What is the Cyber Resilience Act?

The Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) is a European regulation that imposes requirements on Cybersecurity in hardware and software products placed on the EU market. The aim is to ensure that digital products are designed, developed, sold and maintained securely throughout their entire lifecycle.

For OT, this means that suppliers of products such as PLCs, industrial routers, HMIs or Industrial Internet of Things devices are required to develop and maintain their products securely β€” including updates and vulnerability management.


🧠 What does the Cyber Resilience Act cover?

  1. Security by Design β€” security must be built in from the start of product development
  2. Vulnerability management β€” suppliers must follow up and remediate disclosed vulnerabilities
  3. Notification duty β€” exploits or serious weaknesses must be reported to ENISA within 24 hours
  4. Update obligation β€” security updates must be provided in a timely manner and at no extra cost
  5. User information β€” products must be supplied with clear information on security and support duration

πŸ“¦ Scope in OT

Example component CRA application
PLC or RTU Firmware must be secure, updates traceable and verified
Industrial router Must offer secure default configuration and an update process
SCADA software Supplier must publish and patch vulnerabilities
Sensor with network interface Counts as a β€œconnected device”, so subject to the CRA
Engineering software Subject to documentation, logging and update requirements

The CRA also applies to IT components used indirectly in OT, such as embedded operating systems, databases and update agents.


βœ… Key obligations for vendors

Requirement Impact for industrial vendors
Secure default settings Products may not ship with insecure default passwords
Minimum support period Vendors must provide updates for a defined period
Vulnerability documentation Products must be supplied with their known security risks
Logging and audit trail For certain classes, the product must support basic logging functions
Maintenance and patch process Update mechanisms must be secure, controlled and transparent

πŸ” Relationship to other regulations

Regulation / standard Relationship to the CRA
NIS2 The CRA supports NIS2 objectives for secure production chains
IEC 62443 IEC 62443 overlaps with the design principles of the CRA
CE marking The CRA becomes part of CE conformity for digital products
ENISA vulnerability database Vendors must register known vulnerabilities there

The CRA goes hand in hand with existing OT security standards but imposes legally binding requirements on product security.


πŸ“Œ In summary

The Cyber Resilience Act requires vendors of digital products to embed Cybersecurity structurally. For OT, this means that all networked components β€” from field sensor to SCADA server β€” must meet requirements for secure development, vulnerability management and long-term maintenance.