Accenture has agreed to acquire a majority stake in industrial cyber security specialist Dragos and purchase runZero and NetRise outright in a deal valued at approximately US$4.175 billion, marking one of the largest moves in the operational technology security market.
The acquisitions are designed to expand Accenture’s cyber security business beyond services and into software, creating an end-to-end platform for securing critical infrastructure and industrial environments, including data centres.
Under the agreement, Dragos will combine its OT threat detection platform with runZero’s attack surface management capabilities and NetRise’s software supply chain and firmware visibility technology. The companies will operate under the Dragos brand, which will continue to function independently under co-founder and CEO Robert M Lee.
Accenture said the deal comes as industrial environments become increasingly interconnected and AI accelerates both defensive and offensive cyber capabilities. The company believes AI-driven threat activity is compressing the time between an IT breach and attacks targeting operational systems, creating new risks for critical infrastructure operators.
“In an age when AI-driven cyber threats and geopolitical risk are evolving at a rapid pace, our cyber security practice is growing by double digits and has a strong track record of leveraging inorganic opportunity to fuel organic growth,” Julie Sweet, chair and CEO of Accenture, said in a 19 June statement.
“Our clients across industries and regions are asking us how to be more proactive and integrated in their approach to cyber security. The addition of Dragos, complemented by runZero and NetRise, fills this important need.”
Lee added that organisations are increasingly requiring integrated platforms rather than stand-alone security products.
“Our energy and water systems, manufacturing plants, data centres and other operational environments need cyber security built from the ground up for xOT and designed to keep pace as threats evolve,” Lee said.
“The consequences of getting it wrong become societal threats.”
Accenture’s cyber security business grew from US$700 million in revenue in 2016 to US$10 billion in fiscal year 2025. Accenture estimates the broader OT cyber security market will grow from US$27 billion in 2026 to almost US$59 billion by 2031.
The transactions are expected to close in August or September 2026, subject to regulatory approval and customary closing conditions.
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David Hollingworth
David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.