Friday, February 12, 2021

Cyberbioattack on a Florida Water Supply -- No one should be surprised

 It was only a matter of time until a cyberbiohacker emerged. Last week, a cyberbiohacker hacked into the operating system for a Florida municipal water utility, and got control of the chemical control code and tried to increase the sodium hydroxide from 100 to 11,100 parts per million.  Sodium hydroxide is "lye" and can cause injury or death if consumed.

A similar attack on infrastructure took place in Rye, New York, where hackers hacked into the control system of a dam and successfully managed to control the opening and closing of the gates -- had the gates not been in repair and inoperable, the flooding from opening the gates would have been life-threatening to the cities downstream. The perpetrators in that scheme turned out to be Iranian hackers, and they are on the Interpol red list, but unlikely that they will be leaving Iran. At the time, it was apparent that hacking into water systems and potentially poisoning the water was not only conceivable but likely. No one should be surprised with this attack.

The FBI might want to start with that team of cyberhackers with similar motives.

What is shockingly obvious is that we have let federalism get in the way of helping municipalities protect their water supply. Although local and state governments have jurisdiction to control their supplies, the federal government has long had jurisdiction over water quality through the Safe Drinking Water Act, and waste water treatment through the Clean Water Act. In fact, after 9/11, the Safe Drinking Water Act was amended to require security systems and fences installed around water systems to prevent terrorist attacks. 

Now that fences no longer protect water systems, it is time for Congress to focus on the urgent problems facing America, and protecting the water supply should be a top priority.


Article, Feb 9, 2021


Some water systems add some to prevent corrosion in the pipes.