
UNH's John Olson Advanced Manufacturing Center will be a test bed for research into cybersecurity in the manufacturing environment. 2019 photo.
UNH joins dozens of the nationâs leading research institutions in the (CyManII), a $111 million public-private partnership launched Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020. Led by the University of Texas at San Antonio, CyManII is a five-year cooperative agreement with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) that aggregates the most advanced institutions researching smart and advanced manufacturing, secure automation and supply chains, workforce development and cybersecurity.
A far cry from the sooty factory floors of the 20th century, todayâs âsmartâ factories are powered by massive amounts of data that control, sense and manage processes and supply chains. That makes these industrial infrastructures vulnerable to cyber-attacks that could compromise intellectual property and jeopardize American manufacturing jobs and workers.
âIf youâre a manufacturer, you really need to protect your data, whether itâs quality assurance data you send along your supply chain or intellectual property that keeps the machines on your own factory floor producing state-of-the-art products.â
âIf youâre a manufacturer, you really need to protect your data, whether itâs quality assurance data you send along your supply chain or intellectual property that keeps the machines on your own factory floor producing state-of-the-art products,â says Brad Kinsey, professor of mechanical engineering and UNH lead for CyManII.
As a member, UNH and industry partners will have access to funding for research in cybersecurity and manufacturing. For example, says Kinsey, UNHâs , which he directs, âcould be a great test bed for that idea of a cybersecurity manufacturing environment. We can showcase how we not only improve the manufacturing processes but also how we set up the firewalls to protect that data,â he says.
In addition to the Olson Center, CyManII will leverage the resources of UNHâs (IOL), as well as research strengths in software cybersecurity, wireless communication, networking, data-driven decision making, hardware cybersecurity and policy.
Faculty members likely to be involved include Kinsey, Pablo Yoon, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering; Dongpeng Xu, assistant professor of computer science; Nick Kirsch, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering; Bob Noseworthy, IOL chief engineer; Marek Petrik, assistant professor in computer science; Qiaoyan Yu, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering; and Maeve Dion, assistant professor of security studies at UNH Manchester.
Like ARMI, the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing Institute based in Manchester, CyManII aims to propel an area of manufacturing through collaborations among members from academia, industry, nonprofits and government. Kinsey says partnerships with New Hampshire and regional industry will be an essential component to any research, and that UNHâs CyManII involvement stands to advance the regionâs manufacturing sector.
âSecuring the data in our factories and across our supply chain is critical for Pratt & Whitney and will progress our advanced manufacturing efforts,â says Mike Newsky, associate director of manufacturing engineering at Pratt & Whitneyâs North Berwick, Maine, facility. âWe have a strong relationship with the Olson Center and are hopeful to continue collaboration in the future.â
CyManIIâs 59 proposed members include three DOE National Laboratories (Idaho National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Sandia National Laboratories), four Manufacturing Innovation Institutes, 24 powerhouse universities, including UNH, 18 industry leaders, and 10 nonprofits. This national network of members will drive impact across the nation and solve the biggest challenges facing cybersecurity in the U.S manufacturing industry.
âAs U.S. manufacturers increasingly deploy automation tools in their daily work, those technologies must be embedded with powerful cybersecurity protections,â saysÌęHoward Grimes, CyManII chief executive officer and UTSA associate vice president and associate vice provost for institutional initiatives. âUTSA has assembled a team of best-in-class national laboratories, industry, nonprofit and academic organizations to cybersecure the U.S. manufacturing enterprise. Together, we will share the mission to protect the nationâs supply chain, preserve its critical infrastructure and boost its economy.â
CyManII is funded by the âs and co-managed with the .
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Written By:
Beth Potier | UNH Marketing | beth.potier@unh.edu | 2-1566