Company executives are worried about security breaches, but recent
surveys suggest they are not convinced about the value or
effectiveness of cyber insurance.
The report from the University of Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies
and the Lloyd's of London insurance market outlines a scenario of an
electricity blackout that leaves 93 million people in New York City
and Washington DC without power.
The scenario, developed by Cambridge, is technologically possible
and is assessed to be within the once-in-200-year probability for
which insurers should be prepared, the report said.
The hypothetical attack causes a rise in mortality rates as health
and safety systems fail, a drop in trade as ports shut down and
disruption to transport and infrastructure.
"The total impact to the U.S. economy is estimated at $243 billion,
rising to more than $1 trillion in the most extreme version of the
scenario," the report said. The losses come from damage to
infrastructure and business supply chains, and are estimated over a
five-year time period.
The extreme scenario is built on the greatest loss of power, with
100 generators taken offline, and would lead to insurance industry
losses of more than $70 billion, the report added.
There have been 15 suspected cyber attacks on the U.S. electricity
grid since 2000, the report said, citing U.S. energy department
data.
[to top of second column] |
The U.S. Industrial Control System Cyber Emergency Response Team
said that 32 percent of its responses last year to cyber security
threats to critical infrastructure occurred in the energy sector.
"The evidence of major attacks during 2014 suggests that attackers
were often able to exploit vulnerabilities faster than
defenders could remedy them," Tom Bolt, director of performance
management at Lloyd's, said in the report.
Lloyd's syndicates offer cyber insurance but only 160 million pounds
($246.82 million) in cyber insurance premiums are written through
London, which amounts to more than 10 percent of the global market.
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|