Litcius/Paper detail

A Systematic Review of the State of Cyber-Security in Water Systems

Nilufer Tuptuk, Peter Hazell, Jeremy Watson, Stephen Hailes

2021Water127 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Critical infrastructure systems are evolving from isolated bespoke systems to those that use general-purpose computing hosts, IoT sensors, edge computing, wireless networks and artificial intelligence. Although this move improves sensing and control capacity and gives better integration with business requirements, it also increases the scope for attack from malicious entities that intend to conduct industrial espionage and sabotage against these systems. In this paper, we review the state of the cyber-security research that is focused on improving the security of the water supply and wastewater collection and treatment systems that form part of the critical national infrastructure. We cover the publication statistics of the research in this area, the aspects of security being addressed, and future work required to achieve better cyber-security for water systems.

Topics & Concepts

BespokeIndustrial espionageCritical infrastructureComputer securityScope (computer science)Computer scienceControl system securityCover (algebra)Work (physics)Industrial control systemSecurity serviceRisk analysis (engineering)Control (management)BusinessInformation securityEngineeringSoftware security assuranceProgramming languageAdvertisingMechanical engineeringArtificial intelligenceSmart Grid Security and ResilienceAdvanced Malware Detection TechniquesNetwork Security and Intrusion Detection
A Systematic Review of the State of Cyber-Security in Water Systems | Litcius