"The NIPP is the path forward on building and enhancing protective measures for the critical infrastructure assets and cyber systems that sustain commerce and communities throughout the United States," said DHS Under Secretary for Preparedness George Foresman. "The NIPP formalizes and strengthens existing critical infrastructure partnerships and creates the baseline for how the public and private sectors will work together to build a safer, more secure and resilient America."
The vast majority of the nation's critical infrastructure is owned and operated by private industry or state, tribal and local governments. The NIPP represents an unprecedented initiative at all levels of government and among private industry, tribal partners and nongovernmental agencies, to build an overarching structure that integrates critical infrastructure security efforts, sets protection goals and supporting objectives, and focuses resources according to risk.
HSPD 7 identified seventeen critical infrastructure and key resource sectors that require protective actions for a terrorist attack or other hazards. Those sectors include: agriculture and food; energy; public health and healthcare; banking and finance; drinking waters and water treatment systems; information technology; telecommunications; postal and shipping; transportation systems including mass transit, aviation, maritime, ground or surface, and rail and pipeline systems; chemical; commercial facilities; government facilities; emergency services; dams; nuclear reactors, materials and waste; the defense industrial base; and national monuments and icons.
Sector-Specific Plans that complement the NIPP and detail the risk management framework will be released within 180 days. These plans will address unique characteristics and risk landscapes, and they will be developed in collaboration with sector specific security partners.