ICS/OT

US Says National Water Supply ‘Absolutely’ Vulnerable to Hackers

Water Facility

<p><span><span><img src="/sites/default/files/features/Water-Supply-Hack_675.jpg" alt="Water Facility" title=" US drinking water systems are vulnerable to large-scale disruption by cyberattacks" width="675" height="389" style="text-align: center;" /></span></span></p>

Cyber defenses for US drinking water supplies are “absolutely inadequate” and vulnerable to large-scale disruption by hackers, a senior official said Thursday.

“There’s inadequate resilience to even a criminal sector,” the official said. “The threshold of resilience is not what it needs to be.”

President Joe Biden has attempted to address infrastructure cybersecurity but is limited by the fact that the vast majority of services are provided by private, not government, companies.

The scale of the challenge became clear in May last year when a ransomware attack temporarily crippled the Colonial Pipeline, a major oil pipeline network. A similar attack was carried out on JBS, one of the world’s biggest meat-processing companies.

[ READ: Remote Hacker Caught Poisoning Florida City Water Supply ]

US officials, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity, unrolled a plan to get water companies to cooperate with the government in a concerted effort to close up security gaps. The government is asking companies to share information of attacks and to cooperate in hardening defenses.

“The bottom line is that really after decades of us kicking the can down the road… the administration really takes steps to reverse this trend,” one official said.

However, the program, similar to initiatives already in place for the electric and natural gas sectors, is voluntary.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

There’s also a hurdle in the sheer number of different water providers — about 150,000 systems serving 300 million Americans, the official said.

[ READ: Ransomware Hit SCADA Systems at 3 Water Facilities in U.S. ]

These systems are increasingly automated, with computers managing treatment, storage and distribution. “These processes — I want to underscore this point — could all be vulnerable to cyberattacks, which could disable or manipulate monitoring control systems,” the official said.

“We’re particularly concerned that a cyberattack could be carried out, for example, to manipulate treatment processes to produce unsafe water. Also to damage water infrastructure or even to stop the flow of water,” the official said.

Related: Industry Reactions to U.S. Water Plant Hack: Feedback Friday

Related: Hack Exposes Vulnerability of Cash-Strapped US Water Plants

Related Content

ICS/OT

UK’s NCSC releases security guidance for OT organizations considering migrating their SCADA solutions to the cloud.

ICS/OT

In an age of increasing geopolitical tensions caused by actual wars, and the threat of Chinese action against Taiwan, OT is a target that...

ICS/OT

SecurityWeek interviews Del Rodillas, Senior Director of Product Management at Palo Alto Networks, about the integration of IT and OT in the ICS threat landscape.

ICS/OT

Seven vulnerabilities found in Rapid SCADA could be exploited to gain access to sensitive industrial systems, but they remain unpatched.

ICS/OT

The Municipal Water Authority of Aliquippa was just one of multiple organizations breached in the U.S. by Iran-linked "Cyber Av3ngers" hackers

ICS/OT

Members of Congress asked the U.S. Justice Department to investigate how foreign hackers breached a water authority near Pittsburgh, prompting CISA to warn other...

ICS/OT

SecurityWeek’s 2023 ICS Cybersecurity Conference continues in Atlanta, as hundreds of industrial cybersecurity stakeholders gather for Day 2 of the annual industrial cybersecurity conference.

ICS/OT

Join SecurityWeek and TXOne Networks for this webinar as we expose common misconceptions surrounding the security of Operational Technology (OT) and dive into the...

Copyright © 2024 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version