In a context where digitalization of the energy sector creates new critical vulnerabilities, Anguita Osorio and EnergySage Chile have established a strategic alliance to address the convergence between cybersecurity, energy regulation, and corporate governance, particularly relevant after the February 25, 2025 blackout.

Redefining Security in Critical Energy Infrastructure
As Rodrigo Sáez, CEO of EnergySage Chile, notes in his recent analysis on the new ESG paradigm, the world has redefined how it evaluates risks in energy investments: ESG no longer means Environmental, Social, Governance, but Economics, Security, Geopolitics. In this new context, the collaboration between Anguita Osorio and EnergySage Chile combines legal expertise in ANCI-SEC-CNE regulatory convergence with practical experience in control center transformation and business model development in critical infrastructure. This synergy enables energy sector investors and operators to navigate the post-Law 21.663 regulatory complexity, where a cyber incident triggers not only operational protocols from the National Electric Coordinator but parallel investigations by the National Cybersecurity Agency with national security implications.
The critical question posed by EnergySage —What would have happened if the February 25 communication failures had been caused by a cyberattack?— evidences the urgency of integrating cybersecurity into the energy sector's corporate strategy. With 954 MW of operational storage and over 7,500 MW in development, each BESS system, each PMGD, and each control center simultaneously represents a commercial asset and a national vulnerability vector. Our joint proposal, detailed at EnergySage Energy Cybersecurity, goes beyond compliance: we identify opportunities where the market undervalues resilient assets and overvalues vulnerable ones, transforming regulatory complexity into sustainable competitive advantage for those who can navigate the legal-technological-geopolitical convergence of the new energy paradigm.