Examination of the Critical Infrastructure Resilience Directive From the Maritime Point of View

IF 3.3 1区 社会学 Q1 ECONOMICS
Marcos Julien Alexopoulos, Arto Niemi, Bartosz Skobiej, Frank Sill Torres
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Abstract

This article evaluates the implementation challenges of the Critical Entities Resilience (CER) Directive in comparison with the Network and Information Security (NIS) Directive and the Floods Directive (FD) within the European Union (EU). CER, which aims to enhance the resilience of critical entities, including critical maritime infrastructure, allows for considerable interpretative flexibility by Member States in defining critical entities and security measures. This flexibility could lead to heterogeneous impacts, introducing inconsistencies that hinder the functioning of the single market, and thereby resilience uniformity across the EU. In contrast, the FD's structured approach with clear objectives and detailed reporting requirements has led to a more consistent and effective implementation. This paper argues that the lack of specificity in the CER Directive may undermine its effectiveness. It suggests that adopting a more structured approach similar to the FD could improve the implementation consistency and resilience of critical entities across the EU.

从海事角度审视关键基础设施弹性指令
本文与欧盟(EU)内的网络和信息安全(NIS)指令和洪水指令(FD)相比,评估了关键实体弹性(CER)指令的实施挑战。CER旨在增强关键实体(包括关键海事基础设施)的弹性,允许成员国在定义关键实体和安全措施方面具有相当大的解释灵活性。这种灵活性可能会导致不同的影响,导致不一致,从而阻碍单一市场的运作,从而在整个欧盟范围内恢复统一。相比之下,FD的结构化方法有明确的目标和详细的报告要求,使其实施更加一致和有效。本文认为,CER指令缺乏特异性可能会影响其有效性。它表明,采用类似于FD的更结构化的方法可以提高整个欧盟关键实体的实施一致性和弹性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
18.20%
发文量
137
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