Connect with us

State News

Federal-state task force grapples with grid protection

Published

on

A Dominion substation in New Kent County, Virginia. (Sarah Vogelsong / Virginia Mercury)

 

A federal task force wrestled with the costs and benefits of better shielding the nation’s tens of thousands of electric substations from a growing number of attacks, like a neo-Nazi plot the FBI says it foiled earlier this month in Maryland, another that knocked out power to thousands in North Carolina in December and more in the Pacific Northwest.

“These events correspond with an increase in extremism in our country,” said Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Willie Phillips during a Wednesday meeting of a federal-state task force on electric transmission. Phillips cited a report released last year by the Program on Extremism at George Washington University that found that between 2016 and 2022, “white supremacist plots targeting energy systems dramatically increased in frequency,” with 13 people arrested and charged in federal court during that span, most of them in the past two years.

In December, FERC ordered a review of security standards at electric transmission facilities and control centers. That review, to be completed by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which sets and enforces reliability standards for the bulk power system in the U.S., Canada, and part of Mexico, is due in April.

But at the task force meeting, NERC President and CEO James Robb said there are more than 50,000 high-voltage substations dispersed across the country and regulators must make difficult decisions about which ones most need additional security.

“That’s a tremendous amount of infrastructure to protect,” he told the task force, a mix of FERC commissioners and state utility regulators. “It’s not as simple as ‘we should just protect everything.’ Your ratepayers that you’re responsible for probably wouldn’t like that answer.”

Robb said the vast majority of “physical security events,” including vandalism, theft of copper wires and other components, and shooting attacks, don’t result in any impact to the grid. Only about 5% do, though the bad news is the attacks are increasing, with extremist groups posting instructions for disabling critical infrastructure on the “dark web,” he said.

Puesh Kumar, director of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Cybersecurity, Energy Security and Emergency Response, said that in 2022 there were 163 events categorized as “physical” incidents involving electric infrastructure, including vandalism and sabotage, up from 92 in 2021.

“The majority of incidents, there isn’t a lot of good information on what caused it,” he told the task force. “When these events do occur, they tend to be pretty localized.”

Existing regulations, which came about after a 2014 sniper attack on a California electric substation, only apply to facilities that, if they were knocked out or damaged, could create hazards for the larger grid, like cascading outages.

Many substations, like the ones targeted in Moore County, North Carolina, don’t meet that threshold, but damaging them can still result in a loss of power for thousands.

“The consequence we’re protecting against is the cascading event that would (affect) millions of customers, not thousands,” he said.

As NERC works through its report, he suggested that state regulators discuss security costs with utilities.

“You have to weigh the customer impact of this … relative to your cost to defend against it,” he said. “A substation in a very rural part of the country will have different vulnerabilities than one in downtown Manhattan.”

Dan Scripps, a task force member, and chair of the Michigan Public Service Commission said he wasn’t “entirely convinced” that there shouldn’t be some baseline security requirements, such as fencing, regardless of where a facility is located.

He added that it’s difficult “from an optics and public responsiveness position” to explain to utility customers that there are no minimum standards for many facilities.

“There’s definitely work to be done,” Robb said. “There could be room here for a minimum threshold of protection.”

Robb added that states are free to impose their own security requirements.

“You can always go further,” he said.

FERC Commissioner Mark Christie, a former Virginia utility regulator, suggested states should work with utilities to develop a “hierarchy” of the most crucial facilities.

“You can’t harden every substation in the country,” he said. “The costs would be astronomical.”

Kumar noted that beefing up physical security is one approach to the problem, but so is making the power system more resilient by improving electric transmission and exploring more distributed generation and microgrids with battery storage that are less dependent on the larger power system.

“I think we have an opportunity, but we need to be balanced,” Phillips said, recalling a conversation with his personal trainer. “You can pay me now, or you can pay the doctor later.”

 

by Robert Zullo, Virginia Mercury


Virginia Mercury is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Virginia Mercury maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sarah Vogelsong for questions: info@virginiamercury.com. Follow Virginia Mercury on Facebook and Twitter.

Front Royal, VA
66°
Sunny
6:41 am7:45 pm EDT
Feels like: 66°F
Wind: 12mph N
Humidity: 47%
Pressure: 30.31"Hg
UV index: 6
SunMonTue
75°F / 63°F
82°F / 63°F
88°F / 64°F
Obituaries1 hour ago

James Christopher “Chris” Sain (1948 – 2026)

Obituaries1 hour ago

Alice “Maybelle” Henson (1938 – 2026)

Health4 hours ago

How Sleep and Stress Affect Cancer Risk

State News4 hours ago

Spanberger Signs Sweeping Public Safety and Gun Violence Bills

Local News4 hours ago

Horses, Fans Return as Shenandoah Downs Season Begins

State News5 hours ago

Skill Games Halted Again as Spanberger Issues Veto

Local News5 hours ago

VDOT: Warren County Traffic Alert for April 13 – 17, 2026

Interesting Things to Know5 hours ago

The Cat Who Outlasted Six Prime Ministers

Opinion23 hours ago

Front Royal, Virginia. Vacation Destination?

Crime/Court24 hours ago

Virginia State Police Report Major Drug Seizures in Weekly Crime Suppression Effort

State News1 day ago

Virginia Secures Birth Control Access as Other Southern States Eye Abortion Pill Manufacturers

State News1 day ago

SCC Approves Loudoun Transmission Line, Nixes Undergrounding; Final Route to be Determined

State News1 day ago

Slate of New Virginia Laws Address Health Care and Housing Affordability

Obituaries1 day ago

James J. Coverston Sr. (1942 – 2026)

Business Growth Series1 day ago

Business Growth Series: Your Biggest Problem Isn’t Competition — It’s Being Overlooked

Health1 day ago

Why Many Experts Say a Concussion Should Be Called a Brain Injury

Crime/Court2 days ago

Missouri Man Arrested in Undercover Operation Targeting Online Crimes Against Children

Regional News2 days ago

Trump Tax Plan Credited With Higher Refunds, Lower Taxes

State News2 days ago

Spanberger Vetoes Fairfax Casino Bill, Citing Local Opposition

Community Events2 days ago

Blue Ridge Point-to-Point Races Return Saturday at Woodley Farm

State News2 days ago

Legislative Effort to Buy Monroe’s Loudoun Estate on Pause, Budget Effort Underway

Regional News2 days ago

US House Democrats Call for Congress to Come Back Into Session for Iran War Debate

State News2 days ago

Virginia to Raise Minimum Wage to $15 by 2028 Under New Law

State News2 days ago

Spanberger Signs Bills to Aid Low-Income Utility Customers, Manage Power Demand

State News2 days ago

FTC Wants to Hear from Renters About ‘Unfair and Deceptive Housing Fees’