Industry 4.0 represents the vision of smart, interconnected
factories where cyber-physical production systems (CPPS) enable advanced
capabilities through tight integration of industrial operational technologies
(OT) and information technologies (IT). The increased connectivity and
automation capabilities of Industry 4.0 cyber-physical production systems
(CPPS) create significant cyber-security vulnerabilities in supervisory control
and data acquisition (SCADA) environments if robust protections are not properly
implemented. Legacy industrial control systems and new IP-enabled sensors,
instruments, controllers, and appliances often lack basic safeguards like
encryption, rigorous access controls, and endpoint security. This exposes
manufacturers to substantial risks of cyberattacks that could manipulate,
disrupt, or disable critical physical assets and processes related to their
production lines and facilities. This study proposes a comprehensive
cybersecurity framework to reduce the challenges faced by SCADA environments.
The framework employs various measures such as granular access controls,
network micro-segmentation, anomaly detection, encrypted communications, and
legacy system upgrades to strengthen the security of SCADA environments. The
multilayered defense-in-depth (DID) approach is able to combine policies,
processes, and technologies to counter emerging vulnerabilities. The
methodology was adopted in an electronics manufacturing facility, covering
aspects such as access control, zoning, monitoring, and encryption. Results
show security improvements, including 57.4% fewer unauthorized access events,
41.2% faster threat containment, and 79.2% fewer hacking attempts. The
quantified metrics highlight the CPPS resilience and threat mitigation
capabilities enabled by the securely designed SCADA architecture, which allows
manufacturers to confidently pursue Industry 4.0 integration and digital
transformation with minimized disruption. Organizations must balance costs
against the risks of cyber incidents in their unique environment. Further
research is needed to streamline and simplify management across disparate
tools.
Author(s)details:-
Eric Wai
Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, The Hong Kong
Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China.
C. K. M.
Lee
Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, The Hong Kong
Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China and Research Institute of Advanced
Manufacturing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China.
Please See
the book here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/strufp/v2/12542F
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