This article repeatedly cites the need for personnel to have diplomas, certificates, and other ceremonial bits of paper.
This focus on paper qualification to mitigate risk seems a very European approach. Not saying it is wrong - it is just not emphasized as strongly elsewhere. And while it seems like a good fit for a slow-moving industry with high expectations of safety, the solar/wind world is not a slow-moving industry.
A good point - perhaps the focus is too heavy on paperwork or "measurable compliance".
From experience in this sector though, I think the real issue is a lack of technical awareness and competency with enough breadth to extend into the "digital" domain - often products like these are developed by people from the "power" domain (who don't necessarily recognise off the top of their head that 512-bit RSA is a #badthing and not enough to use to protect aggregated energy systems that are controllable from a single location).
Clearly formal diplomas/certificates are not needed for that - some practical hands-on knowledge and experience would help a lot there.
When a product gets a network interface on it, or runs programmable firmware, we should hear discussions about A/B boot, signatures, key revocation, crypto agility to enable post quantum cryptography algorithms, etc. Instead, the focus will be on low-cost development of a mobile app, controlled via the lowest-possible-cost vendor server back-end API that gets the product shipped to market quickly.
Let's not even go near the "embedded system" mindset of not patching and staying up to date - embedded systems are a good place to meet Linux 2.4 or 2.6, even today... Vendors ship whatever their CPU chipset vendor gives them as a board support package, generally as a "tossed over the wall" lump of code.
I doubt many of these issues (which seem to be commercial/price driven) will be resolved through paperwork, as you say.
In the rest of the tech industry, what you did to get your diploma gives you about 18 months of momentum. If you haven’t learned multiple new technologies by that point, you’re in trouble. Success in this industry means perpetually redeveloping your own skills, and liking it.
How someone would wave a 20 year old piece of paper as evidence that they know how to use solar tech that was developed last year, I don’t know.
I mean, electrical engineering teaches you a lot of the math,physics,and control systems theory, and power systems that guides the design and operating characteristic of power systems devices like inverters. Sure EE doesn’t help with cybersecurity per se, but inverters and solar panels existed 20 years ago so I feel like my 20 year old electrical engineering degree is pretty darn relevant
It certainly does - if you remain current then not a lot has really changed.
If you understand the principles of control systems and how an electrical grid works, this is broadly "just" a grid stability concern.
To some extent this feels like an issue of IoT-ification of things that we otherwise understood just fine! Maybe the real issue is how we blend cyber security knowledge into other sectors, and quantify and ensure it is present?
Fair enough, the parent comment mentioned “solar tech” and old pieces of paper and silly me didn’t realize that the power systems side works is a given and the problem is essentially hooking it up to computers and the internet to gain a modicum of convenience.
This focus on paper qualification to mitigate risk seems a very European approach. Not saying it is wrong - it is just not emphasized as strongly elsewhere. And while it seems like a good fit for a slow-moving industry with high expectations of safety, the solar/wind world is not a slow-moving industry.