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Cybersecurity capabilities for critical infrastructure resilience

Masike Malatji (Postgraduate School of Engineering Management, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Annlizé L. Marnewick (Postgraduate School of Engineering Management, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Suné Von Solms (Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Science, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa)

Information and Computer Security

ISSN: 2056-4961

Article publication date: 14 October 2021

Issue publication date: 29 March 2022

2251

Abstract

Purpose

For many innovative organisations, Industry 4.0 paves the way for significant operational efficiencies, quality of goods and services and cost reductions. One of the ways to realise these benefits is to embark on digital transformation initiatives that may be summed up as the intelligent interconnectivity of people, processes, data and cyber-connected things. Sadly, this interconnectivity between the enterprise information technology (IT) and industrial control systems (ICS) environment introduces new attack surfaces for critical infrastructure (CI) operators. As a result of the ICS cybersecurity risk introduced by the interconnectivity between the enterprise IT and ICS networks, the purpose of this study is to identify the cybersecurity capabilities that CI operators must have to attain good cybersecurity resilience.

Design/methodology/approach

A scoping literature review of best practice international CI protection frameworks, standards and guidelines were conducted. Similar cybersecurity practices from these frameworks, standards and guidelines were grouped together under a corresponding National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) cybersecurity framework (CF) practice. Practices that could not be categorised under any of the existing NIST CF practices were considered new insights, and therefore, additions.

Findings

A CI cybersecurity capability framework comprising 29 capability domains (cybersecurity focus areas) was developed as an adaptation of the NIST CF with an added dimension. This added dimension emphasises cloud computing and internet of things (IoT) security. Each of the 29 cybersecurity capability domains is executed through various capabilities (cybersecurity processes and procedures). The study found that each cybersecurity capability can further be operationalised by a set of cybersecurity controls derived from various frameworks, standards and guidelines, such as COBIT®, CIS®, ISA/IEC 62443, ISO/IEC 27002 and NIST Special Publication 800-53.

Practical implications

CI sectors are immediately able to adopt the CI cybersecurity capability framework to evaluate their levels of resilience against cyber-attacks, given new attack surfaces introduced by the interconnectivity of cyber-connected things between the enterprise and ICS levels.

Originality/value

The authors present an added dimension to the NIST framework for CI cyber protection. In addition to emphasising cryptography, IoT and cloud computing security aspects, this added dimension highlights the need for an integrated approach to CI cybersecurity resilience instead of a piecemeal approach.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: This research was funded by the Water Research Commission (WRC) of South Africa, grant number C2021/2023-00354.

Citation

Malatji, M., Marnewick, A.L. and Von Solms, S. (2022), "Cybersecurity capabilities for critical infrastructure resilience", Information and Computer Security, Vol. 30 No. 2, pp. 255-279. https://doi.org/10.1108/ICS-06-2021-0091

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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