Governance & Risk Management
,
Operational Technology (OT)
Hitachi Energy Security Head Joe Doetzl on Common Tools and Practices
The energy sector is undergoing rapid digital transformation to meet demands to power data centers, expand generation of renewable energy and modernize distribution. New connected systems that support distributed grid architectures are driving the need for convergence of IT systems and operational technologies, widening the threat landscape for cyber and kinetic attacks that cause widespread damage.
See Also: AI vs. AI: Leveling the Defense Playing Field
While IT and OT environments have traditionally been seen as two separate parts of the organization, security teams can use common tools and practices to protect both areas, said Joe Doetzl, head of cybersecurity at Hitachi Energy. In fact, the Zurich-based technology manufacturer designated a single leader for IT-OT environments years ago.
“The closer you can be to your business as a security professional, the more successful you’re going to be. While IT and OT security mandates differ, there are common aspects, and much of what we’re seeing can apply across the service portfolio,” Doetzl said.
Along with IT-OT convergence, cybersecurity tools are also becoming more effective for the entire enterprise, he said.
“The same tooling can be used to measure cybersecurity risk and to drive action plans,” he said. “The GRC aspect is the same. Our cyber defense center is ingesting information from our OT environments and from our IT environments. It’s going into the same technology stack. We’re using the same SIEM for triaging the alerts and the same people for managing incidents.”
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Doetzl also discussed:
- The benefits of sharing threat intelligence;
- Mitigating risk in the supply chain;
- Security regulation trends in the energy sector.
Doetzl joined Hitachi Energy’s predecessor in 2014 and has more than 25 years of IT and OT cybersecurity experience. He has designed and implemented enterprise-wide cybersecurity and compliance programs for the energy sector and has built and led high-performing teams through crisis management, security incident response and securing industrial control systems. Doetzl, a Certified Information Systems Security Professional, has created and led cybersecurity programs for electric utilities and audited numerous North American utilities for compliance to the NERC CIP standards.

