ARTICLE
2 August 2016

Cybersecurity Risks In The Supply Chain Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Adopts Rules To Promote Reliability Of Electric Power Industry

SK
Stoll Keenon Ogden PLLC

Contributor

In boardrooms and courtrooms, Stoll Keenon Ogden PLLC provides strategic legal counsel to clients in the Midwestern United States, across the country and around the world. Our attorneys are recognized among the best in their fields by Martindale-Hubbell, Best Lawyers in America and Benchmark Litigation. We build client relationships for the long haul, because succeeding at business is a marathon, not a sprint.
After identifying supply chain risks to the electric utility industry (including the insertion of counterfeits, unauthorized production, tampering, theft, or insertion of malicious software, as well as poor manufacturing and development practices) on July 21 the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) directed the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) to develop a new or modified Reliability Standard that addresses risks to industrial control systems associated with bulk ele
United States Energy and Natural Resources
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After identifying supply chain risks to the electric utility industry (including the insertion of counterfeits, unauthorized production, tampering, theft, or insertion of malicious software, as well as poor manufacturing and development practices) on July 21 the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) directed the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) to develop a new or modified Reliability Standard that addresses risks to industrial control systems associated with bulk electric system operations.

The plan required by the new or modified Reliability Standard developed by NERC should address four specific security objectives in the context of addressing supply chain management risks:

  • Software integrity and authenticity
  • Vendor remote access
  • Information system planning
  • Vendor risk management and procurement controls 

The agency pointed to changes in the bulk electric system cyber threat landscape, evidenced by recent malware campaigns targeting supply chain vendors, which highlighted a gap in the protections under the current reliability standards. Examples cited by regulators include unauthorized code found in Juniper firewalls in 2015, as well as two events targeting electric utility vendors.

The new rule is effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register and NERC is to submit the new standard within one year.

A copy of the FERC order is available here.

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ARTICLE
2 August 2016

Cybersecurity Risks In The Supply Chain Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Adopts Rules To Promote Reliability Of Electric Power Industry

United States Energy and Natural Resources

Contributor

In boardrooms and courtrooms, Stoll Keenon Ogden PLLC provides strategic legal counsel to clients in the Midwestern United States, across the country and around the world. Our attorneys are recognized among the best in their fields by Martindale-Hubbell, Best Lawyers in America and Benchmark Litigation. We build client relationships for the long haul, because succeeding at business is a marathon, not a sprint.
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