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View Full Version : Thousands Seen Dying If Terrorists Attack U.S. Power Grid.



Ponce
18th November 2012, 08:01 AM
I read that it takes one year to order a transformer and get it, so why not order 100 transformer ahead of time and stock them at differnt places?.....they now want to do that but only with a few of them.......it would take the demoliton of only three towers nation wide to take down the whole net in the US..........
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terrorist attack on the U.S. power grid could be more destructive than superstorm Sandy, possibly costing hundreds of billions of dollars and leading to thousands of deaths, the National Academy of Sciences said.

While such an event probably wouldn’t kill people immediately, it could cause widespread blackouts for weeks or months, according to a recently declassified report released today by the Academy. If it occurred during extreme weather, heat stress or exposure to cold may lead to “hundreds or even thousands of deaths,” the authors of the study wrote.

“An event of this magnitude and duration could lead to turmoil, widespread public fear, and an image of helplessness that would play directly into the hands of the terrorists,” they said.

While other entities have issued reports on electric-grid vulnerabilities, the study released today provides an unusually stark picture of what might happen if hackers, extremist groups, disgruntled employees or even energy companies sabotage the nation’s power network. It calls for the government to create a national inventory of portable generation equipment that can be used during such an event.

An attack “could be carried out by knowledgeable attackers with little risk of detection or interdiction,” it said.

2007 Study
The study released today by the National Academy of Sciences was sponsored by the Department of Homeland Security and completed by the National Research Council, which is part of the National Academy of Sciences. Although the report was finished in 2007, President George W. Bush’s administration a year later prevented it from being distributed publicly. The panel of experts who prepared the report, believing it contained no classified information, pressed for its dissemination. In August, the administration of President Barack Obama agreed to declassify most of the study.

National Academy of Sciences President Ralph J. Cicerone, and Charles M. Vest, president of the National Academy of Engineering, in a forward to the report, said its key findings remain “highly relevant.” The men also are chairman and vice chairman, respectively, of the National Research Council.

Complicated Web
The U.S. electricity network consists of a complicated web of generators, high-voltage power lines, lower voltage lines that run to homes and businesses, substations and other gear to keep electricity flowing smoothly across the country. The National Academy of Engineering called the transmission and distribution system, or the grid, “the world’s largest integrated machine.”

Since 2007, the increased use of computerized systems, including so-called smart meters -- which give consumers greater control over their energy use -- highlights the need for vigilance against cyber attacks, David Owens, executive vice president of business operations at the Edison Electric Institute and a contributor to the study, said in a phone interview.

“The grid is changing,” Owens said.

Threats to the network also include physical attacks on equipment that is often decades-old and lacks the technology to limit the effects of such an event, the study said.

Multiple Attacks
While a hurricane or ice storm usually only takes down distribution lines that utility crews can put back up, terrorists can disable transformers, which may take years to replace, said Alan Crane, a senior scientist who worked on the report. A well-planned operation could take out several substations, he said.

“It’s the multiple attacks that have the really scary consequences,” Crane said. Although the probability of such a conspiracy is low, the consequences “could just be really awful.”

The report raises questions about how a blackout would affect services including medical care, the water supply and the pumping of natural gas, which uses compressors powered by electricity, he said.

“Living without electricity is one thing,” Crane said. “Living without water is something else.”

An attack could inflict more damage than superstorm Sandy, which roared across the Eastern U.S. at the end of October, according to a statement released with the study. The storm temporarily tripped power to three nuclear reactors and caused a fourth, owned by Exelon Corp. (EXC), to declare an alert.

Insured losses from the disaster will probably exceed $20 billion, according to QBE Insurance Group Ltd. (QBIEY), which had a 3.5 percent share of U.S. commercial property insurance during the second quarter.

High-Voltage Transformers
“High-voltage transformers are of particular concern because they are vulnerable to attack, both from within and from outside the substation where they are located,” according to the report. Transformers are often custom-built, difficult to transport because of their size, and made outside the U.S., meaning that the industry’s inventory could be “overwhelmed by a large attack,” it said.

The Edison Electric Institute, a Washington-based industry group for publicly traded utilities including Duke Energy Corp. (DUK) and Southern Co. (NSC), is leading a pilot program to install spare transformers at sites where they can be transported for use in the event of an emergency, Owens said.

Exacerbating the risk to the grid is a patchwork of energy- market structures, established since the 1990s to spur competition, according to the study.

Network Stress
“The push by federal regulators to introduce competition in bulk power across the country has also resulted in the transmission network being used in ways for which it was not designed,” the study’s authors wrote.

A 2005 U.S. energy law included measures to strengthen the power grid’s reliability, and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission now has the ability to issue fines as high as $1 million per day for each reliability violation.

Cyber attackers “could magnify the damage of a physical attack” by disabling computerized security systems or blocking signals to grid operators, the report said.

Other threats to the grid may include terrorist groups, disgruntled or bored individuals, or energy companies seeking to thwart competitors, it said. A 2011 report from the Electric Power Research Institute said that about $3.7 billion in investment is needed to protect the grid from cyber attacks.

Increased Investment
Energy companies including utilities would have to increase their investment in computer security more than seven-fold to reach an ideal level of protection, according to a January survey done for Bloomberg Government by the Ponemon Institute LLC, a data-security research firm based in Traverse City, Michigan. The survey of network managers at 21 energy companies including 14 utilities found the companies would need an average annual budget of $344.6 million to stop 95 percent of their cyber threats.

The report released today recommends that the Homeland Security Department take the lead in overseeing electric-grid security, working with the Energy Department and private companies to create a stockpile of mobile reserve equipment, including transformers, for the network. It also calls for the security agency to work with the FERC, state regulators, utilities and grid operators to make sure they have “appropriate incentives” to upgrade the system.

The release of the report will speed the adoption of new technology that will better protect the grid, Cicerone and Vest said.

Utilities including American Electric Power Co. (AEP) of Columbus, Ohio, have already been working together to share cyber-threat information learned from software developed by Lockheed Martin Corp. (LMT)

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-14/thousands-seen-dying-if-terrorists-attack-vulnerable-u-s-grid.html

brosil
18th November 2012, 09:10 AM
First; It takes about 6 months to build a large substation type transformer. Second: The various companies do stock replacements but usually only one or two of a (large) type. They're damned expensive and take up a lot of space. Companies plan for normal repairs. If a major event knocks out more than they have, they borrow from other companies. Having said that; yes, the electric grid is vulnerable much like the nat.gas grid and our liquid fuel supply. There's a lot of ways to take it down.

Spectrism
18th November 2012, 09:40 AM
It is evident that there really is NO terrorist threat. With 10 men, I could shut down Amerika. The fact that it has not been shut down is clear proof that there are no terrorists trying to. It does not take much.

I suspect that the global controllers are busy fabricating terrorists who will commit such acts so that the crisis will usher in more controls. There are many things that can happen. Yes- power grid is an easy and powerful target. Also- refineries. And what about the thousands of shoulder-launch missiles unaccounted for? Air traffic can be shut down for months. Bridges and tunnels are also key targets. There are tons of low-tech ways to shut the country down. But these will all pale in comparison with the natural disasters that are going to increase.

Hatha Sunahara
18th November 2012, 10:08 AM
Booga Booga! I bought a book called Harry and the Terrible Whatzit

http://www.amazon.com/Harry-Terrible-Whatzit-Dick-Gackenbach/dp/0395287952%3FSubscriptionId%3D14H876SFAKFS0EHBYQ02 %26tag%3Dhubpages-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165 953%26creativeASIN%3D0395287952

many years ago to teach my kids that usually their fears were trumped up in their own minds, and the best solution was to OPEN your eyes. Not shut them.

Spectrism must have read that book as well. There are no terrorists. The FBI has to stage terrorism to entrap stupid young muslims to make an arrest to make the FBI look like it is doing something real and valuable which it isn't. The rest of the government apparatus set up to fight terrorism has far less integrity than that, but it has a lot of money to keep the illusion going.

Our best hope is that the government will run out of money. Then they won't be able to pretend they are protecting us, and terrorism will disappear and our freedoms will once again return.


Hatha

freespirit
18th November 2012, 10:14 AM
how will they run out of money when they are fabricating new numbers and notes around the clock?

Hatha Sunahara
18th November 2012, 11:10 AM
They don't print value. They print QUANTITY. The government will run out of money when its value is zero.

We don't have to do anything but sit back and watch them destroy themselves. It might be prudent to take measures for personal survival. It is only a matter of time until this terrorism nightmare ends. It's fate is assured. The timing however is the major uncertainty. The big event will be the collapse of the dollar.


Hatha

singular_me
18th November 2012, 11:40 AM
reads like a prophecy that will come true very soon...

glad to have this solar powered/off grid house that we are house sitting til end of summer 2013. Things turned out well in the end for us.

freespirit
18th November 2012, 11:40 AM
Hatha, i agree, and that is what i thought you meant in your earlier post.

the thought i've had lately is that we know the money is worthless, they know the money is worthless, but they still act as though it is the only thing of substance, and expect us to continue to blindly chase after this elaborate pipe dream they have conjured up.

Silver Rocket Bitches!
18th November 2012, 07:39 PM
http://www.amazon.com/One-Second-After-William-Forstchen/dp/0765356864/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1353292754&sr=8-1&keywords=one+second+after

Neuro
20th November 2012, 04:01 PM
Hatha, i agree, and that is what i thought you meant in your earlier post.

the thought i've had lately is that we know the money is worthless, they know the money is worthless, but they still act as though it is the only thing of substance, and expect us to continue to blindly chase after this elaborate pipe dream they have conjured up.
The best way to keep the illusion going is to keep the plebs in short supply of it, make them borrow more buying useless crap they have been hypnotized into thinking they MUST have NOW, and keep the salaries/government handouts so that they can't pay it back, but give them the illusion they can pay it back in 96 EASY monthly installments, charge them exorbitant amounts when they miss one installment, when they miss many just give the bank the money, and take the plebs property... Interesting things will happen when enough people wake up to the scam though, literarily heads will roll. But people are hypnotized by telavision, prescription drugs, fluoride, hypes...

Serpo
20th November 2012, 04:14 PM
I thought America had already shut down.................

Serpo
20th November 2012, 04:16 PM
reads like a prophecy that will come true very soon...

glad to have this solar powered/off grid house that we are house sitting til end of summer 2013. Things turned out well in the end for us.

Thats right ,power is so centralized ,whereas it needs to be decentralized and then they wouldnt have this problem but then they want to charge for it a tax it ect ,,,,,so screw them.

Serpo
20th November 2012, 04:19 PM
Hatha, i agree, and that is what i thought you meant in your earlier post.

the thought i've had lately is that we know the money is worthless, they know the money is worthless, but they still act as though it is the only thing of substance, and expect us to continue to blindly chase after this elaborate pipe dream they have conjured up.

Not only is it completely worthless but they cannot afford to print too much of the stuff so only about 6% is printed while the rest is recorded on a computer.If they did print it all then they would need massive buildings to store it all which dont exist at the moment.