At 13:30, I am ready to go back to it. An afternoon filled with similar activities to my first half of the day: checking how we can further improve our services to match the market demand, helping the Energy Market, and shaping its future of cyber security. As I am responsible for the Energy Market within Toreon, I analyze the evolutions we see in that market and match an offering from Toreon to that.
To give a small example: there are some European laws and regulations upcoming for ports (of which we have a few in Belgium, like the Port of Antwerp) where large vessels need to plug in their on-board power systems to the grid to limit the carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide emissions in those areas. This seems very simple but having a “plug and socket” system for a ship with the high-voltage energy consumption of a small town is not a small feat. Let alone getting the invoicing correct in our complex energy landscape in Belgium and getting the necessary power delivered from our onshore grid to the vessel from the moment it docks.
Where we have power consumption, we also have data transfers. That’s where Cyber Security (preferably Toreon, of course ;)) should come in: we offer security architecture services where we can support how systems should interact with each other on a high level, but also help write the security requirements for all vendors supplying solutions, and even help those suppliers to develop their solutions securely so their systems don’t get hacked from day one. Believe it or not, gaining control over the power delivery to a tanker or container ship is an attractive target to some parties if only for the bragging rights (ask our Ethical Hackers and OT Security team ;)). To achieve our success in these environments, we must provide our services with the right context to the players in these markets so they can understand the added value we bring.
This was only one small example, many more challenges are going on in the energy market: managing all the data and insights from our digital meters by distribution grid operators, transitioning to a more decentralized production system where we have massive amounts of data that will influence our decision-making processes, the use of flexibility in our electricity system where you get paid to either consume more or less based on the actual load of the grid and so much more. For each of those challenges, cybersecurity plays a crucial role of ensuring the success of those evolutions. Feel free to contact me if you want to discuss on some of them, I will be happy to!