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Power The Military

Ex-CIA Director: We're Not Doing Nearly Enough To Protect Against the EMP Threat 182

An anonymous reader writes: Last week saw the release of an open letter written to President Obama by a committee of notable political, security and defense experts — which includes past and present members of Congress, ambassadors, CIA directors, and others — on the country's concerning level of vulnerability to a natural or man-made Electro-Magnetic Pulse (EMP). An EMP has very real potential for crippling much of our electrical grid instantaneously. Not only would that immediately throw the social order into chaos, but the timeline to repair and restart the grid in most estimated scenarios would take months to a year or more.

Executive Director of the EMP Task Force Dr Peter Pry said, "Well, the short answer to [why we aren't defending against EMPs] is called the North American Electric Reliability Corporation. They used to be a trade association or a lobby for the 3,000 electric utilities that exist in this country. ... There is no part of the U.S. government that has the legal powers to order them to protect the grid. This is unusual, because in the case of every other critical infrastructure, there's an agency in the U.S. government that can require them to take actions for public safety. For example, the Food & Drug Administration can order certain medicines kept off shelves to protect the public safety. ... The U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission doesn't have those legal powers or authorities."
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Ex-CIA Director: We're Not Doing Nearly Enough To Protect Against the EMP Threat

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  • EMP (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @05:29AM (#49881491)

    It's unbelievable. No, wait, that's, uh, ??

  • Telling it straight (Score:4, Interesting)

    by fremsley471 ( 792813 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @05:38AM (#49881507)

    From TFA.
    And, the NERC, which owns half of K Street and has got very deep pockets, has been successful in lobbying against legislation like the Grid Act and the SHIELD Act, both bipartisan bills supported almost unanimously by Democrats and Republicans. They've been able to stall for years and keep these bills held up. One time when we got a bill passed: the Grid Act actually, in 2010, unanimously passed the House. Everybody supported it. But Washington is so broken, one senator put a hold on a bill - if they know which senator to buy, they can buy that one senator and the person can put a hold on the bill so it can't come to the floor for a vote and they can do it anonymously. The senator doesn't have to identify themselves. So, you never know who stopped the bill.

    • and the person can put a hold on the bill so it can't come to the floor for a vote and they can do it anonymously

      Wait what? Can someone explain this to an outsider? Snide comments aside this sounds like the exact opposite of a democracy. I thought only the President had, what it sounds like, something akin to veto powers over bills.

      • by guises ( 2423402 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @08:19AM (#49881989)
        Well you can read the wikipedia article [wikipedia.org] if you want, but all of these procedural rules boil down to pretty much the same thing: good rules which exist to foster informed consideration and thoughtful discussion of pending legislation become tools of abuse when the goal stops being about passing good legislation and starts being about pleasing your campaign donors.

        The Senate hold was originally about giving a senator time to gather additional information on an issue, now it's a way to stop bills which a senator doesn't like without needing or allowing a vote on them. It can be defeated by a cloture vote, but this requires 60/100 senators rather than a simple majority. This rule has been used to great effect over the last six years to stop anything and everything. You may have heard that our congress over that time has been the least productive congress ever? This is what they've been using to achieve that. Most famously though, Ted Stevens and Robert Byrd used secret holds to stop an anti-corruption transparency bill (temporarily - they were found out pretty quickly). Stevens was later convicted for corruption related to taking money from oil companies, though that conviction was later thrown out for procedural reasons.
      • The parent is exaggerating more then a bit. After the house passes a bill it will go to a senate committee it's not one Senator but rather many that need to be bribed to keep the bill in committee with out the public knowing who was blocking the bill, the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources has 22 members. The last ditch effort would be for them to bribe the senate majority leader, the one who schedules votes on bills, this is public so it would have to be a very big bribe.
      • by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @10:12AM (#49882697) Homepage

        and the person can put a hold on the bill so it can't come to the floor for a vote and they can do it anonymously

        Wait what? Can someone explain this to an outsider? Snide comments aside this sounds like the exact opposite of a democracy. I thought only the President had, what it sounds like, something akin to veto powers over bills.

        There are two different bills that the GP referenced, the Grid Act and the SHIELD Act.

        The GRID act gives special emergency powers to The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to order utilities to do something. This was widely rejected by the industry because some of the powers could force the utility to keep their plants online, even if their machines were being damaged. That's not reasonable. If a grid problem gets to the point where it is damaging generators and other grid infrastructure, we should shut it down. Intentionally damaging a bunch of generators isn't going to keep the grid online if things get to that point.

        The SHIELD act was about electromagnetic interference. FERC asked NERC last month [nerc.com] to look into this some more. I would rather a government agency with some knowledge and experience on the matter write the rules, rather than a bunch of politicians who are pushing a bill that a lobbyist wrote.

    • Thanks for posting from TFA, inspired me to go read it. Pretty messed up stuff. Broken politics aside, their conjuring up of "duhr, 'cause terruhrists, russia, china, much scare, very fear!" arguments are insignificant to me.

      However coronal mass ejections are very real and very scary for power distribution networks, and I would say that even without phantom evils going bump in the night, hardening power distribution against EM events is an issue all nations should tackle.

      As an outsider living in Eu
  • Just heard a long-format interview with three of the signers the other day. Very interesting. [youtube.com]

  • Really this should be done over the ISlamic State
  • by Maury Markowitz ( 452832 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @07:22AM (#49881765) Homepage

    > An EMP has very real potential for crippling much of our electrical grid instantaneously

    A *nuclear* one, sure. But that would require someone to explode a nuclear bomb over the US.

    Non-nuclear EMPs are a joke, and not getting better.

  • The bigger the tensions in a country the more important that the infrastructure is up and running. If there is an power outage for a couple of days and your inner society tensions are not too big, life would get organized again. Most of the food I consume is produced locally. Real problems would be heating (in winter) and water supply. However, I assume that we could organize that in a couple of days based on existing catastrophe reaction plans. True health care especially hospitals will not work, however,

  • by TheRealHocusLocus ( 2319802 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @07:37AM (#49881823)

    Q: Why are we just talking about it and why hasn't the problem been fixed?
    Dr. Pry: Okay. Well, the short answer to that is itâ(TM)s called the North American Electric Reliability Corporation. They are basically the representativeâ" they used to be a trade association or a lobby for the 3,000 electric utilities [...] agency in the U.S. government [...] protect the public safety

    Woolsey: [mumble mumble THEY could make a bomb]

    I call NO THANKS on this transparent attempt to create yet another regulatory agency arm of DHS, and Jen Bawden who may be as concerned as I am about the grid, but sounds like she wants a boxcar on the gravy train. Mumble mumble THEY could come by boat she says. Then Woolsey and Pry go so far as to declare NERC 'worthless'. Sounds like a gub'mint involvement power grab that has little to do with engineering. To find out how little a political initiative like this will actually improve the grid, just go ahead and create this new agency, just like all the other ones. Before long everyone will be working for the Federal Government and the economy will be supported by a single hot dog vendor in Wash DC. They'll spend their whole budget creating scary power point presentations about bad-people-threats, because they'd rather not go outside.

    NERC is populated by people who don't mind going outside to look at things.

    NERC does need a kick in the ass though. It needs to worry less about cyberattack (which conveniently does not require you to go outside) and put a more concentrated effort into black start capability --- which is the ability (through planned procedures and simulation) to bring up the grid from complete power down This involves the identification of islands and what are called 'black start resources', stations that can power up first and help others to start. See the working document on EOP-005-x [google.com]. Whatever the disaster and no matter how pervasive its effects, the first priority needs to be a firm plan for getting things going again and isolating sections that need replacement parts.

    Do not let that Carrington Event stuff terrify you too deeply. In the 1859 small gauge telegraph wires were strung hundreds of miles to make the perfect EMP antenna, and its effects were what could be expected of a system that was on no way designed to withstand induced EMF. The modern grid is a lightning-arresting monster of conductor. Many old or improperly maintained components may fail in places, but it's not some slate-wiper, the greatest challenge will be merely to isolate problems and restart the rest.

    Unfortunately when it comes to telephone communication this generation is pretty well screwed [slashdot.org] by a series of shitty little compromises over 30 years that will result in NO PHONES WORKING a week after major sections of the grid has gone dark, no matter if there are portable generators handy. POTS is gone, control has been centralized to distant places. Don't expect that cell tower to let you call your neighbor.

    But the essential components and practice of the power grid remains the same as it was in the 70s, robust and reliable. If NERC would spend more time planning and training for black start capability, THAT is the best, possibly only, thing that would make a real difference.

    • Unfortunately when it comes to telephone communication this generation is pretty well screwed by a series of shitty little compromises over 30 years that will result in NO PHONES WORKING a week after major sections of the grid has gone dark, no matter if there are portable generators handy. POTS is gone, control has been centralized to distant places.

      POTS lines are still there, I still have one that I don't use and I can still hook my butt set up to it and call 9-1-1. But the switches are all digital and an EMP will blow the shit out of the telcos anyway, so you're talking a load of bollocks. If the ionosphere is unusable, the POTS system likely will be too.

      • by rayd75 ( 258138 )

        POTS lines are still there, I still have one that I don't use ...

        Nah, you most likely have something else entirely that is terminated in a POTS hand-off. The digital switches you describe and the various DSL or optical backhauls along with the nodes that break them out into subscriber lines at the edge of neighborhoods are they very reason "POTS is dead". You're right though, the POTS of old would make little to no difference in an EMP event.

  • by InterGuru ( 50986 ) <(jhd) (at) (interguru.com)> on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @07:46AM (#49881861)

    In 1859 the world was hit by an EMP from a massive solar flare, called the Carrington Event. From a comment by Sampenny in the original article.

    The Carrington event was a direct hit of a solar-generated EMP, and it destroyed some portion of the very primitive electronics of the time: the telegraph that connected batteries through a coding key to an electrical line stretching across the country-side. The electrostatic disturbances lasted more than a day, and the most obvious effects were the aurora borealis shining around the world. A few years ago the earth missed an equivalent event by just a couple of days of orbit, only now our entire society depends on electronics that fries when subjected to the kind of EM fields that will enter our grids when such as event does occur
     

    More recently in March 1989 we had a geomagnetic storm [wikipedia.org] which caused a massive blackout in Quebec. It was repaired in 9 hours, but a more massive widespread storm could take months.

  • by smpoole7 ( 1467717 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @07:46AM (#49881863) Homepage

    Really interesting reading, found the link at the Wiki article on NEMP.

    http://www.ornl.gov/sci/ees/et... [ornl.gov]

    I think, as usual, the truth lies somewhere in the middle (as the ORNL study points out). A few things to keep in mind:

    1. Even a small nuclear weapon can cause a significant EMP. Larger weapons cause a more widespread affect, but even a relatively small 2KT weapon, targeted over a key facility, could knock out power to a large area.

    2. The weapon needs to be detonated above dense atmosphere.

    As far as electromagnetic pulses in general, shielding is effective ... and those who say it isn't don't understand that there are right and wrong ways to shield and ground. In my work (radio engineer), I have to do some odd-looking things to protect against lightning. A single loop in a feedline to an AM tower, for example, attenuates the lightning that comes back into my facility. Thus, I have big honkin' ball gaps at the tower base, but can get by with a smaller "horn gap" at the entry to my equipment.

    Our grid could be protected with reasonable expenditures. We couldn't prevent all damage, but we could limit it. Solid-state electronics have to be protected two ways: overall shielding, and limiting/protection at the I/O points. For example, an old desktop computer in a heavy metal case, with a good ground, probably wouldn't notice the EMP ... *except* for induced voltages coming in on the video, mouse and printer cables. Those would probably send the motherboard screaming into the shrubbery. :)

    • ...For example, an old desktop computer in a heavy metal case, with a good ground, probably wouldn't notice the EMP ... *except* for induced voltages coming in on the video, mouse and printer cables. Those would probably send the motherboard screaming into the shrubbery. :)

      I saw this happen on a small scale a few years ago. There was an overnight lightning storm that affected a small office building across the parking lot from our main site. The fibre connection to the main building was not hurt, but about half the Ethernet transceivers in the small office building were fried. I took some money out of petty cash, walked across the street to the local computer store, and bought enough Ethernet cards to replace the failures.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Our grid could be protected with reasonable expenditures. We couldn't prevent all damage, but we could limit it. Solid-state electronics have to be protected two ways: overall shielding, and limiting/protection at the I/O points. For example, an old desktop computer in a heavy metal case, with a good ground, probably wouldn't notice the EMP ... *except* for induced voltages coming in on the video, mouse and printer cables. Those would probably send the motherboard screaming into the shrubbery. :)

      It's the in

  • NASA agrees (Score:5, Informative)

    by Twinbee ( 767046 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @07:55AM (#49881909)
    The bottom line direct from NASA [nasa.gov] is that there's a 12% chance every decade (or 72% chance every century if you do the math) of a direct hit from the sun. Such an event could send us back to the middle ages, or at least cause widespread destruction and panic (no water, electricity, transport, etc. for days, weeks, possibly months, and all or most computer circuitry, including SSDs (though not optical media) would be frazzled).

    I'm going to temper that apocalyptic-looking premise with a quote from that NASA article which may provide a little... comfort.

    The worst geomagnetic storm of the Space Age, which knocked out power across Quebec in March 1989, registered Dst=-600 nT. Modern estimates of Dst for the Carrington Event itself range from -800 nT to a staggering -1750 nT.

    So, that's 'only' up to 3x as bad as an event that happened in 1989, and we seemed to have got through that okay (their power was cut for 11 hours apparently [wikipedia.org]).

    Maybe even NASA is over-reacting a bit on this then..... But like CO2 emissions, it's best not to take the chance. It is possible to protect the grid to a large extent if the world cared enough the risk. I think we're talking in the range of $billions of investment to save $trillions of damage when the inevitable happens (definitely a question of when, rather than if).

    • Such an event could send us back to the middle ages

      is that hyperbolic or do EMPs cause feudalism?

      • by jittles ( 1613415 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @08:48AM (#49882181)

        Such an event could send us back to the middle ages

        is that hyperbolic or do EMPs cause feudalism?

        It's worse than that, I fear. A catastrophic solar storm in the 5th century sent the world as we know it into the dark ages. It took about a thousand years for society to recover from that particular storm, and there are few records left to talk of this catastrophe.

  • by JigJag ( 2046772 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @08:56AM (#49882247)

    If you like the topic of EMP and how it would affect the society, check this fiction from William R. Forstchen. It's called One Second After [wikipedia.org] and it's written from the perspective of the US being brought to its knees after a terrorist EMP strike and its effects on all societal levels.

  • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Wednesday June 10, 2015 @09:28AM (#49882415) Homepage
    If the electricity is off for two weeks, society will begin to totally disintegrate.

    Your water tap stops because no power to pump water into your nearby water tower. It may have a backup generator, but that takes fuel, which I'll come to next.

    You won't be able to put fuel into your car because no electricity to operate the gas pumps at the filling station. Even using siphoning or other ways of pumping the fuel out of the underground storage tanks, the filling station fuel supplies will get tapped out soon.

    Not only will you no longer be able to use your car (electric or fuel powered) but there will be no more deliveries. Your local grocery store should be completely picked clean by now.

    At this point, people will fight for food, water, batteries, fuel, other supplies. Don't expect help from the police, military of government. They will be having the same basic problems. The people who participate in the police and military will be having the same basic problems with their own families.

    By now, you can see where this is going.
  • The problem is the vulnerability of the power grid. It is pretty easy to bring down transmission towers (with a limited quantity of explosives) and it would be trivial for some terrorist to e.g. place synchronized timer activated explosives on critical points on the grid. Done right the build in redundancy will not help and large areas could be without electricity for weeks to months.

    EMP can be a problem but (again ignoring nuclear war) the effects of EMP devices are local, sure that can still be a huge pro

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