Notice of Determination That No Further Action Is Required Under the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Authority at the Union Carbide Corporation Facility in Lawrenceburg, TN, 57576-57577 [E6-16014]
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57576
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 189 / Friday, September 29, 2006 / Notices
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket Nos. 070–00784 and 040–07044]
Notice of Determination That No
Further Action Is Required Under the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s
Authority at the Union Carbide
Corporation Facility in Lawrenceburg,
TN
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC).
ACTION: Notice of Determination that no
further remedial action is required.
AGENCY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kenneth Kalman, Materials
Decommissioning Section, Division of
Waste Management and Environmental
Protection, NRC, Washington, DC
20555; telephone: (301) 415–6664; fax:
(301) 415–5398; or e-mail at:
klk@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
I. Introduction
The NRC is providing notice that it
has determined that no further remedial
action under the NRC’s authority is
required at the Union Carbide
Corporation (UCAR) site located at
Highway 43 South, in Lawrenceburg,
Tennessee (the Site).
UCAR was issued Special Nuclear
Materials License No. SNM–724 (SNM–
724), on August 26, 1963, for testing
equipment and nuclear fuels
development. UCAR also held License
No. SMB–720 (SMB–720), which
authorized the possession of source
material at the Site. SNM–724 was
terminated on June 4, 1974, and the U.S.
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
released the site for unrestricted use.
SMB–720 was superceded by the State
of Tennessee License No. S–5002–H8
and was terminated on August 28, 1975.
SNM–724 authorized possession of up
to 500 grams (g) of fully-enriched (<94
percent) uranium for testing of
equipment and processes in the
Lawrenceburg Fuel Development
Facility located at the Site. On May 22,
1964, the license was amended to
authorize possession of 150 kilograms
(kg) of U–235 to make graphite-coated
uranium-thorium carbide particles and
graphite-matrix fuel elements. The
possession limit was increased to 475 kg
on June 12, 1964.
By letter dated February 4, 1974,
UCAR submitted ‘‘closeout’’ survey
information and requested that SNM–
724 be terminated and the facility be
released for unrestricted use. On April
5, 1974, AEC staff performed a closeout
inspection which was documented in
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:43 Sep 28, 2006
Jkt 208001
Inspection Report 70–784/74–1. The
staff recommended that the license be
terminated, and the facility be released
for unrestricted use. By AEC letter dated
June 4, 1974, SNM–724 was terminated
and the UCAR facility released for
unrestricted use.
In 1991, the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory was contracted by NRC to
review and evaluate all nuclear
materials licenses terminated by NRC or
its predecessor agencies, since inception
of materials regulation in the late 1940s.
One of the objectives of this review was
to identify sites with the potential for
residual contamination, based on
information in the license
documentation. NRC evaluated the
available survey data to determine if the
information was sufficient to conclude
that the site meets the existing
guidelines for unrestricted use.
Radiological assessments performed
at the UCAR facility and its immediate
vicinity identified the presence of
enriched and depleted uranium on
building surfaces and in soil in excess
of applicable radiological release
criteria. Sampling identified
contamination in three buildings on the
UCAR site: Building 10, Building 5
Annex, and the Metallurgy Laboratory.
Surface contamination in Building 10,
Building 5 Annex, and in the Metallurgy
Laboratory was primarily present as
fixed contamination. Contamination in
soils/sediments in small areas was also
present.
Surface contamination above the
release guidelines was identified in 11
rooms in Building 10 (Rooms 106–2,
120, 121, 122, 124, 126, 128–1, 129, 132,
133, and 134) ranging from background
to 106,469 disintegrations per minute/
100 square centimeter (dpm/100 cm2)
direct beta/gamma. Volumetric
contamination in other areas of the site
was found to be above the release
criteria: (1) Soil surrounding the
incinerator pad; (2) sediment in the
manholes and cooling water tanks; (3)
laundry sump tank; and (4) the surface
layer of concrete flooring. A core sample
was taken near the incinerator pad. The
range for total uranium concentration
was 1.33 to 3,655 picocuries per gram
(pCi/g). The estimated average depth of
the soil contamination was one foot
resulting in a contaminated soil volume
estimate of 500 cubic feet.
Uranium was also the primary
contaminant in Building 5 Annex.
Surface contamination was found in
four rooms in Building 5 (Rooms 106,
107, 108, 110), ranging from background
to 428,698 dpm/100 cm2 direct beta/
gamma. Volumetric contamination
above the release criteria was found in
three areas in and around Building 5: (1)
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Sink trap; (2) concrete flooring; and (3)
asphalt outside exit.
Contamination in the Metallurgy
Laboratory consisted of localized
surface contamination on the tops of
cabinets. There was no indication of
radioactive material above the release
criteria beyond the former restricted
area boundary in the ground water,
settling basins, or former sanitary sewer
system.
UCAR voluntarily conducted
remediation activities without a license,
as its license was terminated in 1974.
Although UCAR was not a licensee,
NRC staff conducted periodic
inspections to ensure that remediation
was performed in accordance with
current regulations and release limits.
As part of its remediation activities,
UCAR amassed fifteen (15) 24-yard3
intermodal containers of solid low-level
radiological waste. UCAR reported
concentrations in the intermodal
containers averaging approximately 25
pCi/g of U–235 and 1,082 pCi/g of total
uranium.
On February 15 and 16, 2006, NRC
staff conducted an inspection of the
UCAR site that included Building 10,
Building 5 Annex, the Metallurgy Lab,
the incinerator pad and other areas, as
well as the intermodal containers
(Inspection Report 07000784/2005001).
This inspection found that residual
uranium contamination on surfaces and
soil met the criteria in the remediation
plan for unrestricted use. The
remediation activities in Building 10
and the incinerator pad resulted in
complete removal of the structures and
the concrete floor pads so that no
surfaces were available for surface
contamination measurements. Gamma
scans of areas where an incinerator pad,
drain lines, and a buried water cooling
tank had been located, as well as scans
of various non-remediated areas found
no areas of elevated gamma exposure
rates. Direct alpha measurement of the
Building 5 Annex and the Metallurgy
Lab were all less than 2000 dpm/
100cm2. The inspector found no areas of
elevated gamma exposure rates in the
scanned areas.
Soil samples were taken from Site
areas based on operational history and
remediation activities and were
analyzed by the Oak Ridge Institute for
Science and Education for isotopic
concentrations of U–234, U–235, and U–
238. All samples were surface soil,
collected within the top four inches of
the soil surface. One sample from the
Building 5 Annex showed elevated
concentrations of U–234, but when
averaged over the survey unit was found
to be within the derived concentration
guidelines for soils at the site.
E:\FR\FM\29SEN1.SGM
29SEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 189 / Friday, September 29, 2006 / Notices
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
The NRC inspector examined the
intermodal containers while they were
stored at the site. The amount of U–235
in the intermodals ranged from 75 to
206 grams per intermodal. One of the
intermodals contained a sump from
Building 10 and had a contact exposure
rate of 65 microroentgens/hour.
Measurements of the other containers
were not significantly above
background. On August 14, 2006, UCAR
provided copies of the shipping
manifests demonstrating that the 15
intermodal containers had been
accepted for disposal by
EnergySolutions in Utah.
UCAR provided a final radiological
status survey and the NRC staff
performed an independent dose
assessment to demonstrate the site
meets the license termination criteria in
Subpart E of 10 CFR Part 20. Based on
its reviews of UCAR submittals and its
own analyses and assessments, the NRC
staff has determined that the site meets
the unrestricted release dose criteria in
10 CFR Part 20.1402 and that no further
remedial action under the NRC’s
authority is required at the UCAR site.
The staff prepared a Safety Evaluation
Report (SER) (ML062580415) to support
its determination.
II. Further Information
In accordance with 10 CFR Part 2.790
of the NRC’s ‘‘Rules of Practice,’’ details
with respect to this action, including the
SER, are available electronically at the
NRC’s Electronic Reading Room at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. From this site, you can
access the NRC’s Agency wide
Document Access and Management
System (ADAMS), which provides text
and image files of NRC’s public
documents. The ADAMS accession
number for the termination letter and
SER, ‘‘Safety Evaluation Report to
Support the Determination that No
Further Action is Required under the
Authority of the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission at the Union
Carbide Corporation Facility in
Lawrenceburg, TN’’ (Docket Nos. 070–
00784 and 040–07044) is ADAMS No.
ML062620512. If you do not have access
to ADAMS or if there are problems in
accessing a document located in
ADAMS, contact the NRC Public
Document Room Reference staff at 1–
800–397–4209, 301–415–4737, or by email to: pdr@nrc.gov.
This document may also be viewed
electronically on the public computers
located at the NRC’s PDR, O–1–F21,
One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, MD 20852. The PDR
reproduction contractor will copy
documents for a fee.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:43 Sep 28, 2006
Jkt 208001
Dated at NRC, Rockville, MD, this 22nd
day of September, 2006.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Keith I. McConnell,
Deputy Director, Decommissioning
Directorate, Division of Waste Management
and Environmental Protection, Office of
Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards.
[FR Doc. E6–16014 Filed 9–28–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket Nos. STN 50–454, STN 50–455, STN
50–456 and STN 50–457]
Exelon Generation Company, LLC,
Byron Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2;
Braidwood Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2;
Environmental Assessment and
Finding of No Significant Impact
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is considering
issuance of an exemption from the
requirements of Title 10 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (10 CFR) Part 50,
Section 50.60(a), for Facility Operating
License Nos. NPF–37, NPF–66, NPF–72
and NPF–77, issued to Exelon
Generation Company, LLC (the
licensee), for operation of the Byron
Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2 (Byron), and
Braidwood Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2
(Braidwood), located in Ogle County,
Illinois and Will County, Illinois,
respectively. Therefore, as required by
10 CFR 51.21, the NRC is issuing this
environmental assessment and finding
of no significant impact.
Environmental Assessment
Identification of the Proposed Action
The proposed action would allow the
use of the methods described in
Westinghouse Commercial Atomic
Power Report (WCAP)–16143, ‘‘Reactor
Vessel Closure Head/Vessel Flange
Requirements Evaluation for Byron/
Braidwood Units 1 and 2,’’ dated
November 2003, in calculating the
reactor pressure vessel (RPV) pressuretemperature (P–T) limits for Byron and
Braidwood, in lieu of 10 CFR Part 50,
Appendix G, ‘‘Fracture Toughness
Requirements,’’ paragraph IV.A.2.c as
required by 10 CFR 50.60(a).
The proposed action is in accordance
with the licensee’s application for
exemption dated October 3, 2005.
The Need for the Proposed Action
The proposed action is needed
because utilization of WCAP–16143 will
enhance overall plant safety by
widening the P–T operating window,
especially in the region of low
temperature operations. The primary
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
57577
two safety benefits that would be
realized are the following: (1) A
reduction in the potential challenges to
the low-temperature overpressure
protection system and resultant
inadvertent opening of a power operated
relief valve, and (2) a reduction in the
risk of damaging the reactor coolant
pump seals due to pump operation
under conditions in which it is difficult
to maintain adequate seal differential
pressure to ensure proper pump
operation.
Appendix G to 10 CFR Part 50
contains requirements for P–T limits for
the primary system and requirements
for metal temperature of the closure
head flange and vessel flange regions.
The P–T limits are to be determined
using the methodology of American
Society of Mechanical Engineers Boiler
and Pressure Vessel Code (ASME Code),
Section XI, Appendix G, but the flange
temperature requirements are specified
in 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix G. This
regulation (Table 1 of 10 CFR Part 50,
Appendix G) states that the metal
temperature at the closure flange regions
must exceed the material unirradiated
nil-ductility transition reference
temperature (RTNDT) by at least 120 °F
for normal operation when the pressure
exceeds 20 percent of the pre-service
hydrostatic test pressure.
This requirement was originally based
on concerns about the fracture margin in
the closure flange region. During the
boltup process, outside surface stresses
in this region typically reach over 70
percent of the steady state stress,
without being at steady state
temperature. The margin of 120 °F and
the pressure limitation of 20 percent of
hydrostatic pressure were developed in
the mid-1970s using the ASME Code
lower bound crack arrest/dynamic test
fracture toughness (KIa) to ensure that
appropriate margins would be
maintained.
Improved knowledge of fracture
toughness and other issues that affect
the integrity of the reactor vessel have
led to the recent change to allow the use
of the ASME Code lower bound static
crack initiation fracture toughness (KIc)
in the development of P–T curves, as
contained in ASME Code Case N–640,
‘‘Alternative Reference Fracture
Toughness for Development of P–T
Limit Curves for Section XI, Division 1.’’
ASME Code Case N–640 has been
approved for use without conditions by
the NRC staff in Regulatory Guide 1.147,
‘‘Inservice Inspection Code Case
Acceptability, ASME Section XI,
Division 1,’’ published in August 2005.
However, P–T limit curves can still
produce operational constraints by
limiting the operational range available
E:\FR\FM\29SEN1.SGM
29SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 189 (Friday, September 29, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57576-57577]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-16014]
[[Page 57576]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket Nos. 070-00784 and 040-07044]
Notice of Determination That No Further Action Is Required Under
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Authority at the Union Carbide
Corporation Facility in Lawrenceburg, TN
AGENCY: U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).
ACTION: Notice of Determination that no further remedial action is
required.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kenneth Kalman, Materials
Decommissioning Section, Division of Waste Management and Environmental
Protection, NRC, Washington, DC 20555; telephone: (301) 415-6664; fax:
(301) 415-5398; or e-mail at: klk@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The NRC is providing notice that it has determined that no further
remedial action under the NRC's authority is required at the Union
Carbide Corporation (UCAR) site located at Highway 43 South, in
Lawrenceburg, Tennessee (the Site).
UCAR was issued Special Nuclear Materials License No. SNM-724 (SNM-
724), on August 26, 1963, for testing equipment and nuclear fuels
development. UCAR also held License No. SMB-720 (SMB-720), which
authorized the possession of source material at the Site. SNM-724 was
terminated on June 4, 1974, and the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
released the site for unrestricted use. SMB-720 was superceded by the
State of Tennessee License No. S-5002-H8 and was terminated on August
28, 1975.
SNM-724 authorized possession of up to 500 grams (g) of fully-
enriched (<94 percent) uranium for testing of equipment and processes
in the Lawrenceburg Fuel Development Facility located at the Site. On
May 22, 1964, the license was amended to authorize possession of 150
kilograms (kg) of U-235 to make graphite-coated uranium-thorium carbide
particles and graphite-matrix fuel elements. The possession limit was
increased to 475 kg on June 12, 1964.
By letter dated February 4, 1974, UCAR submitted ``closeout''
survey information and requested that SNM-724 be terminated and the
facility be released for unrestricted use. On April 5, 1974, AEC staff
performed a closeout inspection which was documented in Inspection
Report 70-784/74-1. The staff recommended that the license be
terminated, and the facility be released for unrestricted use. By AEC
letter dated June 4, 1974, SNM-724 was terminated and the UCAR facility
released for unrestricted use.
In 1991, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory was contracted by NRC to
review and evaluate all nuclear materials licenses terminated by NRC or
its predecessor agencies, since inception of materials regulation in
the late 1940s. One of the objectives of this review was to identify
sites with the potential for residual contamination, based on
information in the license documentation. NRC evaluated the available
survey data to determine if the information was sufficient to conclude
that the site meets the existing guidelines for unrestricted use.
Radiological assessments performed at the UCAR facility and its
immediate vicinity identified the presence of enriched and depleted
uranium on building surfaces and in soil in excess of applicable
radiological release criteria. Sampling identified contamination in
three buildings on the UCAR site: Building 10, Building 5 Annex, and
the Metallurgy Laboratory. Surface contamination in Building 10,
Building 5 Annex, and in the Metallurgy Laboratory was primarily
present as fixed contamination. Contamination in soils/sediments in
small areas was also present.
Surface contamination above the release guidelines was identified
in 11 rooms in Building 10 (Rooms 106-2, 120, 121, 122, 124, 126, 128-
1, 129, 132, 133, and 134) ranging from background to 106,469
disintegrations per minute/100 square centimeter (dpm/100
cm2) direct beta/gamma. Volumetric contamination in other
areas of the site was found to be above the release criteria: (1) Soil
surrounding the incinerator pad; (2) sediment in the manholes and
cooling water tanks; (3) laundry sump tank; and (4) the surface layer
of concrete flooring. A core sample was taken near the incinerator pad.
The range for total uranium concentration was 1.33 to 3,655 picocuries
per gram (pCi/g). The estimated average depth of the soil contamination
was one foot resulting in a contaminated soil volume estimate of 500
cubic feet.
Uranium was also the primary contaminant in Building 5 Annex.
Surface contamination was found in four rooms in Building 5 (Rooms 106,
107, 108, 110), ranging from background to 428,698 dpm/100
cm2 direct beta/gamma. Volumetric contamination above the
release criteria was found in three areas in and around Building 5: (1)
Sink trap; (2) concrete flooring; and (3) asphalt outside exit.
Contamination in the Metallurgy Laboratory consisted of localized
surface contamination on the tops of cabinets. There was no indication
of radioactive material above the release criteria beyond the former
restricted area boundary in the ground water, settling basins, or
former sanitary sewer system.
UCAR voluntarily conducted remediation activities without a
license, as its license was terminated in 1974. Although UCAR was not a
licensee, NRC staff conducted periodic inspections to ensure that
remediation was performed in accordance with current regulations and
release limits.
As part of its remediation activities, UCAR amassed fifteen (15)
24-yard3 intermodal containers of solid low-level
radiological waste. UCAR reported concentrations in the intermodal
containers averaging approximately 25 pCi/g of U-235 and 1,082 pCi/g of
total uranium.
On February 15 and 16, 2006, NRC staff conducted an inspection of
the UCAR site that included Building 10, Building 5 Annex, the
Metallurgy Lab, the incinerator pad and other areas, as well as the
intermodal containers (Inspection Report 07000784/2005001). This
inspection found that residual uranium contamination on surfaces and
soil met the criteria in the remediation plan for unrestricted use. The
remediation activities in Building 10 and the incinerator pad resulted
in complete removal of the structures and the concrete floor pads so
that no surfaces were available for surface contamination measurements.
Gamma scans of areas where an incinerator pad, drain lines, and a
buried water cooling tank had been located, as well as scans of various
non-remediated areas found no areas of elevated gamma exposure rates.
Direct alpha measurement of the Building 5 Annex and the Metallurgy Lab
were all less than 2000 dpm/100cm2. The inspector found no
areas of elevated gamma exposure rates in the scanned areas.
Soil samples were taken from Site areas based on operational
history and remediation activities and were analyzed by the Oak Ridge
Institute for Science and Education for isotopic concentrations of U-
234, U-235, and U-238. All samples were surface soil, collected within
the top four inches of the soil surface. One sample from the Building 5
Annex showed elevated concentrations of U-234, but when averaged over
the survey unit was found to be within the derived concentration
guidelines for soils at the site.
[[Page 57577]]
The NRC inspector examined the intermodal containers while they
were stored at the site. The amount of U-235 in the intermodals ranged
from 75 to 206 grams per intermodal. One of the intermodals contained a
sump from Building 10 and had a contact exposure rate of 65
microroentgens/hour. Measurements of the other containers were not
significantly above background. On August 14, 2006, UCAR provided
copies of the shipping manifests demonstrating that the 15 intermodal
containers had been accepted for disposal by EnergySolutions in Utah.
UCAR provided a final radiological status survey and the NRC staff
performed an independent dose assessment to demonstrate the site meets
the license termination criteria in Subpart E of 10 CFR Part 20. Based
on its reviews of UCAR submittals and its own analyses and assessments,
the NRC staff has determined that the site meets the unrestricted
release dose criteria in 10 CFR Part 20.1402 and that no further
remedial action under the NRC's authority is required at the UCAR site.
The staff prepared a Safety Evaluation Report (SER) (ML062580415) to
support its determination.
II. Further Information
In accordance with 10 CFR Part 2.790 of the NRC's ``Rules of
Practice,'' details with respect to this action, including the SER, are
available electronically at the NRC's Electronic Reading Room at http:/
/www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. From this site, you can access the
NRC's Agency wide Document Access and Management System (ADAMS), which
provides text and image files of NRC's public documents. The ADAMS
accession number for the termination letter and SER, ``Safety
Evaluation Report to Support the Determination that No Further Action
is Required under the Authority of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission at the Union Carbide Corporation Facility in Lawrenceburg,
TN'' (Docket Nos. 070-00784 and 040-07044) is ADAMS No. ML062620512. If
you do not have access to ADAMS or if there are problems in accessing a
document located in ADAMS, contact the NRC Public Document Room
Reference staff at 1-800-397-4209, 301-415-4737, or by e-mail to:
pdr@nrc.gov.
This document may also be viewed electronically on the public
computers located at the NRC's PDR, O-1-F21, One White Flint North,
11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD 20852. The PDR reproduction
contractor will copy documents for a fee.
Dated at NRC, Rockville, MD, this 22nd day of September, 2006.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Keith I. McConnell,
Deputy Director, Decommissioning Directorate, Division of Waste
Management and Environmental Protection, Office of Nuclear Material
Safety and Safeguards.
[FR Doc. E6-16014 Filed 9-28-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P