Resilience of Critical Energy Infrastructure: A Multi-Criteria Assessment of the Žilina Heating Plant

Authors

  • Michal Miške Faculty of Security Engineering, University of Žilina, Univerzitná 8215, 010 26, Žilina, Slovakia
  • Maksims Feofilovs Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Azenes iela 12/1, Riga, LV-1048, Latvia
  • Francesco Romagnoli Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Azenes iela 12/1, Riga, LV-1048, Latvia
  • Zdeněk Dvořák Faculty of Security Engineering, University of Žilina, Univerzitná 8215, 010 26, Žilina, Slovakia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7250/conect.2026.022

Keywords:

Critical infrastructure resilience, District heating, Energy security, multi-criteria analysis, resilience assessment, Risk analysis

Abstract

This case study, developed within the APRIORI project, focuses on assessing the resilience of a district heating system as a key element of national critical energy infrastructure. The object under analysis is the Žilina Heating Plant, one of the largest district heating facilities in Slovakia, supplying heat and electricity to approximately 20 000 households and essential public institutions. The study examines the resilience of district heating systems considering technical, organizational, environmental, and security perspectives, with particular emphasis on risk identification and threat assessment. Identified threats include technological failures, fire hazards, environmental impacts, cyber threats, and intentional attacks, as well as long-term challenges such as infrastructure ageing and dependence on fossil fuels. A structured multi-criteria decision-making approach, using TOPSIS, was applied to evaluate the severity and priority of the identified risks. The criteria reflected key dimensions of district heating resilience, including probability of occurrence, repair costs, transmission and supply losses, restoration time, and impact intensity. The results confirm that the Žilina district heating system is a critical element of regional infrastructure, whose continuous operation is essential for energy security, public safety, and social stability. While the system benefits from experienced personnel, established emergency cooperation, and partial technological modernization, vulnerabilities remain in areas such as fuel dependency, automation level, and environmental burden. The case study demonstrates that resilience enhancement in district heating systems can be effectively achieved through a combination of traditional preventive measures and advanced technologies, including automation, digital monitoring, predictive maintenance, and cybersecurity protection. The findings contribute to the validation of the APRIORI resilience assessment methodology and provide practical recommendations applicable to district heating systems in other European regions.

Supporting Agencies
The work has been supported by the following project: “Advanced Technologies for Physical ResIlience Of cRitical Infrastructures (APRIORI)”, code: SPS G6140, funded by the NATO, Science for Peace and Security (SPS) Call for Proposals 2023-1.

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Published

08.05.2026

Issue

Section

Energy Efficiency, Energy Systems (District Heating)

How to Cite

Resilience of Critical Energy Infrastructure: A Multi-Criteria Assessment of the Žilina Heating Plant. (2026). CONECT. International Scientific Conference of Environmental and Climate Technologies, 54. https://doi.org/10.7250/conect.2026.022