Title: CARVER Shock
1- CARVER Shock
- Vulnerability Assessments
- Strategic Partnership Program Agroterrorism
(SPPA) - Donald Kautter, Jr.
- Food and Drug Administration, DHHS
- Office of Food Safety, Defense, and Outreach
- Multistate Partnership Meeting
- April 19, 2006
2Why Are We Concerned about Food and Agriculture
Defense?
- No specific targeting information indicating
attack on food supply is imminent - Intelligence indicates that terrorists have
discussed components of food sector - Manuals for intentional contamination of food are
widely available - Concern exists for exploitation of soft targets,
such as the food supply
3Why Are We Concerned about Food Defense?
- Use of biological or chemical weapons against
food supply could cause mass casualties - Even an ineffective attack could cause
significant economic and psychological damage - Severity of attack dependant upon agent and
attack scenario used, and efficiency and
effectiveness of detection and response
4Risk Assessments Food Defense
5How does risk assessment help address food
defense?
- Focus limited resources on foods and agents that
are of greatest concern - Allows targeting of resources in the following
areas - Research
- Analytical methods (rapid and confirmatory)
- Nature of disease (e.g., oral infective dose)
- Food-agent compatibility
- Food processing mitigation steps
- Physical security mitigation steps
6How does risk assessment help address food
defense?
- Selection of countermeasures
- Emergency response preparedness
- Preparedness exercises
- Sufficient laboratory capacity/capability
- Sufficient medical mitigations
- Effective disposal/clean-up methods
- Allows targeting of outreach to stakeholders
- Guidance
- Industry and regulator training
- Communication
7Initial Agency Risk Rankings
- Conducted after 9/11/01 prior to CARVER analyses
- Assessed and ranked risk of product-agent-process
combinations - Prioritize foods that warrant more detailed
analysis - Evaluated public health consequences only.
- Did not consider other consequences (economic
damage, public alarm, loss of confidence in the
food supply and in the government, interruption
of the food stream)
8Findings of Initial Food Risk Rankings
- Foods and agents of greatest concern
- Common vulnerability factors
- Large batch size large number of servings
- Short shelf life rapid turnaround at retail and
rapid consumption - Uniform mixing of contaminant into food
- Easy accessibility to product at critical node
9Why Use CARVER?
- Simplifies and standardizes the process
- Breaks down exposure and hazard into
characteristics that are easily defined and can
be examined independently - Provides a measurable scale for each of the
characteristics to facilitate quantitative
assessment - Examines public health, economic, and
psychological consequences of an attack - Offensive targeting tool used by the U.S. military
10CARVER Overview
- Breaks a food system into its smallest pieces
(nodes) in the farm to table continuum - Identifies critical nodes that are the most
likely targets for terrorist attack, by applying
the analysis to each node - Leads to the identification of countermeasures to
reduce the risk at those nodes
11CARVER METHOD
- Identify foods for evaluation - based on
screening methods - Assemble evaluation team potential expertise,
depending on food or agriculture system being
evaluated, might include
12CARVER METHOD
- Develop flow diagram for each product Farm to
Table - Farm
- Bulk transportation
- Processing
- Finished product transportation
- Warehousing
- Retail/food service
- Develop terrorist profile based on threat
intelligence and use throughout analysis
13CARVER Shock
- Considers seven factors that affect the
desirability of a target - Criticality Public health and economic impacts
to achieve the attackers intent - Accessibility Physical access to the target
- Recuperability Ability of the system to recover
from the attack - Vulnerability Ease of accomplishing the attack
- Effect Amount of direct loss from an attack
- Recognizability Ease of identifying a target
- Shock Psychological effects of an attack
14CARVER
- Criticality A target is critical when
introduction of threat agents into food/system at
this location would have significant health or
economic impact. . - One must ask Does it achieve the goals of the
terrorist profile?
15CARVER
- Accessibility A target is accessible when an
attacker can reach the target to conduct the
attack and egress the target undetected.
Accessibility is the openness of the target to
the threat. This measure is independent of the
probability of successful introduction of threat
agents. - Includes the ability to gather intelligence,
conduct reconnaissance, conduct the attack, and
leave the target undetected. - One must ask What are the barriers to an attack?
16CARVER
- Recuperability Measured in the time it will
take for the specific facility to recover
productivity. The effect of a possible decrease
in demand is considered in this criterion.
17CARVER
- Vulnerability A measure of the ease with which
threat agents can be introduced in quantities
sufficient to achieve the attackers purpose once
the target has been reached. - Vulnerability is determined both by
- characteristics of the target (e.g., ease of
introducing agents, ability to uniformly mix
agents into target) and - characteristics of the surrounding environment
(ability to work unobserved, time available for
introduction of agents). - It is also important to consider what
interventions are already in place that might
thwart an attack.
18CARVER
- Effect of system productivity damaged by an
attack at a single facility. Thus, effect is
inversely related to the total number of
facilities producing the same product .
19CARVER
- Recognizability The degree to which it can be
identified by an attacker without confusion with
other targets or components . - Factors that influence recognizability
- Size of the target
- Complexity of the target
- Existence of distinguishing characteristics
20Shock
- Combined measure of the health, psychological,
and collateral national economic impacts of a
successful attack on the target system. - Shock is considered on a national level.
- The psychological impact will be increased if
there are a large number of deaths or the target
has historical, cultural, religious or other
symbolic significance. - Mass casualties are not required to achieve
widespread economic loss or psychological damage.
- Collateral economic damage includes such items as
decreased national economic activity, increased
unemployment in collateral industries, etc. - Psychological impact will be increased if victims
are members of sensitive subpopulations such as
children or the elderly.
21Strategic Partnership Program Agroterrorism
(SPPA) Initiative
22SPPA Overview
- What
- FDA, USDA, DHS, and FBI will collaborate with
industry and States in a joint initiative to - Validate and identify critical infrastructure and
key resources within the food and agriculture
system - Identify early indicators and warnings
- Develop focused intelligence collection
strategies - Identify mitigation strategies
23SPPA Overview
- How
- Seeking voluntary industry and state partners to
conduct local assessments. - USG will work with commodity group trade
associations to increase the number of firms
conducting the assessment. - A site visit will be conducted at food and
agriculture sites that represent the
industry/commodity group. - The actual assessment will take place in a
facility conference room or hotel conference room.
24Program Objectives
- In partnership with industry and States
- Validate or identify sector-wide vulnerabilities
by conducting critical infrastructure/key
resources (CI/KR) assessments in order to - Identify gaps
- Inform Centers of Excellence and Sector Specific
Agencies (SSA) of identified research needs and - Catalog lessons-learned.
25Program Objectives
- In partnership with industry and States
- Identify indicators and warnings that could
signify planning for an attack - Develop mitigation strategies to reduce the
threat/prevent an attack. Strategies may include
actions that either industry or that government
may take to reduce vulnerabilities - Gather information to enhance existing tools that
both USG and industry employ - Validate assessments conducted by the USG for the
food and agriculture sector
26Implementation
- The Sector Specific Agency (FDA or USDA) will
lead site coordination and visit - Teams will include
- USG reps (FDA, USDA, DHS, FBI)
- Industry reps/trade association
- State and local reps (State Dept. of Health,
State Dept. of Ag, FDA, USDA, law enforcement,
vets, etc) - Contractor support
- Pre-planning and follow on reporting for each
visit will consist of approximately 9 weeks (4
week prep and 4 week follow-up). All will be
adjusted based on USG and industry needs
27Criteria List of Foods
- Beef cattle feedlot
- Citrus
- Corn farm
- Dairy farm
- Poultry farm
- Rice mill
- Seed production facility
- Soybean farm
- Swine production facility
- Veterinary biologics farm
- Deli meats
- Grain elevator/Grain export handling facility
- Ground beef processing facility
- Hot dog processing
- Liquid eggs
- Retailers
- School kitchens
- Warehouses
- Yogurt
- Animal foods/feeds
- Baby food
- Deli salads
- Dietary supplements
- Flour
- Frozen entrees
- Fruit juice
- Gum arabic
- High fructose corn syrup
- Honey
- Ice cream
- Infant formula
- Milk
- Peanut butter
- Produce
- Seafood
- Soft drinks
- Spices
- Vitamins
28Deliverables/Outcomes
- Working Notes that will be developed and approved
by industry participants and distributed to all
attendees. - Classified report from each site visit will
detail critical nodes, vulnerabilities, possible
mitigation strategies, and potential warnings and
indicators. - Information gathered will be shared with the Food
and Ag Sector and help populate the National
Asset Database. - Vulnerability assessment tool for each industry
sub-sector that incorporates existing tools. - Sector-specific investigative templates and field
guides for food and agriculture intelligence
sector. - Identify and validate RD initiatives related to
the food and agriculture sector.
29Overarching Observations (thus far)
- Out of CARVER categories, industry can
influence/affect vulnerability and accessibility.
- Mitigation strategies are sensitive part of the
discussion, though vital. Many best practices
and flow of ideas help foster discussion. - Participation of trade associations are key to a
successful exercise. - Provide general ranges and serve as broker during
discussions involving proprietary information.
30Overarching Observations (thus far)
- Many research gaps regarding properties and
characteristics of agents in specific commodities
- Desire to know what is and isnt possible for
public message - Need to develop a system for prioritization,
tasking, and system to relay results back to
industry. - Research will be key to mitigating food defense
threats and issues - CFSAN reprioritize of food safety research to
food defense research - NCFST Industry need to foster discussion of
increased food defense research activities
31Industry/State Volunteers
- Requesting industry and state volunteers for the
site visits/assessments. Your involvement is
important and critical to success - Interested parties should contact the appropriate
SSA (FDA or USDA) with available dates for the
assessment - Submit your request to
- Donald Kautter FDA
- Diane DiPietro USDA
32Points of Contact
- FDA Donald Kautter, 301-436-1629
- Donald.Kautter_at_fda.hhs.gov
- USDA Diane DiPietro, 202-720-7654
Diane.Dipietro_at_usda.gov - FBI Megan Coward, 202-324-2562
Megan.Coward_at_ic.fbi.gov - DHS John Martin, 202-447-3044 John.D.Martin_at_dhs.g
ov
33Want to Know More about CARVER Shock?CARVER
Assessment Training April 20, 20068AM 1PM