Abstract
Abstract: Background: Tracing down the technological transformation of EU within recent decades, a wide range of innovation such as Artificial Intelligence, Cloud Computing and Internet of Things has become major strategic assets throughout EU. This vividly presents the dependency of EU citizens on numbers of infrastructures, ranging from physical assets such as transportation to the networked environment such as financial services and internet.1 Against this background, many governmental bodies after tracing the series of attack, considered these infrastructures to be critical and most vulnerable. This possess severe threat to EU economy and democracy at large. Objective: The main focus of this research paper was to explore different scenario of Cyber related incident against EU Democracy and Economy and critically examine the preparedness of EU level Cyber Security law in combating possible damages to the Critical Infrastructures. Methods: In this paper, researcher used non-empirical legal research and Comparative Research methodology. Basically in the first part of the paper, researcher would like to used qualitative or non-numerical which includes extraction of information from the legal text either from writing of publishers, laws or court decisions and interpretation of the text to identify the patterns. Second part of the researcher will be Comparative research method to compare the EU based Cyber Security law and finding out the strength and weakness of the EU Laws and possible challenges. Findings: From the research, it was acknowledge that various socio-economic vulnerabilities affecting CIs remained but NIS Directive 2 tries to cover most of the vulnerability and limitation of previling Directive 2016.