In this section:
The EC-RRG promotes the availability of electronic communications infrastructures in the UK and provides an industry emergency response capability through ownership and maintenance of the National Emergency Plan for the Telecommunications Sector.
The Group is chaired by an industry representative and hosted by BIS (the Department for Business Innovation and Skills). The current chair (2010/11) is Geoff Eveleigh of O2. The Group meets quarterly: a Strategy Board is convened to shape the agenda of the Plenary session at which all members are invited to participate.
The Group takes the lead in developing and maintaining co-operation between the telecommunication industry and government through:
The Terms of Reference provide further details of the Group.
Members are expected to be responsible for, or involved in, the management of their employer’s emergency or business continuity planning arrangements.
Members who have subscribed to the National Resilience Extranet (NRE) have access to the secure shared EC-RRG Forum Group. The NRE is a secure web-based browser tool that enables the UK resilience community to access key information up to and including RESTRICTED for multi-agency working and communication.
Information posted on the Forum includes:
Working Groups have been established to focus on specific telecommunications resilience enhancing objectives that include:
The following documents delivered by the Group may be of assistance in developing arrangements for business continuity and emergency planning:
NEAT is a protocol for sharing information among members of the Group. NEAT is triggered in the event of circumstances that may effect the operation of telecommunications networks where the impact is felt by two or more service providers. The process provides a conduit for information between industry members of the Group, between industry and government and within members’ organisations enabling the widest possible picture of impacts to be assessed. Members of the Group meet virtually and assemble a situation report. The report provides a shared understanding of the situation which becomes central to determining actions that are needed to rectify any identified problems. A shared understanding has been found to be particularly valuable at the outset of a response to an incident when the situation is often at its most ambiguous.
NEAT has been central to providing a telecommunications sector response to incidents that have included: the bombs in Central London (2005); the explosion and fire that engulfed the oil depot at Buncefield, England (2005) and the flooding that inundated Gloucester in central England (2007). The NEAT protocol was integrated into Exercise White Noise a Department for Business Innovation and Skills led exercise held in November 2009 that simulated a sector response to a major telecommunications incident. Exercise White Noise formed part of the National Preparedness Programme annual exercise series and brought together the relevant parts of Government, including the Devolved Administrations, with industry partners to test the response to a failure of the UK telecommunication network. The end of exercise report Guidelines provides an overview of the exercise and key learning points.
Confidence in the NEAT protocol is maintained through regular testing that contact can be established with members and specific aspects of the protocol have been exercised annually since 2004 through the EMPEX exercise programme.