Kudankulam nuclear power plant denies reports of cyber-attack

Update: 2019-10-29 09:58 GMT
The Union government wants to implement the first phase of the Market-based Economic Dispatch of Electricity (MBED) from April 1, 2022.

Rumours of a cyber-attack on the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNP), India’s largest nuclear power station, were on Tuesday (October 29) turned down by officials who said that such an attack was not possible since the KKNP network was an isolated one.

“Any cyber-attack on the Nuclear Power Plant Control System is not possible,” read a statement issued by the KKNP. It clarified that the network of the power plant was not connected to internet or any outsider cyber network.

The statement came after a Twitter user claimed that the power station’s domain controller access could have been compromised. According to unverified reports, the virus ‘DTrack RAT’ was said to have hit the KKNP network.

Reacting to the reports, Congress leader Shashi Tharoor sought an explanation from the government and said the issue seems to be “serious”.

“This seems very serious. If a hostile power is able to conduct a cyber-attack on our nuclear facilities, the implications for India’s national security are unimaginable. The Government owes us an explanation,” he tweeted.

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