Do air gaps protect nuke power plant systems?

Industrial control systems at nuclear power plants are typically isolated from the Internet, but there are potential bridges for hackers to beat such "air gaps."

Shutterstock image (by Maksim Kabakou): Science data concept, nuclear icon.

What: A Chatham House report on cybersecurity vulnerabilities at civilian nuclear facilities.

Why: Nuclear power plants are difficult for the federal government to protect from cyberattack because most are privately owned. However, their security is a matter of federal concern because they contain nuclear materials that are potentially dangerous if they get into the wrong hands or are manipulated remotely via the Internet.

U.S. nuclear power plants are relatively old, and their industrial control systems rely on aging, legacy technology. Attacks on IT and control processing technologies at nuclear power plants have been steadily increasing. The time-tested defense against hacks has been separating such systems from the Internet -- the so-called "air gap" method.

But according to the Chatham House report, air gaps do not guarantee isolation from the Internet. Office systems at plants often rely on virtual private networks for Internet connections, and those networks could be used to tunnel into control systems. Perhaps more alarming is that some facility operators might not even be aware of a VPN or any interconnection between infrastructure components and the Internet, according to the report.

Other risks include infrastructure components that are easily identified via a Google search, flash drives that can bridge air gaps and nuclear plant employees who are alarmingly unfamiliar with key cybersecurity procedures. Exacerbating the problem is the fact that nuclear engineers and cybersecurity experts don't speak the same technical language and are often not located at the same sites.

The report backs new risk assessment procedures that incorporate security and safety. It also encourages a vigorous conversation between engineers and contractors to raise awareness of the problems associated with unauthorized Internet connections.

Verbatim: "Not only can air gaps be breached with nothing more than a flash drive (as in the case of Stuxnet), but the commercial benefits of Internet connectivity mean that nuclear facilities may now have virtual private networks and other connections installed, sometimes undocumented or forgotten by contractors and other legitimate third-party operators."