3.5 MB Format : PDF
- Related Resources & News