West Valley Demonstration Project Waste Management Activities, 35073-35077 [05-11882]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 115 / Thursday, June 16, 2005 / Notices
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Grover J. Whitehurst,
Director, Institute of Education Sciences.
[FR Doc. 05–11921 Filed 6–15–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4001–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
West Valley Demonstration Project
Waste Management Activities
U.S. Department of Energy.
Record of decision.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: In the Final West Valley
Demonstration Project Waste
Management Environmental Impact
Statement (WVDP WM EIS, Department
of Energy (DOE)/EIS–0337, December
2003), DOE considered alternatives for
the management of WVDP low-level
radioactive waste (LLW), mixed
(radioactive and hazardous) LLW
(MLLW), transuranic (TRU) waste, and
high-level radioactive waste (HLW).
DOE prepared the WVDP WM EIS
pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), 42 United States
Code (U.S.C.) 4321 et seq., the Council
on Environmental Quality’s regulations
for implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) (40
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) parts
1500–1508), and DOE’s NEPA
Implementing Procedures (10 CFR part
1021). To make progress toward
fulfilling its responsibilities under the
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35073
WVDP Act, DOE needs to disposition
the wastes that are either currently in
storage at the site or that will be
generated at the site over the next ten
years. DOE evaluated three alternatives
for the management of the wastes: A No
Action Alternative (Continuation of
Ongoing Waste Management Activities),
Alternative A (Off-site Shipment of
HLW, LLW, MLLW, and TRU Wastes to
Disposal), and Alternative B (Off-site
Shipment of LLW and MLLW to
Disposal, and Shipment of HLW and
TRU Waste to Interim Storage [prior to
disposal]). Based on the analysis of the
potential impacts documented in the
EIS, implementation of any of the
alternatives would result in very low
impacts to human health and the
environment.
DOE has decided to partially
implement Alternative A, the preferred
alternative, for the management of
WVDP LLW, MLLW, and HLW that are
either currently in site over the next ten
years:
DOE will ship LLW and MLLW off
site for disposal in accordance with all
applicable regulatory requirements,
including permit requirements, waste
acceptance criteria (WAC), and
applicable DOE Orders. DOE will
dispose of LLW and MLLW at
commercial sites (such as Envirocare, a
commercial radioactive waste disposal
site in Clive, Utah), one or both of two
DOE sites (the Nevada Test Site [NTS]
in Mercury, Nevada; or the Hanford Site
in Richland, Washington), or a
combination of commercial and DOE
sites, consistent with DOE’s February
2000 decision regarding LLW and
MLLW disposal.1 Disposal of WVDP
LLW and MLLW at Hanford would be
subject to the limits DOE has imposed
upon non-Hanford waste receipts in its
June 2004 decision regarding waste
management at the Hanford Site,2 and
contingent upon the resolution of
ongoing Hanford litigation in which a
preliminary injunction has been entered
against shipping off site LLW and
MLLW to Hanford.
Consistent with the Waste
Management Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement HighLevel Waste Record of Decision (64 FR
1 Record of Decision for the Department’s Waste
Management Program: Treatment and Disposal of
Low-Level Waste and Mixed Low-Level Waste;
Amendment of the Record of Decision for the
Nevada Test Site (65 FR 10061, February 25, 2000).
2 Record of Decision for the Solid Waste Program,
Hanford Site, Richland, Washington: Storage and
Treatment of Low-Level Waste and Mixed LowLevel Waste; Disposal of Low-Level Waste and
Mixed Low-Level Waste, and Storage, Processing
and Certification of Transuranic Waste for
Shipment to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (69 FR
39449, June 30, 2004.
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46661, August 26, 1999), DOE will store
canisters of vitrified HLW at the WVDP
site until transfer to a geologic
repository. Contingent upon issuance of
a license by the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) to construct and
operate the repository and the execution
of a disposal contract between DOE and
the State of New York, DOE plans to
dispose of the canisters there when the
repository becomes available.
DOE is deferring a decision on the
disposal of WVDP TRU waste, pending
a determination by DOE that the waste
meets all statutory and regulatory
requirements for disposal at the Waste
Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP).
ADDRESSES: Copies of the WVDP WM
EIS and this Record of Decision (ROD)
may be obtained by calling (716) 942–
2152 or (800) 633–5280 (toll-free), by
sending an e-mail request to
sonja.allen@wvnsco.com, or by mailing
a request to: Mr. Daniel W. Sullivan, EIS
Document Manager, DOE West Valley
Area Office, 10282 Rock Springs Road,
WV–49, West Valley, New York 14171–
9799.
This ROD will be available on the
DOE NEPA Web site, https://
www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/
pub_rods_toc.html, and the WVDP Web
site, https://www.wv.doe.gov. The WVDP
WM EIS is available at the WVDP Web
site and through DOE’s NEPA Web site
at https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions concerning WVDP waste
management activities can be submitted
by calling (716) 942–2152 or (800) 633–
5280 (toll-free), by sending an e-mail
request to sonja.allen@wvnsco.com, or
by mailing them to Mr. Daniel W.
Sullivan at the above address.
For general information on the DOE
NEPA process, please contact: Ms. Carol
M. Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance, (EH–42), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, Telephone:
(202) 586–4600, or leave a message at
(800) 472–2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Western New York Nuclear
Service Center (Center) comprises 14
square kilometers (5 square miles) in
West Valley, New York, and is located
in the town of Ashford, approximately
50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of
Buffalo, New York. It was the only
commercial nuclear fuel reprocessing
plant to have operated in the United
States. The Center operated under a
license issued by the Atomic Energy
Commission in 1966 to Nuclear Fuel
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Services, Incorporated, and the New
York State Atomic and Space
Development Authority, now known as
the New York State Energy Research
and Development Authority
(NYSERDA).
During reprocessing, spent nuclear
fuel from commercial nuclear power
plants and DOE sites was chopped,
dissolved, and processed by a solvent
extraction system to recover uranium
and plutonium. Fuel reprocessing ended
in 1972, when the plant was shut down
for modifications to increase its
capacity, reduce occupational radiation
exposure, and reduce radioactive
effluents. At the time, the owner and
operator of the reprocessing plant,
Nuclear Fuel Services, Incorporated,
expected that the modifications would
take two years and $15 million to
complete. However, between 1972 and
1976, there were major changes in
regulatory requirements, including more
stringent seismic and tornado siting
criteria for nuclear facilities and more
extensive regulations for radioactive
waste management, radiation
protection, and nuclear material
safeguards. In 1976, Nuclear Fuel
Services, Incorporated, judged that over
$600 million would be required to
modify the facility to increase its
capacity and to comply with these
changes in regulatory standards.
As a result, the company announced
its decision to withdraw from the
nuclear fuel reprocessing business and
exercise its contractual right to yield
responsibility for the Center to
NYSERDA. Nuclear Fuel Services,
Incorporated, withdrew from the Center
without removing any of the in-process
nuclear wastes. NYSERDA now holds
title to and manages the Center on
behalf of the people of the State of New
York.
In 1980, Congress passed the WVDP
Act (Public Law No. 96–368, 42 U.S.C.
2021a). The WVDP Act requires DOE to
demonstrate that the liquid HLW from
reprocessing can be safely managed by
solidifying it at the Center and
transporting it to a geologic repository
for permanent disposal. Specifically,
Section 2(a) of the Act directs DOE to
take the following actions:
1. Solidify HLW by vitrification or
such other technology that the DOE
deems effective;
2. Develop containers suitable for the
permanent disposal of the solidified
HLW;
3. Transport the solidified HLW to an
appropriate Federal repository for
permanent disposal;
4. Dispose of the LLW and TRU waste
produced by the HLW solidification
program; and
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5. Decontaminate and decommission
the waste storage tanks and facilities
used to store HLW, the facilities used
for solidification of the HLW, and any
material and hardware used in
connection with the project in
accordance with such requirements as
the NRC may prescribe.
In the 20 years since the WVDP Act
was enacted, DOE has succeeded in
preparing all 2.3 million liters (600,000
gallons) of waste resulting from
reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel for
disposal, including treatment of HLW
by vitrification (combining liquid HLW
with borosilicate glass), and has
developed stainless-steel canisters
suitable for HLW permanent disposal
(actions 1 and 2). The Decommissioning
and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the
WVDP and the Western New York
Nuclear Service Center EIS, currently
being prepared, will address
decommissioning and closure
alternatives. DOE published a Notice of
Intent to prepare the Decommissioning
and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the
WVDP and the Western New York
Nuclear Service Center EIS on March
13, 2003 (68 FR 12044, March 13, 2003).
Although DOE does not manage lowlevel radioactive waste according to the
classes of NRC’s regulations for shallow
land disposal, 10 CFR 61.55, a 1987
Stipulation of Compromise between the
Coalition on West Valley Nuclear
Wastes and DOE specified that an EIS be
prepared that addresses the disposal of
those Class B and C wastes generated as
a result of the activities of DOE at the
WVDP.
Purpose and Need for Action
In accordance with the directives in
the WVDP Act, DOE is responsible for
the facilities used in connection with
the WVDP HLW vitrification effort and
for disposal of the LLW, MLLW, HLW,
and TRU waste produced by the WVDP
HLW solidification program. To make
progress in fulfilling its responsibilities
under the WVDP Act, DOE needs to
identify a disposal path for the wastes
that are currently stored onsite and that
will be generated from ongoing
operations and decontamination
activities that will occur over the next
ten years. Decommissioning and/or
long-term stewardship (LTS) decisions
will be made under the
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center EIS.
Alternatives Considered
The WVDP WM EIS evaluates
alternatives for meeting DOE’s onsite
waste management and off-site
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transportation and disposal
responsibilities under the WVDP Act.
To address the range of reasonable
alternatives, the WVDP WM EIS
evaluated three alternatives. Each
alternative is described below. In
implementing any of these alternatives,
DOE would comply with applicable
laws, regulations, orders, agreements,
receiving site permits and WAC, and
state-approved closure plans.
No Action Alternative—Continuation of
Ongoing Waste Management Activities
Under this alternative, DOE would
provide continued operational support
and monitoring of WVDP waste
management facilities to meet the
requirements for safety and hazard
management.
Waste management activities
currently in progress would continue for
onsite storage of existing Class A, B, and
C (per 10 CFR 61.55) LLW and MLLW,
TRU waste and HLW waste and off-site
disposal of a limited quantity of Class A
LLW at a commercial facility such as
Envirocare in Utah, or at DOE disposal
facilities at the Hanford Site in
Washington or NTS in Nevada. Removal
of these wastes for off-site disposal
would require 169 truck shipments or
85 rail shipments. The HLW storage
tanks and their surrounding vaults
would continue to be ventilated to
manage moisture levels as a corrosion
prevention measure until
decommissioning and/or LTS decisions
are made based in part on the impact
assessment to be provided by the
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center EIS.
Alternative A (Preferred Alternative)—
Off-Site Shipment of HLW, LLW, MLLW,
and TRU Wastes to Disposal
Under this alternative, DOE would
ship Class A, B, and C LLW and MLLW
to either or both of two DOE potential
disposal sites (the Hanford Site or NTS)
and/or to a commercial disposal site
(such as Envirocare), ship TRU waste to
WIPP (near Carlsbad, New Mexico), and
ship HLW to the Yucca Mountain
Repository (in Nye County, Nevada).
LLW and MLLW would be shipped over
the next ten years (requiring
approximately 1,966 truck shipments or
608 rail shipments). TRU waste
shipments to WIPP could be completed
within the next ten years if the TRU
waste is determined to meet all the
requirements for disposal at WIPP
(requiring approximately 270 truck
shipments or 172 rail shipments);
however, if some or all of WVDP’s TRU
waste does not meet these requirements,
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the DOE would need to explore other
alternatives for disposal of this waste.
Approximately 300 canisters of HLW
would be shipped to the Yucca
Mountain Repository (requiring
approximately 300 truck shipments or
60 rail shipments). These shipments
would occur when the repository
becomes available, which is contingent
upon authorization by NRC to construct
and operate the repository, and the
execution of a disposal contract between
the DOE and the State of New York. The
waste storage tanks would continue to
be managed as described under the No
Action Alternative.
Alternative B—Off-Site Shipment of
LLW and MLLW to Disposal, and
Shipment of HLW and TRU Waste to
Interim Storage
Under this alternative, LLW and
MLLW would be shipped off-site for
disposal at the same locations as
Alternative A. TRU wastes would be
shipped to the Hanford Site; Idaho
National Laboratory in Idaho Falls,
Idaho; the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee;
and/or the Savannah River Site (SRS) in
Aiken, South Carolina, for interim
storage and then to WIPP for disposal.
TRU waste also could be shipped to
WIPP for interim storage prior to
disposal there. HLW would be shipped
to SRS or Hanford for interim storage,
with subsequent shipment to the Yucca
Mountain Repository for disposal.
Implementation of this alternative
would require 540 truck shipments or
344 rail shipments of TRU waste and
600 truck shipments or 120 rail
shipments of HLW; this represents the
number of shipments required from
WVDP to the interim storage site and
then from interim storage to the disposal
site.
It is assumed that the shipment of
LLW and MLLW to disposal would
occur within the next ten years, and that
TRU waste and HLW would be shipped
to interim storage during that same ten
years. Ultimate disposal of TRU wastes
and HLW wastes would be subject to the
same constraints described under
Alternative A. The impacts of
transporting these wastes to their
ultimate disposal sites, as well as to the
interim storage sites, were included in
the impact analyses for this alternative.
The waste storage tanks would continue
to be managed as described under the
No Action Alternative.
Environmental Impacts
The waste management actions
proposed under all alternatives would
be conducted in existing facilities (and
in the case of waste transportation, on
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35075
existing road and rail lines) by the
existing work force at the involved
facilities and would not involve either
new construction or building
demolition. Because there would be no
mechanism for new land disturbance
under any alternative, there is no
potential, except for transportation
accidents, to directly or indirectly
impact current land use; biotic
communities; cultural, historical, or
archaeological resources; visual
resources; ambient noise levels;
threatened or endangered species or
their critical habitats; wetlands; or
floodplains. None of the onsite
management activities under any of the
alternatives would result in any new
criteria air pollutant emissions.
Additionally, because the work force
needed for the waste management
activities analyzed in this EIS would be
the same under all alternatives and
there would be no increases or
decreases from current employment
levels as a result of waste management
activities, there is no potential for
socioeconomic impacts.
Waste management activities under
each alternative would result in the
limited exposure of workers to small
amounts of radiation and contaminated
material, and exposure of the public to
very small quantities of radioactive
materials. The human health impacts to
involved and noninvolved workers and
the public at or near the WVDP site are
small and are dominated by ongoing
WVDP site operations that would
continue under all alternatives. Any
differences in the potential impacts
among the three alternatives would not
be discernible. Implementation of any of
the alternatives would result in very
small impacts to human health or the
environment.
The EIS analysis of potential human
health impacts shows that onsite waste
management actions under each
alternative would result in less than one
latent cancer fatality (LCF) among
workers (maximum 0.1 LCF) and the
public (maximum 0.0015 LCF) under
normal operating conditions. Further,
neither individual involved workers, the
maximally exposed individual, nor the
public, near the WVDP site would be
expected to incur a LCF under any
atmospheric conditions if an accident
were to occur during waste management
activities.
Projected impacts from off-site waste
transportation are less than one LCF
among workers and the public for all
three alternatives. The consequences of
the maximum reasonably foreseeable
transportation accidents under each
alternative would vary slightly among
the alternatives and between truck and
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rail transport. Under the No Action
Alternative, the maximum reasonably
foreseeable transportation accident
would involve Class A LLW. For truck
transport, this accident could result in
about one LCF, and for rail about two
LCF’s, among the exposed population
(the annual probability of such an
accident occurring is about five in ten
million for truck transport, or about two
in one million for rail transport). For
Alternatives A and B, the maximum
reasonably foreseeable truck or rail
transportation accident with the highest
consequences would involve TRU
waste. Because one TRU waste shipping
container (a TRUPACT–II container)
was assumed to be involved in either
the truck or rail accident, the
consequences for the truck or rail
accident would be the same. Among the
exposed population, this accident could
result in about four LCF’s (for
Alternative A, the annual probability of
such an accident occurring is about six
in ten million for truck transport, or
about one in ten million for rail
transport; for Alternative B, the annual
probability of such an accident
occurring is about eight in ten million
for truck transport, or about three in ten
million for rail transport). Potential
impacts of waste management activities
at off-site receiving locations have been
addressed in earlier NEPA documents,
as described in the WVDP WM EIS
(Section 1.7.1). For all waste types,
WVDP waste represents less than two
percent of the total DOE waste
inventory. Human health impacts at all
sites as a result of the management
(storage or disposal) of WVDP waste
during the ten-year period of analysis
would be very minor (substantially less
than one LCF).
Based on the analysis of the potential
impacts documented in the WVDP WM
EIS, DOE has determined that
implementation of any of the
alternatives would result in very low
impacts to human health and the
environment.
Environmentally Preferable Alternative
Alternative A (Off-site Shipment of
HLW, LLW, MLLW, and TRU Wastes to
Disposal) is the environmentally
preferable alternative. Because less
radioactive waste would be transported
under the No Action Alternative,
implementation of that alternative is
likely to result in the smallest impacts
over the next ten years as compared to
Alternatives A or B. Over time,
however, the removal of waste from the
WVDP site to a safer and more secure
disposal site will reduce radiological
risk to workers and the public.
Alternative A would have the smallest
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transportation risks among the action
alternatives because implementation of
this alternative would require half the
number of TRU waste and HLW
shipments as under Alternative B, and
potential transportation risks decrease
as the number of miles traveled and
individual shipments decrease.
Public Comments on the Final WVDP
WM EIS and Agency Response
Following the issuance of the Final
WVDP WM EIS, DOE received comment
letters from the Southwest Research and
Information Center (SRIC) (dated
January 23, 2004), the Coalition on West
Valley Nuclear Wastes (Coalition) (dated
February 14, 2004), and from the State
of Nevada Department of
Administration (dated February 17,
2004). These letters are summarized
below, followed by DOE’s response to
the comments presented.
SRIC Comment Summary: SRIC stated
that it objects to those portions of the
Final WVDP WM EIS action alternatives
related to disposing of TRU waste at
WIPP. The commenter stated that the
EIS is inadequate with regard to TRU
waste, and that the DOE should analyze
alternatives for storage and disposal of
WVDP TRU waste that do not include
WIPP. The commenter further stated
that WVDP waste is prohibited from
disposal at WIPP under the WIPP Land
Withdrawal Act because it is not
defense waste and because the EIS did
not describe all of the requirements for
disposal at WIPP; the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
certification for the repository does not
include any WVDP TRU waste; the State
of New Mexico operating permit does
not include any WVDP TRU waste;
inventory estimates in the WVDP WM
EIS differ from previous estimates such
as those in the WIPP Supplemental EIS–
II (DOE/EIS–0026-S–2, 1997) (WIPP
SEIS–II), which shows that the DOE has
inadequate waste characterization and
inventory information for
decisionmaking; DOE should not
consider bringing West Valley HLW to
be stored or disposed of at WIPP; and
the public comment process on the EIS
was inadequate.
DOE Response: DOE is deferring a
decision on the disposal of WVDP TRU
waste, pending a determination by the
DOE that the waste meets all statutory
and regulatory requirements for disposal
at the WIPP. With regard to potential
WVDP TRU waste disposal at WIPP,
DOE will further respond to SRIC
comments when a decision on WVDP
TRU waste disposal is made. However,
it is appropriate at this time to respond
to two more general SRIC comments.
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First, with regard to the suggestion
that the DOE not send WVDP HLW to
WIPP, this EIS did not propose to send
HLW to WIPP and did not analyze an
alternative that would support such a
decision. The WIPP Land Withdrawal
Act prohibits disposal of HLW at WIPP,
and DOE does not intend to dispose of
West Valley HLW at WIPP.
Second, DOE disagrees with the
commenter’s assertion that the public
comment process for this EIS was
inadequate. Pursuant to the NEPA
implementing regulations, DOE
published notices (66 FR 16447, March
26, 2001, and 68 FR 26587, May 16,
2003) for public scoping and the public
comment period for the Draft EIS in the
Federal Register, and held two public
hearings at the WVDP. The Draft WVDP
WM EIS (and the Final EIS) were
provided to the agencies in all states
hosting proposed disposal or storage
sites. Specifically, in New Mexico, the
documents were sent to the New Mexico
Environment Department (State
National Environmental Policy Act
Clearinghouse). DOE also provided
copies of the Draft WVDP WM EIS (and
the Final WVDP WM EIS) to all persons
known to be interested. Copies of the
Draft and Final EIS were provided to
governors and Members of Congress in
all potentially affected states (including
Idaho, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, and
Washington). DOE received and
considered comments from stakeholders
in states hosting DOE sites analyzed for
waste storage and/or disposal; these are
identified in the Final WVDP WM EIS.
Coalition Comment Summary: The
Coalition stated that the DOE did not
respond to its comments on the Draft
WVDP WM EIS regarding the Coalition’s
position that shipment of Class B/C
waste (as determined under NRC
classification regulations) off site for
disposal violates the 1987 Stipulation of
Compromise (Stipulation) resolving the
litigation between the Coalition and
DOE. In addition, the Coalition stated
that the DOE did not respond to other
specific comments: the preparation of
the WVDP WM EIS and the
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center EIS do not comply with the
Coalition’s position that only one EIS
can satisfy the Stipulation; by preparing
two EISs, DOE has improperly
segmented the actions under NEPA by
not including the impacts at receiving
sites and has failed to identify impacts
at those sites for larger volumes of waste
that could be generated under the
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 115 / Thursday, June 16, 2005 / Notices
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center EIS; in accordance with the
Stipulation, Class B/C waste cannot be
shipped off site until the entire closure
EIS process has been completed; and
DOE has acknowledged that additional
NEPA documentation would be needed
before West Valley waste could be
shipped to Hanford. The Coalition also
stated that it objects to the ‘‘counterfeit’’
version of the Stipulation DOE included
in Appendix A of the WVDP WM EIS,
as that version is not identical to the
original version.
DOE Response: DOE has reviewed all
comments received on the Draft WVDP
WM EIS, including those from the
Coalition and its members, and has
addressed the comments in Appendix E
of the Final WVDP WM EIS. DOE
understands that it is the Coalition’s
position that the Stipulation does not
allow disposal of Class B or C LLW until
the Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center EIS is completed. DOE agrees
with the Coalition that a decision to
dispose of WVDP LLW on site would be
precluded by the Stipulation prior to
completion of the Decommissioning
EIS; however, DOE does not believe that
the Stipulation was intended to
preclude a decision to dispose of WVDP
LLW off site prior to completion of that
EIS. Moreover, DOE’s waste
management activities described in the
WVDP WM EIS will not affect the range
of reasonable alternatives available for
decommissioning or LTS. Therefore,
DOE concludes that its NEPA strategy
does not constitute impermissible
segmentation, and that the shipment of
stored wastes off site for disposal has
independent utility.
Chapter 5 of the WVDP WM EIS states
that impacts at receiving sites, including
the potential inventory of wastes to be
shipped from WVDP, were analyzed in
the WM Programmatic EIS (Final Waste
Management Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement for
Managing, Treatment, Storage, and
Disposal of Radioactive and Hazardous
Waste, DOE/EIS–0200–F). In addition,
DOE added a statement to Chapter 5 in
the Final WVDP WM EIS that future
wastes generated by decommissioning
and LTS are not known at this time and
would be addressed under the
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center EIS. DOE’s responses to
comments also stated that additional
site-specific review as called for in the
WM Programmatic EIS was in progress
at Hanford. The Final Hanford Solid and
Radioactive Waste EIS has since been
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:42 Jun 15, 2005
Jkt 205001
issued (January 2004) and analyzes
waste from off-site generators, including
WVDP.
DOE agrees with the Coalition that
DOE should have identified the version
of the Stipulation in Appendix A of the
WVDP WM EIS as a reprint. However,
the differences between that version and
the original Stipulation are minor (such
as spacing and punctuation) and did not
change or affect the content of the text.
State of Nevada Comment Summary:
The State’s Division of Water Resources
stated that applications for the use of
the waters of the State pertaining to the
proposed geologic repository at Yucca
Mountain, Nevada, have been denied by
the State Engineer, a ruling which has
been appealed to the Federal District
Court in Nevada.
DOE Response: The Final WVDP WM
EIS stated, and DOE further states in
this decision, that the WVDP
immobilized HLW planned for disposal
at Yucca Mountain will be stored onsite
until a repository becomes available.
Decision
The WVDP Act (Pub. L. 96–368)
mandates that DOE dispose of LLW and
TRU waste generated by the HLW
solidification project. To make progress
in meeting its obligations under the Act,
DOE has decided to implement partially
Alternative A, the preferred alternative,
for the management of WVDP LLW and
MLLW that is currently in storage at the
site or that will be generated at the site
over the next ten years. Of the two
action alternatives evaluated,
Alternative A is the environmentally
preferable action alternative, has the
fewest transportation impacts, and the
least radiological risk to workers and the
public.
In accordance with all applicable
regulatory requirements, including
WVDP permit requirements, WAC and
applicable agreements, and DOE Orders,
DOE will ship LLW and MLLW off site
for disposal at commercial sites (such as
Envirocare, a commercial radioactive
waste disposal site in Clive, Utah); at
one or both of two DOE sites, the NTS
in Mercury, Nevada, or the Hanford Site
in Richland, Washington; or a
combination of commercial and DOE
sites, consistent with DOE’s February
2000 decision regarding LLW and
MLLW disposal.1 This decision
includes wastes DOE may determine in
the future to be LLW or MLLW pursuant
to a waste incidental to reprocessing by
evaluation process. Disposal at Hanford
would be subject to any of the WVDP
LLW and MLLW (as well as all other offsite DOE waste) limits DOE has imposed
upon non-Hanford waste receipts in its
June 2004 decision regarding waste
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
35077
management at the Hanford Site,2 and
contingent upon the resolution of
ongoing Hanford litigation in which a
preliminary injunction has been entered
against shipping offsite LLW and MLLW
to Hanford. During packaging, shipping,
and managing WVDP waste at receiving
facilities, DOE will continue to follow
all practicable means to avoid or
minimize environmental harm.
DOE will store the canisters of
vitrified HLW at the WVDP site until
they can be shipped to a geologic
repository for the disposal of HLW. As
stated in the Waste Management
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement Record of Decision, DOE
plans to transfer the canisters to the
geologic repository when the repository
becomes available, which is contingent
upon issuance of a license by the NRC
to construct and operate the repository,
and subject to the execution of a
disposal contract between the DOE and
the State of New York. DOE is deferring
a decision on the disposal of WVDP
TRU waste, pending a determination by
the DOE that the waste meets all
statutory and regulatory requirements
for disposal at the WIPP.
Issued at Washington, DC, June 9, 2005.
Charles E. Anderson,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Environmental Management.
[FR Doc. 05–11882 Filed 6–15–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Innovative American Technology, Inc.
Department of Energy, Office of
the General Counsel.
ACTION: Notice of intent to grant
exclusive patent license.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given to an
intent to grant to Innovative American
Technology, Inc. (IAT), of Boca Raton,
Florida, an exclusive license to practice
the inventions described in U.S. Patent
No. 6,545,281, entitled ‘‘Pocked Surface
Neutron Detector’’ and U.S. Patent No.
6,479,826 entitled ‘‘Coated
Semiconductor for Neutron Detection’’.
The inventions are owned by the United
States of America, as represented by the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
DATES: Written comments or
nonexclusive license applications are to
be received at the address listed below
no later than July 18, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Office of the Assistant
General Counsel for Technology
Transfer and Intellectual Property, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Ave., SW., Washington,
DC 20585.
E:\FR\FM\16JNN1.SGM
16JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 115 (Thursday, June 16, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35073-35077]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-11882]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
West Valley Demonstration Project Waste Management Activities
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Energy.
ACTION: Record of decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In the Final West Valley Demonstration Project Waste
Management Environmental Impact Statement (WVDP WM EIS, Department of
Energy (DOE)/EIS-0337, December 2003), DOE considered alternatives for
the management of WVDP low-level radioactive waste (LLW), mixed
(radioactive and hazardous) LLW (MLLW), transuranic (TRU) waste, and
high-level radioactive waste (HLW). DOE prepared the WVDP WM EIS
pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 United
States Code (U.S.C.) 4321 et seq., the Council on Environmental
Quality's regulations for implementing the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) (40 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) parts 1500-
1508), and DOE's NEPA Implementing Procedures (10 CFR part 1021). To
make progress toward fulfilling its responsibilities under the WVDP
Act, DOE needs to disposition the wastes that are either currently in
storage at the site or that will be generated at the site over the next
ten years. DOE evaluated three alternatives for the management of the
wastes: A No Action Alternative (Continuation of Ongoing Waste
Management Activities), Alternative A (Off-site Shipment of HLW, LLW,
MLLW, and TRU Wastes to Disposal), and Alternative B (Off-site Shipment
of LLW and MLLW to Disposal, and Shipment of HLW and TRU Waste to
Interim Storage [prior to disposal]). Based on the analysis of the
potential impacts documented in the EIS, implementation of any of the
alternatives would result in very low impacts to human health and the
environment.
DOE has decided to partially implement Alternative A, the preferred
alternative, for the management of WVDP LLW, MLLW, and HLW that are
either currently in site over the next ten years:
DOE will ship LLW and MLLW off site for disposal in accordance with
all applicable regulatory requirements, including permit requirements,
waste acceptance criteria (WAC), and applicable DOE Orders. DOE will
dispose of LLW and MLLW at commercial sites (such as Envirocare, a
commercial radioactive waste disposal site in Clive, Utah), one or both
of two DOE sites (the Nevada Test Site [NTS] in Mercury, Nevada; or the
Hanford Site in Richland, Washington), or a combination of commercial
and DOE sites, consistent with DOE's February 2000 decision regarding
LLW and MLLW disposal.\1\ Disposal of WVDP LLW and MLLW at Hanford
would be subject to the limits DOE has imposed upon non-Hanford waste
receipts in its June 2004 decision regarding waste management at the
Hanford Site,\2\ and contingent upon the resolution of ongoing Hanford
litigation in which a preliminary injunction has been entered against
shipping off site LLW and MLLW to Hanford.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Record of Decision for the Department's Waste Management
Program: Treatment and Disposal of Low-Level Waste and Mixed Low-
Level Waste; Amendment of the Record of Decision for the Nevada Test
Site (65 FR 10061, February 25, 2000).
\2\ Record of Decision for the Solid Waste Program, Hanford
Site, Richland, Washington: Storage and Treatment of Low-Level Waste
and Mixed Low-Level Waste; Disposal of Low-Level Waste and Mixed
Low-Level Waste, and Storage, Processing and Certification of
Transuranic Waste for Shipment to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
(69 FR 39449, June 30, 2004.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the Waste Management Programmatic Environmental
Impact Statement High-Level Waste Record of Decision (64 FR
[[Page 35074]]
46661, August 26, 1999), DOE will store canisters of vitrified HLW at
the WVDP site until transfer to a geologic repository. Contingent upon
issuance of a license by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to
construct and operate the repository and the execution of a disposal
contract between DOE and the State of New York, DOE plans to dispose of
the canisters there when the repository becomes available.
DOE is deferring a decision on the disposal of WVDP TRU waste,
pending a determination by DOE that the waste meets all statutory and
regulatory requirements for disposal at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
(WIPP).
ADDRESSES: Copies of the WVDP WM EIS and this Record of Decision (ROD)
may be obtained by calling (716) 942-2152 or (800) 633-5280 (toll-
free), by sending an e-mail request to sonja.allen@wvnsco.com, or by
mailing a request to: Mr. Daniel W. Sullivan, EIS Document Manager, DOE
West Valley Area Office, 10282 Rock Springs Road, WV-49, West Valley,
New York 14171-9799.
This ROD will be available on the DOE NEPA Web site, https://
www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/pub_rods_toc.html, and the WVDP Web site, https://
www.wv.doe.gov. The WVDP WM EIS is available at the WVDP Web site and
through DOE's NEPA Web site at https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions concerning WVDP waste
management activities can be submitted by calling (716) 942-2152 or
(800) 633-5280 (toll-free), by sending an e-mail request to
sonja.allen@wvnsco.com, or by mailing them to Mr. Daniel W. Sullivan at
the above address.
For general information on the DOE NEPA process, please contact:
Ms. Carol M. Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance,
(EH-42), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, Telephone: (202) 586-4600, or leave a message at
(800) 472-2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Western New York Nuclear Service Center (Center) comprises 14
square kilometers (5 square miles) in West Valley, New York, and is
located in the town of Ashford, approximately 50 kilometers (30 miles)
southeast of Buffalo, New York. It was the only commercial nuclear fuel
reprocessing plant to have operated in the United States. The Center
operated under a license issued by the Atomic Energy Commission in 1966
to Nuclear Fuel Services, Incorporated, and the New York State Atomic
and Space Development Authority, now known as the New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA).
During reprocessing, spent nuclear fuel from commercial nuclear
power plants and DOE sites was chopped, dissolved, and processed by a
solvent extraction system to recover uranium and plutonium. Fuel
reprocessing ended in 1972, when the plant was shut down for
modifications to increase its capacity, reduce occupational radiation
exposure, and reduce radioactive effluents. At the time, the owner and
operator of the reprocessing plant, Nuclear Fuel Services,
Incorporated, expected that the modifications would take two years and
$15 million to complete. However, between 1972 and 1976, there were
major changes in regulatory requirements, including more stringent
seismic and tornado siting criteria for nuclear facilities and more
extensive regulations for radioactive waste management, radiation
protection, and nuclear material safeguards. In 1976, Nuclear Fuel
Services, Incorporated, judged that over $600 million would be required
to modify the facility to increase its capacity and to comply with
these changes in regulatory standards.
As a result, the company announced its decision to withdraw from
the nuclear fuel reprocessing business and exercise its contractual
right to yield responsibility for the Center to NYSERDA. Nuclear Fuel
Services, Incorporated, withdrew from the Center without removing any
of the in-process nuclear wastes. NYSERDA now holds title to and
manages the Center on behalf of the people of the State of New York.
In 1980, Congress passed the WVDP Act (Public Law No. 96-368, 42
U.S.C. 2021a). The WVDP Act requires DOE to demonstrate that the liquid
HLW from reprocessing can be safely managed by solidifying it at the
Center and transporting it to a geologic repository for permanent
disposal. Specifically, Section 2(a) of the Act directs DOE to take the
following actions:
1. Solidify HLW by vitrification or such other technology that the
DOE deems effective;
2. Develop containers suitable for the permanent disposal of the
solidified HLW;
3. Transport the solidified HLW to an appropriate Federal
repository for permanent disposal;
4. Dispose of the LLW and TRU waste produced by the HLW
solidification program; and
5. Decontaminate and decommission the waste storage tanks and
facilities used to store HLW, the facilities used for solidification of
the HLW, and any material and hardware used in connection with the
project in accordance with such requirements as the NRC may prescribe.
In the 20 years since the WVDP Act was enacted, DOE has succeeded
in preparing all 2.3 million liters (600,000 gallons) of waste
resulting from reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel for disposal,
including treatment of HLW by vitrification (combining liquid HLW with
borosilicate glass), and has developed stainless-steel canisters
suitable for HLW permanent disposal (actions 1 and 2). The
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the WVDP and the
Western New York Nuclear Service Center EIS, currently being prepared,
will address decommissioning and closure alternatives. DOE published a
Notice of Intent to prepare the Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the Western New York Nuclear Service Center
EIS on March 13, 2003 (68 FR 12044, March 13, 2003).
Although DOE does not manage low-level radioactive waste according
to the classes of NRC's regulations for shallow land disposal, 10 CFR
61.55, a 1987 Stipulation of Compromise between the Coalition on West
Valley Nuclear Wastes and DOE specified that an EIS be prepared that
addresses the disposal of those Class B and C wastes generated as a
result of the activities of DOE at the WVDP.
Purpose and Need for Action
In accordance with the directives in the WVDP Act, DOE is
responsible for the facilities used in connection with the WVDP HLW
vitrification effort and for disposal of the LLW, MLLW, HLW, and TRU
waste produced by the WVDP HLW solidification program. To make progress
in fulfilling its responsibilities under the WVDP Act, DOE needs to
identify a disposal path for the wastes that are currently stored
onsite and that will be generated from ongoing operations and
decontamination activities that will occur over the next ten years.
Decommissioning and/or long-term stewardship (LTS) decisions will be
made under the Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the WVDP
and the Western New York Nuclear Service Center EIS.
Alternatives Considered
The WVDP WM EIS evaluates alternatives for meeting DOE's onsite
waste management and off-site
[[Page 35075]]
transportation and disposal responsibilities under the WVDP Act. To
address the range of reasonable alternatives, the WVDP WM EIS evaluated
three alternatives. Each alternative is described below. In
implementing any of these alternatives, DOE would comply with
applicable laws, regulations, orders, agreements, receiving site
permits and WAC, and state-approved closure plans.
No Action Alternative--Continuation of Ongoing Waste Management
Activities
Under this alternative, DOE would provide continued operational
support and monitoring of WVDP waste management facilities to meet the
requirements for safety and hazard management.
Waste management activities currently in progress would continue
for onsite storage of existing Class A, B, and C (per 10 CFR 61.55) LLW
and MLLW, TRU waste and HLW waste and off-site disposal of a limited
quantity of Class A LLW at a commercial facility such as Envirocare in
Utah, or at DOE disposal facilities at the Hanford Site in Washington
or NTS in Nevada. Removal of these wastes for off-site disposal would
require 169 truck shipments or 85 rail shipments. The HLW storage tanks
and their surrounding vaults would continue to be ventilated to manage
moisture levels as a corrosion prevention measure until decommissioning
and/or LTS decisions are made based in part on the impact assessment to
be provided by the Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the
WVDP and the Western New York Nuclear Service Center EIS.
Alternative A (Preferred Alternative)--Off-Site Shipment of HLW, LLW,
MLLW, and TRU Wastes to Disposal
Under this alternative, DOE would ship Class A, B, and C LLW and
MLLW to either or both of two DOE potential disposal sites (the Hanford
Site or NTS) and/or to a commercial disposal site (such as Envirocare),
ship TRU waste to WIPP (near Carlsbad, New Mexico), and ship HLW to the
Yucca Mountain Repository (in Nye County, Nevada). LLW and MLLW would
be shipped over the next ten years (requiring approximately 1,966 truck
shipments or 608 rail shipments). TRU waste shipments to WIPP could be
completed within the next ten years if the TRU waste is determined to
meet all the requirements for disposal at WIPP (requiring approximately
270 truck shipments or 172 rail shipments); however, if some or all of
WVDP's TRU waste does not meet these requirements, the DOE would need
to explore other alternatives for disposal of this waste.
Approximately 300 canisters of HLW would be shipped to the Yucca
Mountain Repository (requiring approximately 300 truck shipments or 60
rail shipments). These shipments would occur when the repository
becomes available, which is contingent upon authorization by NRC to
construct and operate the repository, and the execution of a disposal
contract between the DOE and the State of New York. The waste storage
tanks would continue to be managed as described under the No Action
Alternative.
Alternative B--Off-Site Shipment of LLW and MLLW to Disposal, and
Shipment of HLW and TRU Waste to Interim Storage
Under this alternative, LLW and MLLW would be shipped off-site for
disposal at the same locations as Alternative A. TRU wastes would be
shipped to the Hanford Site; Idaho National Laboratory in Idaho Falls,
Idaho; the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee; and/
or the Savannah River Site (SRS) in Aiken, South Carolina, for interim
storage and then to WIPP for disposal. TRU waste also could be shipped
to WIPP for interim storage prior to disposal there. HLW would be
shipped to SRS or Hanford for interim storage, with subsequent shipment
to the Yucca Mountain Repository for disposal. Implementation of this
alternative would require 540 truck shipments or 344 rail shipments of
TRU waste and 600 truck shipments or 120 rail shipments of HLW; this
represents the number of shipments required from WVDP to the interim
storage site and then from interim storage to the disposal site.
It is assumed that the shipment of LLW and MLLW to disposal would
occur within the next ten years, and that TRU waste and HLW would be
shipped to interim storage during that same ten years. Ultimate
disposal of TRU wastes and HLW wastes would be subject to the same
constraints described under Alternative A. The impacts of transporting
these wastes to their ultimate disposal sites, as well as to the
interim storage sites, were included in the impact analyses for this
alternative. The waste storage tanks would continue to be managed as
described under the No Action Alternative.
Environmental Impacts
The waste management actions proposed under all alternatives would
be conducted in existing facilities (and in the case of waste
transportation, on existing road and rail lines) by the existing work
force at the involved facilities and would not involve either new
construction or building demolition. Because there would be no
mechanism for new land disturbance under any alternative, there is no
potential, except for transportation accidents, to directly or
indirectly impact current land use; biotic communities; cultural,
historical, or archaeological resources; visual resources; ambient
noise levels; threatened or endangered species or their critical
habitats; wetlands; or floodplains. None of the onsite management
activities under any of the alternatives would result in any new
criteria air pollutant emissions. Additionally, because the work force
needed for the waste management activities analyzed in this EIS would
be the same under all alternatives and there would be no increases or
decreases from current employment levels as a result of waste
management activities, there is no potential for socioeconomic impacts.
Waste management activities under each alternative would result in
the limited exposure of workers to small amounts of radiation and
contaminated material, and exposure of the public to very small
quantities of radioactive materials. The human health impacts to
involved and noninvolved workers and the public at or near the WVDP
site are small and are dominated by ongoing WVDP site operations that
would continue under all alternatives. Any differences in the potential
impacts among the three alternatives would not be discernible.
Implementation of any of the alternatives would result in very small
impacts to human health or the environment.
The EIS analysis of potential human health impacts shows that
onsite waste management actions under each alternative would result in
less than one latent cancer fatality (LCF) among workers (maximum 0.1
LCF) and the public (maximum 0.0015 LCF) under normal operating
conditions. Further, neither individual involved workers, the maximally
exposed individual, nor the public, near the WVDP site would be
expected to incur a LCF under any atmospheric conditions if an accident
were to occur during waste management activities.
Projected impacts from off-site waste transportation are less than
one LCF among workers and the public for all three alternatives. The
consequences of the maximum reasonably foreseeable transportation
accidents under each alternative would vary slightly among the
alternatives and between truck and
[[Page 35076]]
rail transport. Under the No Action Alternative, the maximum reasonably
foreseeable transportation accident would involve Class A LLW. For
truck transport, this accident could result in about one LCF, and for
rail about two LCF's, among the exposed population (the annual
probability of such an accident occurring is about five in ten million
for truck transport, or about two in one million for rail transport).
For Alternatives A and B, the maximum reasonably foreseeable truck or
rail transportation accident with the highest consequences would
involve TRU waste. Because one TRU waste shipping container (a TRUPACT-
II container) was assumed to be involved in either the truck or rail
accident, the consequences for the truck or rail accident would be the
same. Among the exposed population, this accident could result in about
four LCF's (for Alternative A, the annual probability of such an
accident occurring is about six in ten million for truck transport, or
about one in ten million for rail transport; for Alternative B, the
annual probability of such an accident occurring is about eight in ten
million for truck transport, or about three in ten million for rail
transport). Potential impacts of waste management activities at off-
site receiving locations have been addressed in earlier NEPA documents,
as described in the WVDP WM EIS (Section 1.7.1). For all waste types,
WVDP waste represents less than two percent of the total DOE waste
inventory. Human health impacts at all sites as a result of the
management (storage or disposal) of WVDP waste during the ten-year
period of analysis would be very minor (substantially less than one
LCF).
Based on the analysis of the potential impacts documented in the
WVDP WM EIS, DOE has determined that implementation of any of the
alternatives would result in very low impacts to human health and the
environment.
Environmentally Preferable Alternative
Alternative A (Off-site Shipment of HLW, LLW, MLLW, and TRU Wastes
to Disposal) is the environmentally preferable alternative. Because
less radioactive waste would be transported under the No Action
Alternative, implementation of that alternative is likely to result in
the smallest impacts over the next ten years as compared to
Alternatives A or B. Over time, however, the removal of waste from the
WVDP site to a safer and more secure disposal site will reduce
radiological risk to workers and the public. Alternative A would have
the smallest transportation risks among the action alternatives because
implementation of this alternative would require half the number of TRU
waste and HLW shipments as under Alternative B, and potential
transportation risks decrease as the number of miles traveled and
individual shipments decrease.
Public Comments on the Final WVDP WM EIS and Agency Response
Following the issuance of the Final WVDP WM EIS, DOE received
comment letters from the Southwest Research and Information Center
(SRIC) (dated January 23, 2004), the Coalition on West Valley Nuclear
Wastes (Coalition) (dated February 14, 2004), and from the State of
Nevada Department of Administration (dated February 17, 2004). These
letters are summarized below, followed by DOE's response to the
comments presented.
SRIC Comment Summary: SRIC stated that it objects to those portions
of the Final WVDP WM EIS action alternatives related to disposing of
TRU waste at WIPP. The commenter stated that the EIS is inadequate with
regard to TRU waste, and that the DOE should analyze alternatives for
storage and disposal of WVDP TRU waste that do not include WIPP. The
commenter further stated that WVDP waste is prohibited from disposal at
WIPP under the WIPP Land Withdrawal Act because it is not defense waste
and because the EIS did not describe all of the requirements for
disposal at WIPP; the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
certification for the repository does not include any WVDP TRU waste;
the State of New Mexico operating permit does not include any WVDP TRU
waste; inventory estimates in the WVDP WM EIS differ from previous
estimates such as those in the WIPP Supplemental EIS-II (DOE/EIS-0026-
S-2, 1997) (WIPP SEIS-II), which shows that the DOE has inadequate
waste characterization and inventory information for decisionmaking;
DOE should not consider bringing West Valley HLW to be stored or
disposed of at WIPP; and the public comment process on the EIS was
inadequate.
DOE Response: DOE is deferring a decision on the disposal of WVDP
TRU waste, pending a determination by the DOE that the waste meets all
statutory and regulatory requirements for disposal at the WIPP. With
regard to potential WVDP TRU waste disposal at WIPP, DOE will further
respond to SRIC comments when a decision on WVDP TRU waste disposal is
made. However, it is appropriate at this time to respond to two more
general SRIC comments.
First, with regard to the suggestion that the DOE not send WVDP HLW
to WIPP, this EIS did not propose to send HLW to WIPP and did not
analyze an alternative that would support such a decision. The WIPP
Land Withdrawal Act prohibits disposal of HLW at WIPP, and DOE does not
intend to dispose of West Valley HLW at WIPP.
Second, DOE disagrees with the commenter's assertion that the
public comment process for this EIS was inadequate. Pursuant to the
NEPA implementing regulations, DOE published notices (66 FR 16447,
March 26, 2001, and 68 FR 26587, May 16, 2003) for public scoping and
the public comment period for the Draft EIS in the Federal Register,
and held two public hearings at the WVDP. The Draft WVDP WM EIS (and
the Final EIS) were provided to the agencies in all states hosting
proposed disposal or storage sites. Specifically, in New Mexico, the
documents were sent to the New Mexico Environment Department (State
National Environmental Policy Act Clearinghouse). DOE also provided
copies of the Draft WVDP WM EIS (and the Final WVDP WM EIS) to all
persons known to be interested. Copies of the Draft and Final EIS were
provided to governors and Members of Congress in all potentially
affected states (including Idaho, New Mexico, Nevada, Oregon, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, and Washington). DOE received and considered
comments from stakeholders in states hosting DOE sites analyzed for
waste storage and/or disposal; these are identified in the Final WVDP
WM EIS.
Coalition Comment Summary: The Coalition stated that the DOE did
not respond to its comments on the Draft WVDP WM EIS regarding the
Coalition's position that shipment of Class B/C waste (as determined
under NRC classification regulations) off site for disposal violates
the 1987 Stipulation of Compromise (Stipulation) resolving the
litigation between the Coalition and DOE. In addition, the Coalition
stated that the DOE did not respond to other specific comments: the
preparation of the WVDP WM EIS and the Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the WVDP and the Western New York Nuclear Service Center
EIS do not comply with the Coalition's position that only one EIS can
satisfy the Stipulation; by preparing two EISs, DOE has improperly
segmented the actions under NEPA by not including the impacts at
receiving sites and has failed to identify impacts at those sites for
larger volumes of waste that could be generated under the
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the WVDP and the
[[Page 35077]]
Western New York Nuclear Service Center EIS; in accordance with the
Stipulation, Class B/C waste cannot be shipped off site until the
entire closure EIS process has been completed; and DOE has acknowledged
that additional NEPA documentation would be needed before West Valley
waste could be shipped to Hanford. The Coalition also stated that it
objects to the ``counterfeit'' version of the Stipulation DOE included
in Appendix A of the WVDP WM EIS, as that version is not identical to
the original version.
DOE Response: DOE has reviewed all comments received on the Draft
WVDP WM EIS, including those from the Coalition and its members, and
has addressed the comments in Appendix E of the Final WVDP WM EIS. DOE
understands that it is the Coalition's position that the Stipulation
does not allow disposal of Class B or C LLW until the Decommissioning
and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the WVDP and the Western New York
Nuclear Service Center EIS is completed. DOE agrees with the Coalition
that a decision to dispose of WVDP LLW on site would be precluded by
the Stipulation prior to completion of the Decommissioning EIS;
however, DOE does not believe that the Stipulation was intended to
preclude a decision to dispose of WVDP LLW off site prior to completion
of that EIS. Moreover, DOE's waste management activities described in
the WVDP WM EIS will not affect the range of reasonable alternatives
available for decommissioning or LTS. Therefore, DOE concludes that its
NEPA strategy does not constitute impermissible segmentation, and that
the shipment of stored wastes off site for disposal has independent
utility.
Chapter 5 of the WVDP WM EIS states that impacts at receiving
sites, including the potential inventory of wastes to be shipped from
WVDP, were analyzed in the WM Programmatic EIS (Final Waste Management
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Managing, Treatment,
Storage, and Disposal of Radioactive and Hazardous Waste, DOE/EIS-0200-
F). In addition, DOE added a statement to Chapter 5 in the Final WVDP
WM EIS that future wastes generated by decommissioning and LTS are not
known at this time and would be addressed under the Decommissioning
and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the WVDP and the Western New York
Nuclear Service Center EIS. DOE's responses to comments also stated
that additional site-specific review as called for in the WM
Programmatic EIS was in progress at Hanford. The Final Hanford Solid
and Radioactive Waste EIS has since been issued (January 2004) and
analyzes waste from off-site generators, including WVDP.
DOE agrees with the Coalition that DOE should have identified the
version of the Stipulation in Appendix A of the WVDP WM EIS as a
reprint. However, the differences between that version and the original
Stipulation are minor (such as spacing and punctuation) and did not
change or affect the content of the text.
State of Nevada Comment Summary: The State's Division of Water
Resources stated that applications for the use of the waters of the
State pertaining to the proposed geologic repository at Yucca Mountain,
Nevada, have been denied by the State Engineer, a ruling which has been
appealed to the Federal District Court in Nevada.
DOE Response: The Final WVDP WM EIS stated, and DOE further states
in this decision, that the WVDP immobilized HLW planned for disposal at
Yucca Mountain will be stored onsite until a repository becomes
available.
Decision
The WVDP Act (Pub. L. 96-368) mandates that DOE dispose of LLW and
TRU waste generated by the HLW solidification project. To make progress
in meeting its obligations under the Act, DOE has decided to implement
partially Alternative A, the preferred alternative, for the management
of WVDP LLW and MLLW that is currently in storage at the site or that
will be generated at the site over the next ten years. Of the two
action alternatives evaluated, Alternative A is the environmentally
preferable action alternative, has the fewest transportation impacts,
and the least radiological risk to workers and the public.
In accordance with all applicable regulatory requirements,
including WVDP permit requirements, WAC and applicable agreements, and
DOE Orders, DOE will ship LLW and MLLW off site for disposal at
commercial sites (such as Envirocare, a commercial radioactive waste
disposal site in Clive, Utah); at one or both of two DOE sites, the NTS
in Mercury, Nevada, or the Hanford Site in Richland, Washington; or a
combination of commercial and DOE sites, consistent with DOE's February
2000 decision regarding LLW and MLLW disposal.\1\ This decision
includes wastes DOE may determine in the future to be LLW or MLLW
pursuant to a waste incidental to reprocessing by evaluation process.
Disposal at Hanford would be subject to any of the WVDP LLW and MLLW
(as well as all other off-site DOE waste) limits DOE has imposed upon
non-Hanford waste receipts in its June 2004 decision regarding waste
management at the Hanford Site,\2\ and contingent upon the resolution
of ongoing Hanford litigation in which a preliminary injunction has
been entered against shipping offsite LLW and MLLW to Hanford. During
packaging, shipping, and managing WVDP waste at receiving facilities,
DOE will continue to follow all practicable means to avoid or minimize
environmental harm.
DOE will store the canisters of vitrified HLW at the WVDP site
until they can be shipped to a geologic repository for the disposal of
HLW. As stated in the Waste Management Programmatic Environmental
Impact Statement Record of Decision, DOE plans to transfer the
canisters to the geologic repository when the repository becomes
available, which is contingent upon issuance of a license by the NRC to
construct and operate the repository, and subject to the execution of a
disposal contract between the DOE and the State of New York. DOE is
deferring a decision on the disposal of WVDP TRU waste, pending a
determination by the DOE that the waste meets all statutory and
regulatory requirements for disposal at the WIPP.
Issued at Washington, DC, June 9, 2005.
Charles E. Anderson,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management.
[FR Doc. 05-11882 Filed 6-15-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P