• 02/18/2026

Fire protection for critical infrastructure

Several serious incidents in Europe this year alone make it clear that fire protection in critical infrastructures (KRITIS) must be an integral part of security strategies. This is where the FeuerTrutz trade fair in Nuremberg can play a decisive role as an international trendsetter.

Written by Reinhold Gebhart

A person wearing full firefighter protective gear stands in front of an open metal container with intense flames emerging from inside. The person is holding a long metal tool with both hands, extending it into the container. Inside, burning wooden materials and strong fire are visible. The scene is outdoors, with modern building structures and trees in the background under bright sunlight.

On the morning of January 3, 2026, an arson attack in Berlin led to a widespread power outage affecting around 45,000 households and over 2,200 businesses. Less than a year earlier, a fire at a substation in London caused a power outage lasting several hours in tens of thousands of households, and even Europe's largest airport, London Heathrow, came to a standstill. The tense geopolitical situation makes threats to critical infrastructure a real possibility. Such infrastructure is increasingly the target of acts of sabotage. But natural disasters or mundane technical malfunctions can also trigger fatal chain reactions.

Critical infrastructure such as data centers, hospitals, care facilities, substations, and major transportation hubs are particularly dependent on effective fire protection. The responsibility shared by the state and operators is correspondingly great, and time is of the essence. “Cooperation between politicians, authorities, and KRITIS operators has intensified significantly in recent years,” notes Axel Haas, Managing Director of the German Institute for Preventive Fire Protection (DIvB). An example of the network between these levels is the UP KRITIS alliance, a cooperation platform between the federal government, the states, and industry. Here, risks are analyzed, threat scenarios simulated, and measures coordinated. At the same time, there are still many issues to be resolved: Currently, there are no uniform interfaces, too many federal differences, and unresolved financing issues.

Security Act 3.0 and the gold standard 

But solutions are in sight. The KRITIS umbrella law (“Security Act 3.0”) passed by the German Bundestag pursues an all-hazards approach: detailed regulations as in building law, but with enough flexibility to also address new forms of threats such as hybrid attacks or climate-related risks. 

“At the same time, KRITIS needs an expanded, quasi ‘gold standard’ of preventive fire protection,” says Axel Haas. By this he means a combination of physical and digital security. While classic preventive fire protection, which has proven itself over decades, focuses primarily on saving lives and preventing damage to buildings, KRITIS focuses on resilience, i.e., maintaining the functionality of facilities. 

This “gold standard” would provide for decoupled fire compartments, independent extinguishing systems, sensor-based early warning systems with their own emergency power supply, and continuous monitoring. Regular stress tests and crisis exercises would realistically simulate scenarios ranging from power failures to cyberattacks.

A large information display in an exhibition hall shows a red orange “FeuerTrutz 2026” announcement with save-the-date details for June 24–25, 2026, in Nuremberg. Below it is a layout map of the exhibition area. In the foreground, a person is looking at the display. The background features modern architecture with glass surfaces and escalators.
FeuerTrutz drives professional exchange and advances resilient fire protection strategies for critical infrastructure.

“European benchmark for physical resilience” 

"This is where the FeuerTrutz trade fair and the accompanying fire protection congress can play a decisive role as an international trendsetter,” believes Axel Haas. For him, future focal points on the topic of “resilience and critical infrastructures” are just as conceivable as specialist forums in which cybersecurity, supply technology, and fire protection are discussed together, right through to live demonstrations of complex hazard scenarios. An innovation award for “KRITIS Resilience” could increase the visibility of best practice examples and at the same time provide new impetus for standardization and research projects. “Last but not least, international cooperation could make the trade fair a European benchmark for physical resilience.”

Author

Portrait of Reinhold Gebhart
Reinhold Gebhart
Online-Redaktion // Editor for Vincentz Network