A broken ethernet cable is seen in front of binary code and words 鈥渃yber security鈥 in this illustration taken on March 8, 2022. 鈥 REUTERS

THE GOVERNMENT needs to develop systems to deter possible cyberattacks on the Philippines鈥 energy infrastructure, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. said on Monday.

鈥淲e are continuing to shore up our defenses when it comes to cybersecurity,鈥 Mr. Marcos said in a speech in Malaca帽ang after the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA) and National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP) signed a deal to boost cybersecurity.

鈥淪ince NGCP is a critical part of our security, of our ability to continue to function as a society, then this is an important day because now we have made more robust the defenses against any possible attacks on our power systems, on any other elements in our everyday lives that require power,鈥 he said.

Under the deal, the NGCP will share 鈥渧ital information鈥 on energy-related security issues and provide technical advice to the NICA, which is tasked to recommend actions in safeguarding the grid agency鈥檚 transmission assets.聽

Mr. Marcos said there have been fears that the involvement of any foreign entity in the power transmission system 鈥渨ould present a security threat to the Philippines.鈥

The partnership between NGCP and NICA is a 鈥渧ery good step towards answering that challenge,鈥 he said.

The State Grid Corp. of China has had a 40% stake in NGCP since 2008, which has raised fears of possible Chinese interference in the country鈥檚 energy infrastructure.

In February 2020, Filipino senators expressed concern that the Philippines鈥 national security might have been compromised after an NGCP official disclosed that their system had been attacked 鈥渁 hundred times already in just the past few weeks.鈥

Senator Ana Theresia 鈥淩isa鈥 Hontiveros warned at the time that the Chinese could switch off the grid any time. She said China may not even need to hack into the Philippine鈥檚 transmission grid to remotely disable it given that the supervisory control and data acquisition network used to control the NGCP鈥檚 power transmission facilities is supplied by NARI Group Corp., which is also a Chinese state-owned entity.

Meanwhile, Mr. Marcos compared the conflicts caused by the industrial revolution to the problems that the world faces today due to digital technologies.

鈥淔or example, in the early 20th century in the First World War, industry was labor intensive. Hence, trench warfare,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd in the Second World War, we had industrialized our businesses, and hence, it was machinery and the production of airplanes and tanks that won the war. And now, we do our business through cyberspace.鈥

Mr. Marcos said the government is now 鈥渄eveloping our cyber systems so that we are secure and so that the data that we need to collect and to disseminate are available to us.鈥

Boosting the country鈥檚 cybersecurity systems would also 鈥渆nsure that we are able to do and handle data in a secure fashion without the risk of it being used somehow against the Philippines.鈥

鈥淟et this be an example to all the other sectors that could be assessed to be at risk when it comes to cybersecurity,鈥 Mr. Marcos said. 鈥淚t is a good example for the rest of our infrastructure, and I talk about hard and soft infrastructure.鈥

The Marcos administration seeks to boost investments in the Philippine energy sector to attract more foreign investors.聽

In January, Energy Secretary Raphael P.M. Lotilla told Chinese investors the Philippine government was prioritizing the integration of renewable sources of energy into the country鈥檚 power system. 鈥 Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza