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CIPC Executive Comittee Update

CIPC Confidentiality - Public. CIPC Executive Comittee Update. CIPC Conference Call September 16, 2004 Stuart Brindley CIPC Chair. CIPC Executive Committee Activities. Support to NERC Board 2005 Business Plan Strategic retreat CIPC Roles Work flow - developing security guidelines

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CIPC Executive Comittee Update

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  1. CIPC Confidentiality - Public CIPC Executive Comittee Update CIPC Conference Call September 16, 2004 Stuart Brindley CIPC Chair

  2. CIPC Executive Committee Activities • Support to NERC Board • 2005 Business Plan • Strategic retreat • CIPC Roles • Work flow - developing security guidelines • Monitor progress and resources of WG/TFs • Seiki Harada replaces John Maguire on Standards & Guidelines WG • Relationship with governments • Opportunities...

  3. NERC 2005 Business Plan • Recognizes need to increase scope and intensity of CIPC efforts • Identified CIPC strategic objectives and major work items • Includes additional NERC staff person dedicated to CIPC • Request approval at October NERC Board meeting

  4. CIPC Strategic Objectives - 2005 • Further develop ISAC capability • Improve coordination and relationships with governments • Develop National Infrastructure Protection Plan • Develop methods to deter, mitigate and respond to attack • Enhance SCADA and process control security • Address cyber & physical security Blackout recommendations

  5. NERC Board Strategic Retreat • From NERC Readiness Audits, develop a plan for identifying and communicating: • Best practices • Commonly identified areas for improvement • Update NERC’s response plan in the event of a significant system disturbance or emergency event • Coordinate NERC and FERC operator training studies • Increase the intensity and commitment of stakeholder contributions to Committees • Clarify the role of the Regions • More proactive with governments - regulatory, security

  6. Electricity Sector - Critical Infrastructure Protection Risk Assessments Threats Early Warning Operational Response CIP Committee * Executive Committee ESISAC Subcommittee Security Planning Subcommittee Working Groups & Task Forces Electricity Industry Associations: • North American Electric Reliability Council • Edison Electric Institute • American Public Power Assoc. • National Rural Electric Co-op Assoc. • Canadian Electricity Association Executive Committee: • Identify strategic objectives and priorities • Respond to requests from NERC leadership, governments and industry associations • Identify needs to Working Groups/Task Forces • Seek active contribution of CIPC members. • Schedule and lead CIPC meetings • Support NERC President as Sector Coordinator Subcommittee Working Groups & Task Forces: • Define scope, deliverables, milestones and resource requirements • Provide periodic status of milestones, deliverables to Executive Committee • Conduct Working Group/Task Force meetings. • Assign tasks to Committee members NERC Staff: • Arrange meeting facilities such as physical space or conference calls • Provide administrative support • Act as primary contact with governments, decide responses with Executive Committee • Operate the ESISAC CIPC Relationships & Roles 14 ISACs Sector Coordinators & ISAC Council Federal, Provincial and State Governments US: Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Department of Energy (DOE) Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Canada: Public Safety & Emergency Preparedness Canada (PSEPC) Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) NERC Leadership Technical Steering Ctee Other NERC Standing Ctees OC, PC, MC, etc ELECTRICITY SECTOR ENTITIES Utilities, Transmitters, Generators, Distributors, Independent System/Market Operators OPERATIONS PHYSICAL AND CYBER SECURITY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE PROTECTION ELECTRIC POWER INFORMATION PHYSICAL PUBLIC HEALTH & SYSTEM TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE SAFETY OPERATION CIP Committee Roles *

  7. CIPC Work Flow - Security Guidelines CIPC Members Executive Committee Working Group/Task Force Standards & Guidelines WG NERC Staff Identify need Prioritize & assign to Working Group/Task Force Within days Prepare scope and identify resources 1 week Within days Approve scope & resources Review scope As versions developed Facilitate meetings & conference calls Prepare “content draft” Review “content draft” Scope-dependent Coordinate review of other NERC Committees as appropriate Submit “content draft” for CIPC approval Scope-dependent CIPC approval of “content draft” Forward “content draft” to Standards & Guidelines WG for: • consistency with existing Standards & Guidelines • final format 1 week 1 week Prepare “final draft” CIPC review and approval to forward to NERC Board 2 weeks 2 weeks Post “final document” for public review Prepare “final document”

  8. Relationships with Governments • Canada-US Outage TF report - prioritize actions • DHS interface with NERC as Sector Coordinator, ESISAC, ISAC Council • NERC President, CIPC Chair are Sector Coordinators • Aug 31/04 meeting with senior DHS officials (NERC, EEI, AGA) • Response to large-scale emergencies (eg. Blackout, hurricanes) • Multi-national CIP initiative - assess opportunity • industry and governments • Australia, New Zealand, US, Canada

  9. Canada-US Outage TF Report • High visibility by governments - life of Task Force extended by 1 year • 16 of 46 recommendations related to CIP • many require coordination with other NERC Committees (esp. Operating and Planning) • Actions underway within CIPC • many during 2004 • some through 2005… and beyond

  10. Sector Coordinators/ISAC Council Mission: To advance the physical and cyber security of the critical infrastructures of North America by establishing and maintaining a framework for valuable interaction between and among the ISACs and with government

  11. Sector Coordinator/ISAC Council Initiatives • Single forum for DHS to interface with all 14 critical infrastructure sectors • who’s who ? • Include Sector-Specific Agencies (eg. DoE) • Matrix project - sharing structure, scope of each ISAC • Interdependency Task Force - proposed 3 tabletop exercises to DHS • Media/Outreach - key public messages communicating what is being done • Physical/Cyber - integrating these functions • Emergency Notification System (ENS) and conference bridge in place

  12. Government Coordinating Council DHS Sector-Specific Agencies (eg.DoE) Sector Coordinating Council PCIS/Sector Coordinators ISACs Opportunities... • Improved coordination with government • 2-way information sharing, risk assessment • Industry outreach to the public regarding CIP threats and incidents… as we did during the Blackout

  13. Opportunities... • Growing the ESISAC • During response mode, can’t just be NERC staff • Leverage CIPC participants: • Subject matter expertise • Getting the right resources, right away • Coordinate with Operations • Timely and effective support of government

  14. Building the DHS Relationship August 31, 2004 Meeting Nebraska Ave. Washington DC

  15. Participants DHS: • Bob Liscouski, Al Martinez-Fonts, Jim Caverley, Bill Flynn, Taralyn Riordon Electricity, Gas Sectors: • Stuart Brindley, Bob Canada, Pat Laird, Lyman Shaffer

  16. Meeting Objectives • Recognize successful initiatives with DHS • Demonstrate the commitment of asset owner/operators, and support of industry associations • NERC, EEI, AGA, others • Sector Coordinators, ESISAC, ISAC Council • Improve 2-way communication between industry and DHS

  17. Recognizing Successes • NERC ESISAC project with Homeland Security Information Network (HSIN) • ES contribution to NIPP (energy annex) • Canada-US interdependency exercise • NERC Security Standards, Guidelines and Workshops • Cyber intrusion detection system pilot • Security clearances with some industry players • Regional gas reliability studies • ESISAC support during emergencies (eg. hurricanes)

  18. DHS and Industry Roles • Industry sees too many CIP contacts with government agencies • Not all Sector Coordinators or ISACs reach across their entire sector • NERC is Sector Coordinator and operates ESISAC • CIPC reaches broadly across electric sector • DHS to formally recognize NERC through provisions of Federal Advisory Committee Act

  19. Opportunities for Improvement • Threat assessment and info-sharing • industry decision-makers with security clearances • Early consultation to facilitate DHS initiatives • Support DHS’ National Infrastructure Coordinating Centre (NICC) • Situation-dependent • Protection of Critical Infrastructure Information (PCII) • Some time until appropriate protection is in place • DHS establishing liaison in 68 Secret Service field offices

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