TierOne Regenerated Faithful
ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSE RISK ADVISORY & RESILIENCE SOLUTIONS

Protecting America’s Critical Infrastructure from Systemic Electronic Failure

TierOne helps critical infrastructure leaders assess, design, and implement EMP resilience for the systems they cannot afford to lose.

For boards, CIOs, CISOs, operators, utility leaders, mission-critical data center owners, and resilience leaders responsible for continuity under extreme disruption.

Executive Education Risk & Dependency Assessments Mitigation & Resilient Design Implementation & Validation
37 YearsIT and infrastructure leadership
Pioneered 1st 2 U.S. ImplementationsFinancial-sector EMP-protected data centers
43+ YearsShielding and EMP engineering expertise
Boards CISOs / CIOs Critical Infrastructure Leaders Data Center Operators Risk & Resilience Owners
Energy
Water
Comms
IT
Finance
Healthcare
Mission Focus Our expertise is EMP resilience, infrastructure dependency analysis, mission-critical continuity planning, and implementation for the organizations that keep our nation running.
WHY TIERONE

Rare Experience for a High-Consequence Risk

EMP resilience requires more than awareness. It requires leadership that understands infrastructure, dependencies, implementation, and the operational realities of mission-critical environments.

PROOF POINT

Rare U.S. Implementation Experience

TierOne is led by practitioners associated with the first known commercial EMP-protected data center implementations in the United States financial sector.

PROOF POINT

Executive + Engineering Lens

We combine senior enterprise leadership experience with world-class EMP engineering expertise to translate technical risk into boardroom-ready action.

PROOF POINT

End-to-End Lifecycle Delivery

From executive education and exposure assessment to mitigation planning, implementation oversight, validation, and sustainment.

PROOF POINT

Critical Infrastructure Focus

We support organizations whose failure would not remain isolated, because they operate systems other sectors depend on.

WHY NOW

The Threat Environment Has Changed Faster Than Infrastructure Assumptions

Modern infrastructure was not designed for today’s threat environment. Adversaries increasingly employ asymmetric strategies, advanced weapons technologies, and disruption methods aimed at complex, electronically dependent systems.

EXECUTIVE FRAMING

Modern infrastructure was not designed for today’s threat environment.

Minimal redundancy, deep electronic dependency, and operational interconnection have created a risk environment far different from what many continuity assumptions were built around.

Electromagnetic Pulse is not just a national security issue. It is a continuity, fiduciary, operational, and reputational risk issue for leaders responsible for systems that cannot fail together.
THREAT CHARACTERISTICS
Increased geopolitical tension among peer and near-peer adversaries
Expansion of asymmetric warfare capabilities
Rapid proliferation of advanced weapons technologies
Heavy reliance on highly interconnected digital infrastructure
Minimal redundancy and resilience in critical systems
WHY IT MATTERS

Modern Civilization Depends on Fragile Electronic Infrastructure

Organizations have invested heavily in modernization, cybersecurity, cloud adoption, automation, and digital efficiency. Far fewer have evaluated whether their most critical systems can continue operating through severe electromagnetic disruption.

THE CORE ISSUE

Efficiency has outpaced resilience.

That gap matters because EMP does not behave like a routine outage. When electronic controls, communications pathways, and digital infrastructure degrade together, continuity assumptions can fail at the same time.

Resilience gaps are often invisible until systems are stressed. That is what makes EMP a leadership issue, not just a technical one.
EXECUTIVE CONSEQUENCE

When electronic systems fail together, consequences cascade.

Operational continuity weakens as controls, coordination, and visibility degrade together
Recovery assumptions break down when external infrastructure does not recover on schedule
Revenue, service delivery, and public trust come under pressure simultaneously
Regulatory, fiduciary, and reputational exposure rise as disruption spreads across dependencies
DEPENDENCY 1

Electronic Controls

Operations increasingly rely on digital controls, automation, sensors, and managed switching environments.

DEPENDENCY 2

Communications

Response, coordination, public messaging, and routine operations all depend on resilient communications pathways.

DEPENDENCY 3

Digital Infrastructure

Applications, data centers, cloud services, and identity systems now sit at the center of continuity planning.

CASCADE VISUALIZATION

How EMP disruption can cascade across America’s critical infrastructure

This executive visualization illustrates how a severe EMP impact can first destabilize the grid, then ripple through foundational lifeline systems, and ultimately spread into broader sector families that depend on power, communications, water, and digital infrastructure.

Most continuity plans assume external dependencies recover. This visualization shows what happens when they do not.

EMP Cascade Simulation
Grid strike → foundational sector disruption → cross-sector operational cascade
Initial Strike Bulk Power Grid Generation • transmission • substations • controls
Foundational Energy Voltage instability • controls • restoration delay
Foundational Water & Wastewater Pumping • treatment • telemetry degradation
Foundational Communications Signal routing • towers • network coordination
Foundational Information Technology Data centers • cloud dependencies • digital operations
Sector Family Transportation Movement slows as energy and signal certainty fall
Sector Family Critical Manufacturing Automation and industrial throughput are disrupted
Sector Family Healthcare Clinical continuity degrades under utility stress
Sector Family Emergency Services Coordination pressure rises as comms pathways weaken
Sector Family Financial Services Transactions, clearing, and digital trust are stressed
Sector Family Government Continuity, public messaging, and response orchestration strain
Live Narrative
Grid disruption emerges

An EMP event first strikes the electrical backbone. Initial voltage disturbance and control-system disruption create uncertainty before wider consequences are visible.

Initial impact zone
Foundational lifeline sectors
Broader dependent sector families
Visible cascade / exposure propagation
OUR SERVICES

Guiding Organizations from Awareness to Resilience

A disciplined 6-step lifecycle process that moves leaders from risk awareness into engineering, implementation, validation, and sustainment.

1. EMP FOUNDATION PACKAGE

Understand the Risk. Establish the Baseline.

Executive briefings designed to build awareness using business, fiduciary, operational, and strategic language.

  • Executive EMP awareness briefings
  • Boardroom-ready threat framing
  • Critical infrastructure context
  • Risk vocabulary for leadership alignment
2. EMP RISK ASSESSMENT PACKAGE

Identify Vulnerabilities. Quantify Exposure.

Detailed assessment work to identify where infrastructure, facilities, and critical systems are most exposed.

  • Asset inventory and criticality review
  • Dependency mapping and vulnerability analysis
  • Sector-aligned risk scoring
  • Executive-ready findings and recommendations
3. EMP ENGINEERING & DESIGN PACKAGE

Protection. Design for Resilience.

Translate assessment results into engineered EMP protection architecture and phased mitigation plans.

  • EMP shielding and facility hardening concepts
  • Grounding and surge mitigation planning
  • Architecture and implementation sequencing
  • Design documentation support
4. IMPLEMENTATION & HARDENING PACKAGE

Build the Protection. Reduce the Risk.

Execution support to move from concept into operational deployment with strong project discipline.

  • Installation oversight
  • Vendor and partner coordination
  • Program and project management discipline
  • Documentation and implementation governance
5. EMP TESTING & VALIDATION PACKAGE

Trust but Verify.

Post-implementation validation to confirm the protection performs as intended and identify residual gaps.

  • Protection effectiveness testing
  • Engineering review and verification
  • Degradation identification
  • Audit-ready validation reporting
6. EMP SUSTAINMENT & ASSURANCE PACKAGE

Protect the Protection.

Ongoing sustainment to ensure the resilience posture remains current as systems, infrastructure, and risks evolve.

  • Periodic reassessment
  • Degradation monitoring
  • Change-impact analysis
  • Ongoing advisory support
EXECUTIVE OFFER

Request a Confidential Executive EMP Briefing

A focused discussion for boards, operators, and infrastructure leaders evaluating EMP exposure, continuity risk, and resilience priorities.

WHO WE SERVE

Supporting Leaders Across All 16 Critical Infrastructure Sectors

TierOne supports owners, operators, regulators, security leaders, and strategic suppliers across the systems modern civilization depends on. Our work is especially relevant for organizations with high consequence of outage, complex external dependencies, long restoration risk, or public-facing continuity obligations.

Foundational Lifeline Systems

Core utilities and digital systems that enable nearly every other sector.

SECTOR

Energy

Generation, transmission, and control environments.

SECTOR

Water & Wastewater Systems

Treatment, pumping, control, and continuity systems.

SECTOR

Communications

Voice, data, routing, and coordination pathways.

SECTOR

Information Technology

Digital infrastructure, computing, and control systems.

Essential Logistics and Public Health

Operational systems that move people, goods, services, and essential health resources.

SECTOR

Transportation Systems

Mobility, routing, fueling, signaling, and logistics.

SECTOR

Healthcare & Public Health

Care delivery and public health operations.

SECTOR

Food & Agriculture

Production, refrigeration, processing, and distribution.

SECTOR

Chemical

Industrial processes and critical materials handling.

Economic and Industrial Backbone

Sectors that sustain production capacity, financial flow, built environments, and economic continuity.

SECTOR

Critical Manufacturing

Production ecosystems with strategic importance.

SECTOR

Financial Services

Payments, settlement, and digital economic operations.

SECTOR

Commercial Facilities

Large-scale commercial environments and business sites.

SECTOR

Dams

Water flow, flood management, and related infrastructure.

Governance, Security and National Functions

Institutions and systems tied to public continuity, response, national security, and high-consequence oversight.

SECTOR

Government Facilities

Administration, command, and continuity of functions.

SECTOR

Emergency Services

Response, dispatch, and operational readiness.

SECTOR

Defense Industrial Base

Industrial and support capabilities tied to defense readiness.

SECTOR

Nuclear Reactors, Materials & Waste

Highly sensitive control and monitoring environments.

SECTOR PROTECTION POSTURE

Illustrative Current Protection vs. Remaining EMP Exposure Gap

Every critical infrastructure sector is essential. Every sector is vulnerable. This illustrative model shows where sectors may generally sit relative to DHS EMP Protection Levels 1-4, and how much exposure may remain above current posture.

DHS EMP PROTECTION CONTEXT

Current Sector Protection Posture

Select a sector to see its illustrative current protection posture against DHS EMP Protection Levels 1-4. Choose All Sectors to view a composite sector posture. Use these DHS protection concepts as a general reference only.

All Sectors

Composite illustrative protection posture across the defined critical infrastructure sectors.

Current Posture
Level 0
DHS EMP Protection Level
Lower Current Protection Higher Protection / Lower Remaining Gap
Gap Zone remains above current protection posture
Level 1
Baseline protection posture with limited EMP-specific hardening.
Level 2
Improved protection using stronger power, filtering, surge, and continuity measures.
Level 3
Shielded civil posture; typically associated with at least 30 dB attenuation.
Level 4
Highest hardened posture; typically associated with 80+ dB attenuation.
View DHS Protection Level Definitions

Use this as a reference for interpreting the sector posture gauge. Sector placements are illustrative current-posture estimates, not official DHS sector ratings.

Level 1

Entry-level protection posture. Focus is on baseline practices, procedures, backup readiness, and limited EMP-specific controls.

Level 2

Improved protection posture. Typically adds stronger surge protection, filtering, backup power, protected communications paths, and continuity measures.

Level 3

Shielded civil protection posture. Often associated with shielded racks, rooms, or facilities and at least 30 dB attenuation through high frequencies.

Level 4

Highest hardened protection posture. Typically aligned to military-style hardening concepts and 80+ dB attenuation for missions with extremely low outage tolerance.

Current Illustrative Posture
Level 0
Directional sector posture based on DHS Level 1-4 protection concepts and public operating characteristics.
Higher Protection Target
Level 4
Level 4 represents the highest DHS protection tier and the smallest remaining exposure gap.
Remaining Gap Zone
0.0 Levels
Illustrative distance from current posture to the highest DHS protection level.
Illustrative executive model only. Not an official DHS sector scorecard or an engineering determination. DHS Levels 1-4 apply to equipment and facility protection postures. Sector placements below are directional estimates for executive context, and individual facilities may perform above or below the general sector posture.
INVESTMENT ESTIMATOR

Generate an Executive Planning Estimate

Use this tool to generate a directional planning estimate for EMP resilience by sector, facility type, scale, and implementation scope. Outputs are intended to support early executive discussion around investment range, staffing effort, sequencing, and timeline.

Project Inputs
Executive Summary
Select inputs and click Generate Planning Estimate.
Executive note: This planning tool helps visitors model order-of-magnitude scope before requesting a briefing.
EMP LOSS SIMULATOR

Model Directional Operational and Financial Exposure

This executive scenario tool models directional exposure under severe EMP disruption. Use it to explore potential asset loss, business interruption, restoration pressure, and cross-sector dependency effects under different operating assumptions.

Designed for boardroom discussion and early risk framing — not as a substitute for live engineering assessment or operational validation.

Scenario Inputs
Scenario Narrative
Select inputs and click Run Simulation.
Use case: This simulator remains a strong lead-generation asset because it makes business impact visible before a call.
OUR LEADERSHIP TEAM AND MISSION

Elite Protection. Proven Expertise. Mission-Driven Resilience.

To fortify the nation’s critical infrastructure through elite talent, advanced technology solutions, and unparalleled EMP and implementation expertise—driven by a deep commitment to safeguarding America from man-made threats and destabilizing intrusions.

Jeffrey Kohl
JEFFREY KOHL

Founder, President

With 37 years of experience across multiple facets of Information Technology—including executive leadership, infrastructure, applications, databases, cybersecurity, governance, compliance, and risk—Jeff Kohl brings a rare combination of strategic vision and hands-on implementation leadership to TierOne Resiliency Group.

Jeff has spent roughly a decade serving as a Senior Executive and eight years as a senior consultant, helping organizations navigate complex business, operational, and technology challenges. His leadership has consistently required close partnership with Legal, Audit, Compliance, HR, Finance, and regulated business functions, giving him a uniquely enterprise-wide view of risk, accountability, and execution.

Jeff is the only known Executive practitioner in the United States to have implemented EMP protection for two financial-sector data centers—an exceptionally rare accomplishment in the field of infrastructure resilience.

He has also received multiple leadership awards for innovation in infrastructure solutions during his tenure inside Fortune 500 organizations, reflecting both his technical depth and his ability to drive high-value outcomes in demanding environments.

Jeff’s motivation is not merely professional. It is deeply personal. His work is driven by a profound commitment to help protect the nation he loves from threats intended to destabilize critical systems, undermine continuity, and weaken the infrastructure that modern civilization depends upon.

Michael Caruso
MICHAEL CARUSO

Lead / Independent Consultant

Former Director of Government & Specialty Business Development for ETS-Lindgren, Michael Caruso is a recognized leader in RF shielded enclosure systems, EMP protection, and anechoic test chamber solutions. He brings more than 43 years of experience in project management, engineering, advanced technical applications, and business development.

Michael has built a national and international reputation for translating highly technical electromagnetic protection concepts into practical solutions for critical environments. His background spans not only business development and engineering leadership, but also extensive Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) testing experience gained while serving as Vice President of Operations for an EMC laboratory.

Michael has lectured in EMP workshops dealing with Critical Infrastructure, Military & Government Facilities, and Data Center issues throughout the United States, South Korea, and Israel.

He has published multiple white papers and technical articles and has testified before the U.S. Congress on the need for EMP protection of the nation’s critical infrastructure.

Michael is also a member of Arizona InfraGard and formerly served as Energy Sector Chief, further underscoring the depth of his engagement with infrastructure security, resilience, and public-private coordination.

Across his career, he has been known for helping clients interpret emerging threats, evaluate technologies, develop partnerships, and create high-value technical solutions in high-consequence environments.

Scott Allhands
SCOTT ALLHANDS

Lead / Independent Consultant

Scott’s professional roles have spanned engineering and implementation, with a strong emphasis on data center and infrastructure leadership. His experience reflects a long track record of helping organizations improve resilience, reduce operational risk, and modernize critical technology environments.

Scott has led implementation of many large-scale data center improvements, ensuring stronger risk mitigation and more credible recovery capabilities across complex environments.

He has also led merger and acquisition efforts that included relocation of data centers, elimination of service redundancies to gain operational efficiencies, achievement of cost reduction targets, and mitigation of enterprise risk.

Scott has led major technology modernization efforts focused on reducing risk, controlling cost, and improving operational effectiveness.

These initiatives included network upgrades that increased capacity and enabled more granular segmentation, adoption of solid-state storage to significantly improve performance and recovery options while lowering administrative costs, mainframe replication enhancements that materially strengthened recovery capabilities, implementation of an automated disaster recovery solution to advance replication and recovery performance, redesign of disaster recovery architecture to align with evolving business RTO, RPO, and risk tolerance requirements, and leadership of new data center planning, build-out, and migration efforts.

Scott brings practical implementation discipline to TierOne’s work—particularly where infrastructure modernization, resilience architecture, execution sequencing, and recovery design must all come together in a credible operating model.

EXECUTIVE OFFER

Request a Confidential Executive EMP Briefing

A focused discussion for boards, operators, and infrastructure leaders evaluating EMP exposure, continuity risk, and resilience priorities.

Confidential conversations for boards, operators, and infrastructure leaders evaluating EMP resilience in high-consequence environments.
CONTACT TIERONE

Direct Contact Information

For confidential executive discussions, resilience inquiries, or follow-up on assessments and modeling, contact TierOne directly using the information below.

BUSINESS ADDRESS

Cincinnati Office

524 Chaswil Drive
Cincinnati, Ohio 45255

EMAIL

jeffkohl@tieronerg.com

Direct email for executive briefings, questions, and outreach.

PHONE

(513) 205-2664

Call directly to discuss EMP resilience priorities and next steps.

Request Executive Briefing