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CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE

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Title: CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE


1
CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE CONTINUITY OF
OPERATIONS IN A POST 9/11 WORLD
Presented by
Dr. Pamela Collins, EKU/JSC
2
Critical Infrastructure Continuity of
Operations in a Post 9/11 World
  • Outline of Presentation
  • Overview of Critical Infrastructures
  • U.S. Critical Infrastructures
  • Global Critical Infrastructures
  • Critical Infrastructures Interdependences
  • Continuity of Operations

3
Overview of Critical Infrastructures
  • Defining Critical Infrastructures
  • Pre 9/11
  • Those systems whose prolonged disruptions could
    cause significant military and economic
    dislocation.

4
Defining Critical Infrastructures
  • Post 9/11
  • Systems and assets,
  • Whether physical or virtual, so vital
  • that the incapacity or destruction
  • of such systems and assets would
  • have a debilitating impact insecurity,
  • national economic security,
  • national public health and safety,
  • or any combination of those matters.

5
CI Post 9/11
  • Definition notes for CI in a Post 9/11 environment

6
Critical Infrastructure Sectors
  • 1. Agriculture and food
  • 2. Energy
  • 3. Public Health
  • 4. Emergency Services
  • 5. Government
  • 6. Defense Industrial Base
  • 7. Information Telecommunications (Cyber)
  • 8. Water Supply Systems
  • 9. Transportation
  • 10. Banking and Finance
  • 11. Chemicals and Hazardous Materials
  • 12. Postal
  • 13. Ports and Shipping

7
Agricultural and Food
  • Supply chains for feed, animals, and animal
    products
  • Crop production and supply chains of seed,
    fertilizer,
  • Post-harvesting-production, packaging, storage,
    etc.

8
Water Supply System
  • Fours areas of Concentration
  • 1. Physical damage or destruction
  • 2. Actual or threatened contamination
  • 3. Cyber Attack
  • 4. Interruption of services

9
U.S. Water Infrastructure
  • 75,000 dams and reservoirs, thousands of miles of
    pipes and aqueducts
  • 168,000 public drinking water facilities
  • 16,000 publicly owned waist water treatment
    facilities.

10
Public Health
  • Public Health Sector Challenges
  • Open and free access to most public health
    facilities
  • Variation in structural and system designs from
    one hospital to the next
  • Lack of protocols governing isolation of
    infections individuals during a crisis
  • Stockpiles and critical emergency resources
  • Legal and regulatory issues
  • Delivering of critical services during a crisis
  • Specialized medical and pharmaceutical
    laboratories

11
CI Public Health
  • Public Health Notes

12
CI Public Health
  • Notes page 3 of CI Public Health

13
Emergency Services
  • Inadequate information sharing between different
    organizations
  • Telecommunications problems
  • Enhancing force protections

14
CI Emergency Services
  • 2nd page of CI Emergency Services

15
Government
  • Physical Protection of critical infrastructures
  • Key Assets
  • Continuity of Operations Plan
  • Continuity of Government

16
Government
  • 1st notes slide

17
Defense and Industrial Base
  • DODs dependency on the private sector
  • Outsourcing
  • Utilities
  • Single or limited of suppliers
  • Military Product Specifications
  • Procurement Process
  • Enhanced Infrastructure Protection Measures

18
CI Defense Industrial Base
  • 2nd slide for CI Defense and Industrial Base notes

19
CI Defense and Industrial Base
  • 2n page of notes

20
CI Defense and Industrial Base
  • 3rd page of notes

21
Information and Telecommunications
  • Public Switched Telecommunications Network (PSTN)
  • Next Generation Network (NGN)
  • Sector Challenges
  • Sector Priorities

22
Information Telecommunications
  • 2nd slide notes

23
Information Telecommunications
  • 3rd slide notes

24
Energy
  • Electricity
  • Generation
  • Transmission and Distribution
  • Control and Communications
  • NERC, FERC, NRC
  • Sector Challenges

25
Energy CI
  • 2nd slide notes

26
Electrical Infrastructure
  • Electrical Power System
  • 92,000 electric generating units (including
    fossil fueled, nuclear, and hydroelectric units)
  • 300,000 miles of transmission lines
  • 150 control centers that regulate the flow of
    electricity.

27
Energy
  • Oil and Natural Gas
  • Five general Components
  • Oil Production
  • Crude Oil Transport
  • Refining
  • Product transport and distribution
  • Control and other external support systems.

28
Energy Security
  • 4th slide notes

29
Energy Security
  • 5th slide notes

30
Key Oil Production Capacity
  • FOUR KEY OIL FIELDS THAT PRODUCE OVER ONE MILLION
    BARRELS PER DAY
  • Saudi Arabia (Ghawar) 4.5 million barrels
  • Mexico (Cantarell) 2 million barrels
  • Kuwait (Burgan) 1 million barrels
  • China (Da Qing) 1 million barrels

31
Asian Critical Infrastructure
Oil Pipeline Kazakhstan To China (Sino-Kazakh)
  • 980 KM of pipeline
  • 246 KM crude oil pipeline to Dushani
    Refinery
  • 10 Billion Tons of Capacity

32
Middle Eastern Pipeline
  • Saudi Arabia-
  • Roughly 25 of the
  • earths total crude
  • oil resources

33
Russian Oil
Largest Non OPEC Energy Producer
34
Transportation
  • Aviation
  • Maritime Traffic
  • Rail
  • Pipelines
  • Highways
  • Trucking and Busing
  • Public Mass Transit

35
Transportation
  • 1st notes slide

36
Maritime Traffic
  • notes

37
Transportation Infrastructure
  • Transportation Civil System-
  • Aviation system
  • 500 Commercial-service airports
  • 14,000 smaller general aviation airports
  • Commuter and urban rail system
  • 10,000 miles

38
Rail system
  • notes

39
Pipeline
  • notes

40
National Highway System Infrastructure
  • U.S. Highway system
  • 600,000 bridges
  • 4 million interconnected
  • Miles of paved roadways
  • 45,000 miles of interstate
  • freeway

41
Mass Transist
  • notes

42
Banking and Finance
  • Highly regulated and competitive
  • Interdependencies
  • FBIIC
  • National Infrastructure Protection Center
  • Challenges

43
Banking and Finance
  • 1st notes slide

44
Chemicals and Hazardous Materials
  • Key provider for public health
  • Nations Top Exporter
  • Highly Diverse
  • Assurance of Supply
  • Chemical Stockpiles
  • Interdependence with Energy

45
Postal and Shipping
  • Volume of mail
  • Size of the USPS
  • Interdependencies
  • Areas of Concern

46
Postal and Shipping
  • 1st notes slide

47
Postal and Shipping
  • 2nd notes slide

48
Key Assets
  • National Monuments and Icons
  • Nuclear Power Plants
  • Dams
  • Government Facilities
  • Commercial Key Assets

49
(No Transcript)
50
Private Sector Responsibility for Protecting
Critical Infrastructure
  • Planning Assurance
  • Increased threshold investments
  • Undertaken enhancements in security
  • Risk versus consequence tradeoffs

51
Government Responsibility for Critical
Infrastructures
  • Responsibility of the U.S. Federal Government
  • Law Enforcement and internal security
  • Foreign Intelligence
  • Foreign affairs and,
  • National Defense

52
Critical InfrastructureAn International
Perspective
  • Australia
  • Canada
  • The United Kingdom
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • European Union
  • Japan

53
Summary
  • Global nature of Critical Infrastructure

54
summary
  • Notes slide 2

55
QUESTIONS
  • Dr. Pamela Collins,
  • Director International Homeland Security
    Institute
  • Professor Safety, Security and Emergency Studies
  • Eastern Kentucky University
  • And Executive Director
  • Justice and Safety Center
  • www.jsc.eku.edu
  • pamcollins57_at_aol.com
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