Biden administration announces plan to stop water plant hacks
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[March 04, 2023]
By Suzanne Smalley
(Reuters) - The Biden administration announced on Friday a new plan to
improve the digital defenses of public water systems.
The move comes one day after the announcement of a national
cybersecurity strategy by the White House, which seeks to broadly
improve industry accountability over the cybersecurity of American
critical infrastructure, such as hospitals and dams.
The water system plan, which recommends a series of novel rules placing
more responsibility for securing water facilities at the state-level,
follows several high-profile hacking incidents in recent years.
In February 2021, a cyberattack on a water treatment plant in Florida
briefly increased lye levels in the water, an incident that could have
been deadly if an alert worker had not detected the hack quickly. And in
March 2019, a terminated employee at a Kansas-based water facility used
his old computer credentials to remotely take systems offline, according
to an administration official.
The government is acting now because of the urgency of the threat,
according to a senior U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
official.
Radhika Fox, the assistant administrator in the EPA's Office of Water,
said hackers had "shut down critical treatment processes" and "locked
control system networks behind ransomware," underscoring the current
danger.
However, some experts say the new plan will not do enough to help make
systems more secure.
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A computer keyboard lit by a displayed
cyber code is seen in this illustration picture taken on March 1,
2017. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration/File Photo
The water sector has long been seen as vulnerable to cyberattack,
according to Mark Montgomery, the former executive director of the
Cyberspace Solarium Commission, a U.S. government-backed
policymaking group.
But Montgomery said the administration's approach - attaching
cybersecurity audits to existing sanitary surveys - is inadequate.
"The EPA is not in a position to perform its responsibilities due to
insufficient personnel and resources, but the states are in no
better position," Montgomery said.
"Rather than pass the buck, EPA should work with water utilities and
establish a joint government/industry organization to establish
standards, provide assessment tools and audit the results."
EPA officials say they have a "robust technical assistance program"
in place to support public water systems that need cyber support.
The water treatment industry was also critical of the
administration's announcement on Friday.
Tracy Mehan, executive director of government affairs at the
American Water Works Association, said the plan has "all sorts of
practical problems, which unfortunately, the government seems to be
ignoring."
(Reporting by Suzanne Smalley; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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