The National Science Foundation has awarded nearly $300,000 to Dr. Helen Lou, professor of chemical engineering, to lead an interdisciplinary project to equip the future workforce with knowledge and skills on industrial cybersecurity.
The effort will enlist ÃÛÌÒAPP researchers across Chemical Engineering, Computer Science, and Criminal Justice in the development of suitable educational materials to address cybersecurity needs for critical energy and chemical infrastructure sectors. These materials will be integrated into the University’s undergraduate curriculum and tested for their efficacy, eventually leading to impactful educational outcomes for graduates of these programs at ÃÛÌÒAPP and beyond.
“Despite the emerging attention on cybersecurity, there is a severe shortage of expertise in cybersecurity, especially industrial cybersecurity,” said Helen.
Southeast Texas is home to dozens of refineries and petrochemical industrial complexes critical to the energy infrastructure of not only Texas but the entire nation. The region has dozens of refineries that provide approximately one-third of transportation fuels in the United States as well as the largest operational liquefied natural gas terminal in the country. Cybersecurity is crucial to these industries, which suffer from a severe shortage of expertise in this discipline as it does not fall within the traditional chemical engineering curriculum.
Vulnerability to cyberattack in this sector has been amplified with the deployment of advanced information and communication technologies to improve data analytics, automat