Lethbridge Herald

Energy sector faces cybersecur­ity threats

HACKERS DRAWN’TO ENERGY SECTOR S LACK OF SENSORS, CONTROLS

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — HOUSTON

Oil and gas companies, including some of the most celebrated industry names in the Houston area, are facing increasing­ly sophistica­ted hackers seeking to steal trade secrets and disrupt operations, according to a newspaper investigat­ion.

A stretch of the Gulf Coast near Houston features one of the largest concentrat­ions of refineries, pipelines and chemical plants in the country, and cybersecur­ity experts say it’s an alluring target for espionage and other cyberattac­ks.

“There are actors that are scanning for these vulnerable systems and taking advantage of those weaknesses when they find them,” said Marty Edwards, director of U.S. Homeland Security’s Cyber Emergency Response Team for industrial systems.

Homeland Security, which is responsibl­e for protecting the nation from cybercrime, received reports of some 350 incidents at energy companies from 2011 to 2015, an investigat­ion by the Houston Chronicle has found. Over that period, the agency found nearly 900 security flaws within U.S. energy companies, more than any other industry.

Steps are being taken to thwart attacks. For instance, the Coast Guard in a joint operation with Houston police patrolled the waters southeast of Houston last year conducting sweeps for unprotecte­d wireless signals that hackers could use to gain access to facilities. The operation was one of the first of its kind in the U.S. concentrat­ing on cyberattac­ks by sea.

But the vast network of oil and gas operations makes it difficult to secure. Thousands of interconne­cted sensors and controls that run oil and gas facilities remain rife with weak spots.

Many companies lack the technology and personnel to detect hackers. Equipment was designed decades ago without security features, and efforts over the years to link computer networks to devices that monitor pressure or control valves have exposed operations to online threats.

“You could mess with a refinery or cause a vessel to explode,” Richard Garcia, a former FBI agent who became a cybersecur­ity specialist, told the Chronicle.

Power, chemical and nuclear facilities must adhere to strict cybersecur­ity measures, but federal law doesn’t impose such standards on the oil and gas sector. And when oil and gas companies have been infiltrate­d by a hacker, they’re not required to report the incident.

More than 20 of the nation’s largest oil companies — including Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhil­lips, refiner Phillips 66 and pipeline operator Kinder Morgan — declined to comment or did not respond to multiple requests for comment. The American Petroleum Institute, the national trade associatio­n for oil and gas, also declined to comment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada