Grid hackers are hard at work trying to takedown the US electric system. The US government and private security firms report both foreign and domestic attempts are growing in frequency
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- One utility reported as many as 10,000 attempted attacks monthly and others said they fend off attacks daily or constantly, in a Congressional report released last year. http://democrats.energycommerce.house.gov/index.php?q=news/markey-waxman-report-highlights-gaps-in-grid-security
- Homeland Security warned that a public utility “was recently compromised when a sophisticated threat actor gained unauthorized access to its control system network,” in a May report.
- Hackers are actually discussing at conferences how to infiltrate the electric grid, according to Tom Kellermann, chief cybersecurity officer at Trend Micro, who was recently interviewed by Lisa Cohn.
- Attacks on energy infrastructure represented 40 percent of the cyber incidences handled last year by Homeland Security
Perhaps most worrisome, a federal report leaked by the Wall Street Journal in March warned that bringing down just nine of the 55,000 substations in the US in a well-timed attack could shut down power to much of the nation for an extended period.
Microgrids are often cited as a protective device should the grid be hacked on a mass scale. They can island from the main grid and in essence block themselves from being infected from whatever is causing the outage. Meanwhile, the microgrid continues to provide power within its borders.
Microgrids also can offer a kind of protection in numbers. They are distributed throughout the grid, so can’t be targeted by hackers in one swoop, as large swaths of the central grid can.
So far we have thwarted major cyber-attacks on US energy infrastructure. So we’ve yet to see microgrids in action during an attack. However, we have seen microgrids successfully island keep the lights on during other kinds of calamities. The performance of Princeton University’s microgrid during SuperStorm Sandy is often cited as an example.
At the same time, some are warning that distributed energy creates its own vulnerabilities. Smart meters and enewable energy systems are described as a myriad of relatively unprotected entry points where hackers make inroads.
Is the same true for microgrids? Do they offer a point of vulnerability or a point of protection to the larger grid when it comes to cybersecurity? What microgrid security systems, processes or controls can help?
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