EXPERTS: INFO SHARING KEY TO PROTECTING U.S. INFRASTRUCTURE FROM CYBER THREATS
Karen Evans, assistant secretary for the Energy Department’s office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response (CESER), cited the creation of her office as evidence of the Trump administration’s “commitment to and prioritization of energy security and national security.” However, some of the witnesses felt the United States is still under-prepared.
“We need to be smarter and better,” Neil Chatterjee, chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, said of sharing information among agencies. “We can always be better.”
David Edward Whitehead of Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories, a Virginia power system protection company, added perspective of a hardware developer from the private sector.
“I think we’re the most skilled in ascertaining what is the impact of a particular cyber threat because we’re the ones writing the code and developing the hardware,” Whitehead said, “Getting us looped in as quickly as possible that there’s an attack out there and setting up mechanisms would really move us forward in being able to secure our really critical infrastructure.”
Chatterjee pushed back on the idea the government isn’t forthcoming enough with information.
“There are challenges that occur in sharing the information in a classified setting,” he said. “We are doing everything we can to make sure that the information that we gather in a closed setting or open setting is shared with industry partners.”