Feds gear up to lock down electric grid supply chain
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The Department of Energy is gearing up to lock down the nation’s electric grid by prequalifying vendors of bulk power equipment.
The Department of Energy is gearing up to lock down the nation’s electric grid by prequalifying vendors of bulk power equipment.
On May 1, President Donald Trump issued an executive order that would prohibit buying or installing bulk-power system electric equipment that comes from certain "foreign adversary" countries because it could pose significant risks, including the threat of cyberattacks. There is also longstanding concern that industrial control systems can provide an entry point to critical infrastructure systems for threat actors, nation-state and otherwise.
The administration has also moved to block U.S. domestic use of Chinese-made equipment in the U.S. telecommunications critical infrastructure for similar reasons.
The executive order puts a process in place to pre-qualify manufacturers of bulk power gear for future use in U.S. energy critical infrastructure. The Energy Department, consulting with other agencies "as appropriate" was charged with setting up and publishing criteria and lists of acceptable equipment and vendors.
"A lot of that prequalification and testing work that you see in the Executive Order is going to be focused within our office, within CESER [Cybersecurity, Energy Security, and Emergency Response]" to provide it to others to support the overall energy infrastructure cybersecurity effort, Nicholas Andersen, deputy assistant secretary for Infrastructure Security and Energy Restoration, said during a June 24 webcast hosted by Venable, LLP.
The order has caused much anxiety in the bulk power sector. Although power providers, "are afraid of 'rip and replace'" in regards to their current equipment, "there is no 'rip and replace,' authority within the executive order," he said. "It's not anticipated to be part of the plan. It's really future-facing, not necessarily focused exclusively what's in place now."
This article was first posted on FCW, a sibling site to GCN.
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