By October 15, 2015 Read More →

Cyber security of energy infrastructure: Energy Dept. invests $34 million in R&D

Energy department investment in cyber security projects with Univ. of Arkansas, Univ. of Illinois

cyber security

Source: West Florida University

Cyber security is increasingly a concern for American businesses, including the nation’s electric grid and oil and natural gas infrastructure. The US Energy Department will spend more than $34 million on two projects intended to help protect that infrastructure from cyber security threats.

The University of Arkansas and the University of Illinois will assemble teams with expertise in power systems engineering and the computer science of cybersecurity to develop new technologies that will help protect energy delivery systems which control the physical processes that result in the delivery of continuous and reliable power, the Department announced in a press release.

Under the Academic Collaboration for Cybersecurity of Energy Delivery Systems Research and Development for the Energy Sector Funding Opportunity Announcement, the Universities of Arkansas and Illinois and their partners will engage with utilities and suppliers of energy delivery systems and components from early research through the eventual transition for use by the energy sector.

cyber security

Lessons learned from these cyber security R&D efforts will be shared through academic outreach to ensure that the technical knowledge also transitions to the energy sector. This investment underscores the vital role that strong cybersecurity technologies and practices play in creating a modern power grid that is reliable, resilient, and secure, as discussed in the Energy Department’s Quadrennial Technology Review released last month.

“Cyber security is one of the most serious challenges facing grid modernization, which is why maintaining a robust, ever-growing pipeline of cutting-edge technologies is essential to helping the energy sector continue adapting to the evolving landscape,” said Patricia Hoffman, Assistant Secretary for DOE’s Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability.

“To meet this challenge, we must continue investing in innovative, next-generation technologies that can be transitioned to the energy sector to reduce the risk of a power disruption resulting from a cyber incident.”

Project descriptions:

University of Arkansas – $12.2 million DOE investment with $3.06 million recipient cost-share: The University of Arkansas consortium will conduct research, develop tools, and evaluate their effectiveness through testing at the University of Arkansas’s National Center for Reliable Electric Power Transmission and partners’ test facilities. Additional testing will be conducted by Arkansas Electric Cooperatives Corp. The technologies will then be transitioned to industry for commercialization and deployment.

University of Illinois Cyber Resilient Energy Delivery Consortium (CREDC) – $22.5 million DOE investment with $5.6 million recipient cost-share: The CREDC consortium will undertake research, development, education, and outreach activities, with intense industry engagement, to develop solutions.

The CREDC model creates a pipeline that generates research results and takes them through to evaluation and deployment of prototypes in industrial settings, with a handoff to the energy sector through licensing, startups, and open-source mechanisms.

Since 2010, the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability has invested more than $150 million in cyber security research, development and demonstration projects that are led by industry, universities and national labs.

More than 20 new technologies that the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability’s investments helped support are now being used to further advance the resilience of the nation’s energy delivery systems.

Posted in: News

Comments are closed.