Shielding the substation against cyber-attacks
As substations become increasingly digital and huge quantities of data are transmitted in real time, utilities are becoming vulnerable to cyber-attack. Consequently, up-to-date cybersecurity defences are crucial to the health and reliability of the digital substation.
Most of today’s substations were commissioned at a time when the only communications link was a private control line using proprietary protocols. Since then, technology has moved on. So, in tandem, have the needs of transmission and distribution system operators for increased connectivity to the substation. “In an effort to improve network operation and, at the same time, reduce costs, utilities set up a second communication link used to download disturbance-recording files and upload relay settings,” explains Jérôme Arnaud, Upstream Marketing Engineer at Alstom Grid. “Once this remote access is established, it opens a whole new world of possibilities: supervision, asset management, troubleshooting, etc. But it also opens the doors to attack.”
1A bot is a software application that runs automated repetitive tasks over the Internet. The largest use of legitimate bots is in web spidering to index content.
2The Stuxnet worm reportedly ruined almost one-fifth of Iran's nuclear enrichment centrifuges in 2009-2010.