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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
G7 Cyber Expert Group Releases New Reports on Ransomware
and Third-Party Risk
December 8, 2022

WASHINGTON—The G7 Cyber Expert Group (CEG) – which U.S. Department of the Treasury’s
Office of Cybersecurity and Critical Infrastructure (OCCIP) co-chairs alongside the Bank of
England – recently released two reports addressing ransomware and third-party risk within the
financial sector. These free and publicly available resources are intended to help financial sector
entities better understand cybersecurity topics as agreed upon by a multilateral consensus.
The Fundamental Elements of Ransomware Resilience for the Financial Sector provides
financial entities with high-level building blocks for addressing the ransomware threat. The
document is part of a series of Fundamental Elements produced by the CEG, all of which are
non-prescriptive and non-binding, and provide an overview of the current policy approaches,
industry guidance, and best practices in place throughout the G7. The aim of this document is
for financial institutions – both public and private – to use its guidance for their own internal
ransomware mitigation activities. Additionally, the collaboration between the G7 jurisdictions
on producing this report highlights global efforts to promote the resilience of the financial
sector.
The CEG’s other product for 2022, The Fundamental Elements of Third-Party Risk Management
for the Financial Sector, updates a previous version published in 2018. Due to the increasing use
of service providers by financial institutions in central operational functions and the subsequent
vulnerabilities created by this reliance, the G7 CEG deemed this update necessary to keep pace
with the ever-changing cyber threat landscape. The update includes explicit recommendations
for monitoring risks along the supply chain, identifying systemically important third-party
providers, and concentration risks.
These reports were announced in October 2022 by Bundesbank, as part of Germany’s
presidency of G7, after they were adopted by the G7 Finance Ministers and Central Bank
Governors. They were published on Bundesbank’s website alongside previous Fundamental

Elements on such topics as cybersecurity in the financial sector, penetration testing, and cyber
exercises.
The G7 CEG was founded in 2015 to serve as a multi-year working group that coordinates
cybersecurity policy and strategy across the eight G7 jurisdictions. In addition to policy
coordination, the G7 CEG also acts as a vehicle for information sharing, cooperation, and
incident response.