BAE Systems Develops Technology to Speed Electric Power Restoration After Cyber Attacks
The
U.S.
Defense
Advanced
Research
Projects
Agency
(DARPA)
has
awarded
BAE
Systems
an $8.6
million
contract
to
develop
technology
designed
to
quickly
restore
power to
the U.S.
electric
grid
after a
catastrophic
failure
caused
by a
cyber
attack.
As
part of
DARPA’s
Rapid
Attack
Detection,
Isolation,
and
Characterization
Systems
program,
BAE
Systems’
technology
quickly
isolates
both
enterprise
IT and
power
infrastructure
networks
from all
conduits
of
malicious
attack.
The
technology
also
establishes
a Secure
Emergency
Network
(SEN)
among
trusted
organizations,
enabling
the
coordination
necessary
to
restore
power to
the
complex
electric
grid.
“Getting
the
power
back on
quickly
after a
cyber
attack
is
critical
to
national
defense,”
said
Victor
Firoiu,
senior
principal
engineer
and
manager
of
Communications
and
Networking
at BAE
Systems.
“Given
the
scale
and
complexity
of the
U.S.
power
grid,
and the
chaos
following
a
coordinated,
large-scale
attack,
this is
no easy
task.
Our work
with
DARPA is
intended
to stop
ongoing
attacks
and
minimize
downtime.”
Once
activated,
BAE
Systems’
technology
detects
and
disconnects
unauthorized
internal
and
external
users
from
local
networks
within
minutes,
and
creates
a
robust,
hybrid
network
of data
links
secured
by
multiple
layers
of
encryption
and user
authentication.
The
systems
rely on
advances
in
network
traffic
control
and
analysis
that
will
enable
utilities
to
establish
and
maintain
emergency
communications.
They
also
establish
the SEN
using
advances
in
broadcast,
satellite,
and
wireless
technologies
developed
for
agile
communications
in
contested
environments.
BAE
Systems’
RADICS
technology
is
designed
to
operate
in the
absence
of prior
coordination
among
affected
organizations
and
regardless
of power
availability,
Internet
connectivity,
disparate
IT
networks
and grid
infrastructure
technology,
situational
awareness,
and
ongoing
disruption
efforts
by
adversaries.