Cyber Attacks on Power Grids: Causes and Propagation of Cascading Failures

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Vetrivel Subramaniam Rajkumar (TU Delft - Intelligent Electrical Power Grids)

Alexandru Stefanov (TU Delft - Intelligent Electrical Power Grids)

Alfan Presekal (TU Delft - Intelligent Electrical Power Grids)

Peter Palensky (TU Delft - Electrical Sustainable Energy)

JL Rueda Torres (TU Delft - Intelligent Electrical Power Grids)

Research Group
Intelligent Electrical Power Grids
Copyright
© 2023 Vetrivel Subramaniam Rajkumar, Alexandru Stefanov, A. Presekal, P. Palensky, José L. Rueda
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2023.3317695
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 Vetrivel Subramaniam Rajkumar, Alexandru Stefanov, A. Presekal, P. Palensky, José L. Rueda
Research Group
Intelligent Electrical Power Grids
Volume number
11
Pages (from-to)
103154-103176
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Cascading effects in the power grid involve an uncontrolled, successive failure of elements. The root cause of such failures is the combined occurrence of multiple, statistically rare events that may result in a blackout. With increasing digitalisation, power systems are vulnerable to emergent cyber threats. Furthermore, such threats are not statistically limited and can simultaneously occur at multiple locations. In the absence of real-world attack information, however, it is imperative to investigate if and how cyber attacks can cause power system cascading failures. Hence, in this work we present a fundamental analysis of the connection between the cascading failure mechanism and cyber security. We hypothesise and demonstrate how cyber attacks on power grids may cause cascading failures and a blackout. To do so, we perform a systematic survey of major historic blackouts caused by physical disturbances, and examine the cascading failure mechanism. Subsequently, we identify critical cyber-physical factors that can activate and influence it. We then infer and discuss how cyber attack vectors can enable these factors to cause and accelerate cascading failures. A synthetic case-study and software-based simulation results prove our hypothesis. This analysis enables future research into cyber resilience of power grids.