Lithuania Solar Cybersecurity Rules Expose Europe’s Renewable Remote Access Risks
The post Lithuania Solar Cybersecurity Rules Expose Europe’s Renewable Remote Access Risks appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Grid operators in Lithuania can now disconnect solar plants above 100 kilowatts that lack required cybersecurity measures. 2. A solar installation in Lithuania. New rules test whether Europe can impose security boundaries on distributed renewable assets after they are already deployed and remotely connected. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) Getty Images Lithuania’s grid operators can now disconnect solar plants above 100 kilowatts that fail new cybersecurity rules. That sounds like narrow local regulation. It isn’t. It is one of the clearest signs yet that Europe’s renewable build-out has become a critical-infrastructure problem as much as a climate one. For utilities, storage developers, infrastructure investors and regulators, the question is no longer just how fast to add solar and batteries. It is who still holds remote access once those assets