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| merge_into_other_topics:critical_infrastructure [2026/03/19 15:59] – removed - external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1 | merge_into_other_topics:critical_infrastructure [2026/03/19 15:59] (current) – ↷ Page moved from playground:critical_infrastructure to merge_into_other_topics:critical_infrastructure admin | ||
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| + | <WRAP catbadge blue> | ||
| + | ====== Critical Infrastructure ====== | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP meta> | ||
| + | lead-authors: | ||
| + | contributors: | ||
| + | reviewers: [Names] | ||
| + | version: 1.0 | ||
| + | updated: 17 March 2026 | ||
| + | sensitivity: | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP intro> | ||
| + | Critical infrastructure refers to systems and assets whose disruption would significantly affect public safety, security, or economic continuity. Electricity grids sit at the core of this category — most other critical systems depend on them, and their growing complexity under smart grid transitions introduces new vulnerabilities alongside new capabilities. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Why this matters ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Electricity is the infrastructure that underlies most other critical infrastructure. Hospitals, water treatment, communications, | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP callout> | ||
| + | Digitalisation makes new forms of grid coordination possible — and introduces new vulnerabilities that did not exist in analogue systems. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== A shared definition ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The EU Directive on the Resilience of Critical Entities (CER, 2022/2557) defines critical infrastructure as infrastructure essential to the maintenance of vital societal functions, economic activity, public health, safety, or security, whose disruption would have significant cross-sectoral effects. Energy — including electricity generation, transmission, | ||
| + | |||
| + | Within that framework, electricity grids carry additional specificities: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Perspectives ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Critical infrastructure protection involves different roles and responsibilities depending on who you focus on, what systems are at stake, and what governance frameworks apply. | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP perspectives> | ||
| + | ==== Actors and stakeholders ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Responsibility for critical infrastructure protection is distributed across multiple actors — grid operators, national regulators, cybersecurity agencies, emergency services, and government ministries — who rarely share a single chain of command. Coordination among them before, during, and after disruptions is as important as the technical measures each actor takes individually. In practice, information sharing across these groups remains uneven, and the boundary between operator responsibility and state responsibility is often contested.< | ||
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| + | **European Union — CER Directive implementation: | ||
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| + | ==== Technologies and infrastructure ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The interdependence of electricity grids with telecommunications, | ||
| + | |||
| + | **EU — NIS2 and energy operators: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== Institutional structures ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Regulatory frameworks for critical infrastructure protection have traditionally focused on physical security. The growing digital dimension has prompted a shift toward integrated cyber-physical governance, but the institutional architecture — who regulates what, at which level — varies significantly across jurisdictions. Cross-border interdependencies add a further layer, as a disruption in one country' | ||
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| + | **EU — NIS2 and CER as parallel frameworks: | ||
| + | |||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Related topics ===== | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== References ===== | ||
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| + | < | ||
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| + | < | ||
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| + | < | ||
| + | |||
| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //AI statement: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) assisted with topic structuring, | ||