Power
Grid Down Drill To Be Conducted By US Government
“If an adversary lands a knockout blow, [experts] fear, it could black out vast areas of the continent for weeks; interrupt supplies of water, gasoline, diesel fuel and fresh food; shut down communications; and create disruptions of a scale that was only hinted at by Hurricane Sandy and the attacks of Sept. 11,” The Times said.
Power
grid vulnerabilities are finally garnering some attention by
government officials
26
August, 2013
.
An
electrical grid joint drill simulation is being planned in the United
States, Canada and Mexico. Thousands of utility workers, FBI agents,
anti-terrorism experts, governmental agencies, and more than 150
private businesses are involved in the November power
grid drill.
The
downed power
grid
simulation will reportedly focus on both physical and cyber attacks.
The antiquated electrical system in the United States has been one of
the most neglected pieces of integral infrastructure.
The
EMP
Commission,
created by Congress, released a report in 2008 calling for increased
planning and testing, and a stockpiling of needed repair items.
The
SHIELD
Act,
which is stalled in Congress, is the first serious piece of
legislation in many years to attempt to address the vulnerabilities
of the power grid in. As previously reported by Off The Grid News, a
recent American
Society of Civil Engineers
(ASCE) report gave the power grid a “D+” when grading various
pieces of infrastructure and public services in the United States.
The
disaster drill is being described as a crisis practice unlike
anything the real power grid has ever experienced. The GridEX
II
drill Nov. 13-14 will focus primarily on how governments will react
if the electrical grid fails and, for instance, the food supply chain
collapses.
American
utility companies are responsible for running approximately 5,800
power plants and about 450,000 high-voltage transmission lines,
controlled by various devices which have been put into place over the
past decades. Some of the utility companies which oversee the power
grid reportedly use “antique computer protocols” which are
“probably” safe from cyber hackers,” The New York Times
reported.
The
Times said experts call the power grid the nation’s “glass jaw.”
Even the military gets 99 percent of its power the same way everyday
citizens get it – from commercially run companies.
“If an adversary lands a knockout blow, [experts] fear, it could black out vast areas of the continent for weeks; interrupt supplies of water, gasoline, diesel fuel and fresh food; shut down communications; and create disruptions of a scale that was only hinted at by Hurricane Sandy and the attacks of Sept. 11,” The Times said.
Former
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission chairman Curt Hebert stated that
if the nation fails at electricity, “we’re going to fail
miserably” at everything else.
Hebert
also noted that during prior power grid drills, the scenario assumed
the system would be up and running again relatively quickly after an
attack. This drill will assume it’s out much longer.
If
the power grid fails, a lack of electricity and food delivery are
only the first wave of troubles facing the American people. Police
could face major problems with civil unrest. Of course, there also
would not be any electric heating or cooling, which easily could lead
to many deaths depending on the season.
A
2012 report by the National
Academy of Science
said terrorists could cripple the nation by damaging or destroying
hard-to-replace components, some of which aren’t even made in the
United States.
“Of
particular concern are giant custom-built transformers that increase
the voltage of electricity to levels suited for bulk transmission and
then reduce voltage for distribution to customers,” The Times said
in a summary of the report. “… Replacing them can take many
months.”
Said
Clark W. Gellings,
a researcher at the Electric Power Research Institute, “I don’t
think we pay quite enough attention to the technology fixes that
would allow us to make the power system more resilient.”
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