Notice of Intent To Prepare a Supplement to the Stockpile Stewardship and Management Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement-Complex 2030, 61731-61736 [E6-17508]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 202 / Thursday, October 19, 2006 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Intent To Prepare a
Supplement to the Stockpile
Stewardship and Management
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement—Complex 2030
National Nuclear Security
Administration, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of intent.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA), an
agency within the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE or Department), announces
its intent to prepare a Supplement to the
Stockpile Stewardship and Management
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement—Complex 2030 (Complex
2030 SEIS or SEIS, DOE/EIS–0236–S4),
pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.), the Council on
Environmental Quality’s (CEQ’s) and
DOE’s regulations implementing NEPA
(40 CFR parts 1500–1508 and 10 CFR
part 1021, respectively). The SEIS will
analyze the environmental impacts from
the continued transformation of the
United States’ nuclear weapons
complex by implementing NNSA’s
vision of the complex as it would exist
in 2030, which the Department refers to
as Complex 2030, as well as
alternatives. Since the end of the Cold
War, there continue to be significant
changes in the requirements for the
nation’s nuclear arsenal, including
reductions in the number of nuclear
weapons. To fulfill its responsibilities
for certifying the safety and reliability of
nuclear weapons without underground
testing, DOE proposed and implemented
the Stockpile Stewardship and
Management (SSM) Program in the
1990s. Stockpile Stewardship includes
activities required to maintain a high
level of confidence in the safety and
reliability of nuclear weapons in the
absence of underground testing, and in
the capability of the United States to
resume nuclear testing if directed by the
President. Stockpile Management
activities include dismantlement,
maintenance, evaluation, repair, and
replacement of weapons and their
components in the existing stockpile.
NNSA’s proposed action is to
continue currently planned
modernization activities and select a
site for a consolidated plutonium center
for long-term research and development,
surveillance, and pit 1 manufacturing;
consolidate special nuclear materials
throughout the complex; consolidate,
1 A pit is the central core of a nuclear weapon
typically containing plutonium-239 that undergoes
fission when compressed by high explosives.
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relocate, or eliminate duplicative
facilities and programs and improve
operating efficiencies; identify one or
more sites for conducting NNSA flight
test operations; and accelerate nuclear
weapons dismantlement activities. This
Notice of Intent (NOI), the initial step in
the NEPA process, informs the public of
NNSA’s intention to prepare the
Complex 2030 SEIS, announces the
schedule for public scoping meetings,
and solicits public input. Following the
scoping period, NNSA will prepare and
issue a draft of the Complex 2030 SEIS
that will describe the Complex 2030
proposal, the alternatives analyzed, and
potential impacts of the proposal and
the alternatives.
This NOI also announces that NNSA
has cancelled the previously planned
Supplemental Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement on
Stockpile Stewardship and Management
for a Modern Pit Facility (DOE/EIS–
0236–S2).
DATES: NNSA invites comments on the
scope of the Complex 2030 SEIS. The
public scoping period starts with the
publication of this NOI in the Federal
Register and will continue through
January 17, 2006. Scoping comments
received after this date will be
considered to the extent practicable.
NNSA will hold public scoping
meetings to discuss issues and receive
oral and written comments on the scope
of the Complex 2030 SEIS. The
locations, dates, and times for these
public scoping meetings are listed
below and will be announced by
additional appropriate means. NNSA
requests federal agencies that desire to
be designated as cooperating agencies
on the SEIS to contact NNSA’s Office of
Transformation at the address listed
under ADDRESSES by the end of the
scoping period.
North Augusta, South Carolina, North
Augusta Community Center, 495
Brookside Avenue. November 9, 2006,
11 a.m.—3 p.m., 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Oak Ridge City
Center Club Room, 333 Main Street.
November 13, 2006, 11 a.m.—3 p.m.,
6 p.m.—10 p.m.
Amarillo, Texas, Amarillo Globe-News
Center, Education Room, 401 S.
Buchanan. November 15, 2006, 11
a.m.—3 p.m., 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
Las Vegas, Nevada, Cashman Center,
850 Las Vegas Boulevard North (at
Washington). November 28, 2006. 11
a.m.—3 p.m., 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
Tonopah, Nevada, Tonopah Convention
Center, 301 Brougher Avenue.
November 29, 2006, 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
Socorro, New Mexico, Macey Center (at
New Mexico Tech), 801 Leroy Place.
December 4, 2006, 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
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Albuquerque, New Mexico,
Albuquerque Convention Center, 401
2nd St. NW. December 5, 2006, 11
a.m.—3 p.m., 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
Los Alamos, New Mexico, Mesa Public
Library, 2400 Central Avenue.
December 6, 2006, 10:30 a.m.—2:30
p.m.
Santa Fe, New Mexico, Genoveva
Chavez Community Center, 3221
Rodeo Road. December 6, 2006, 6
p.m.—10 p.m.
Livermore, California, Robert Livermore
Community Center, 4444 East
Avenue. December 12, 2006, 11
a.m.—3 p.m.
Tracy, California, Tracy Community
Center, 950 East Street. December 12,
2006, 6 p.m.—10 p.m.
U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW., Room
1E–245, Washington, DC. December
14, 2006, 1 p.m.—5 p.m.
NNSA officials will be available to
informally discuss the Complex 2030
proposal during the first hour.
Following this, NNSA intends to hold a
plenary session at each scoping meeting
in which officials will explain the
Complex 2030 proposal and the SEIS,
including preliminary alternatives. The
meetings will provide the public with
an opportunity to provide oral and
written comments to NNSA on the
scope of the SEIS. Input from the
scoping meetings will assist NNSA in
preparing the draft SEIS.
ADDRESSES: General questions
concerning the NOI can be asked by
calling toll-free 1–800–832–0885 (ext.
63519), e-mailing to
Complex2030@nnsa.doe.gov, or writing
to Theodore A. Wyka, Complex 2030
SEIS Document Manager, Office of
Transformation, U.S. Department of
Energy, NA–10.1, 1000 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585.
Written comments on the scope of the
SEIS or requests to be placed on the
document distribution list can be sent to
the Complex 2030 SEIS Document
Manager. Additional information
regarding Complex 2030 is available on
Complex2030PEIS.com.
For general information on the DOE
NEPA process, please contact Carol M.
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, (202) 586–4600
or 1–800–472–2756. Additional
information regarding DOE NEPA
activities and access to many DOE
NEPA documents are available on the
Internet through the DOE NEPA Web
site at https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Background: The early days of the
nuclear weapons complex after World
War II saw a rapid build-up of capability
and capacity to support the growth of
the stockpile to fight the Cold War. By
the 1960s, the United States had built a
large stockpile of nuclear weapons, and
the nation began to focus on improving,
rather than expanding, the stockpile.
NNSA’s predecessor agencies began to
consolidate operations and close some
production facilities. In the 1980s,
facilities were shut down across the
nuclear weapons complex, including
certain facilities at the Savannah River
Site in South Carolina; the Oak Ridge
Reservation in Tennessee; the Rocky
Flats Plant in Colorado; the Fernald Site
in Ohio; the Hanford Reservation in
Washington; and elsewhere.
Prior DOE NEPA Reviews: DOE
completed a Nuclear Weapons Complex
Reconfiguration (‘‘Complex-21’’) Study
in January 1991, which identified
significant cost savings that could be
achieved by further downsizing of the
nuclear weapons complex.
DOE then initiated a programmatic
EIS (Reconfiguration PEIS) examining
alternatives for reconfiguring the
nuclear weapons complex. However, in
December 1991, the Department decided
to separate proposals for transforming
non-nuclear production from the
Reconfiguration PEIS because (1)
proposals to consolidate non-nuclear
facilities might not require preparation
of an EIS, and (2) proposals and
decisions regarding transformation of
non-nuclear production would neither
significantly affect nor be affected by
proposals and decisions regarding
transformation of nuclear production.
On January 27, 1992, the Department
issued an NOI (57 FR 3046) to prepare
an environmental assessment (DOE/EA–
0792) for the consolidation of nonnuclear production activities within the
nuclear weapons complex. Following
the collapse of the Soviet Union, the
United States reduced the budget for the
nuclear weapons program. President
George H. W. Bush imposed a
moratorium in 1992 on underground
nuclear testing.
On September 14, 1993, DOE
published a Finding of No Significant
Impact (FONSI) regarding its proposal to
consolidate non-nuclear component
production (58 FR 48043). This proposal
included termination of non-nuclear
production missions at the Mound Plant
in Ohio, the Pinellas Plant in Florida,
and the Rocky Flats Plant in Colorado.
The electrical and mechanical
manufacturing functions were
consolidated at the Kansas City Plant.
Detonators and beryllium capabilities
for technology and pit support were
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consolidated at Los Alamos National
Laboratory (LANL) in New Mexico, and
neutron generator production was
relocated to Sandia National
Laboratories in New Mexico.
In October 1993, President William J.
Clinton issued Presidential Decision
Directive 15 (PDD–15), which directed
DOE to establish the Stockpile
Stewardship Program. PDD–15
significantly redirected the nuclear
weapons program. Throughout the Cold
War, the Department of Defense (DOD)
and DOE’s nuclear weapons laboratories
had based a portion of their confidence
in the reliability of nuclear weapons on
performance data from atmospheric and
underground tests. To ensure weapons
reliability during the moratorium on
testing, DOE proposed to invest in new
scientific tools to assess the complex
phenomena involved in the detonation
of nuclear weapons. DOE also began to
develop sophisticated tools and
computer-based simulation techniques
to assess various aging phenomena as
nuclear weapons continued to serve
well beyond their originally anticipated
lifetimes. These actions enhanced
research and development (R&D) and
deferred spending on the production
complex.
DOE concluded in October 1994 that
the alternatives described in the
Reconfiguration PEIS no longer
contained realistic proposals for
reconfiguration of the nuclear weapons
complex. That conclusion was based on
several factors, including: comments
offered at the September-October 1993
Reconfiguration PEIS scoping meetings;
the anticipation that no production of
new nuclear weapons types would be
required for the foreseeable future;
budget constraints; and the
Department’s decision to prepare a
separate PEIS on Storage and
Disposition of Weapons-Usable Fissile
Materials (DOE/EIS–0229; NOI
published June 21, 1994, 59 FR 17344).
Consequently, the Department
separated the Reconfiguration PEIS into
two new PEISs: (1) A Tritium Supply
and Recycling PEIS (DOE/EIS–0161);
and (2) the SSM PEIS (DOE/EIS–0236).
The Final PEIS for Tritium Supply and
Recycling was issued on October 27,
1995 (60 FR 55021). In its Record of
Decision (ROD) on May 14, 1999 (64 FR
26369 2), DOE decided it would produce
the tritium needed to maintain the
nuclear arsenal at commercial light
water reactors owned and operated by
the Tennessee Valley Authority and
2 This ROD also contains decisions for the EIS for
Construction and Operation of a Tritium Extraction
Facility at the Savannah River Site (DOE/EIS–0271)
and EIS for the Production of Tritium in a
Commercial Light Water Reactor (DOE/EIS–0288).
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extract tritium at a new DOE-owned
Tritium Extraction Facility at the
Savannah River Site. With regard to the
SSM PEIS, DOE issued an NOI on June
6, 1995 (60 FR 31291), a final SSM PEIS
on November 19, 1996 (61 FR 58871),
and a ROD on December 26, 1996 (61 FR
68014) announcing its decision to
transform the weapons production
complex by (1) reducing the weapon
assembly capacity located at the Pantex
Plant in Texas; (2) reducing the highexplosives fabrication capacity at
Pantex; (3) reducing the uranium,
secondary, and case fabrication capacity
in the Y–12 National Security Complex
in Tennessee; (4) reducing nonnuclear
component fabrication capacity at the
Kansas City Plant; and (5) reestablishing
a modest interim pit fabrication
capability at Los Alamos National
Laboratory in New Mexico while
evaluating the need for greater pit
manufacturing capacity in the future.
In accordance with the decisions in
the SSM PEIS, the Non-nuclear
Consolidation Environmental
Assessment (EA), and the Tritium
Supply and Recycling PEIS, DOE began
transforming the nuclear weapons
complex to its present configuration.
DOE has also prepared other EISs that
facilitated the transformation of the
complex. The relevant RODs for these
site-wide and project-specific EISs are
listed below:
• 1996 ROD for the EIS for the
Nevada Test Site and Off-Site Locations
in the State of Nevada (61 FR 65551,
December 13, 1996).
• 1997 ROD for the EIS for the
Continued Operation of the Pantex
Plant and Associated Storage of Nuclear
Weapon Components (62 FR 3880,
January 27, 1997).
• 1999 ROD for the Site-wide EIS for
Continued Operation of the Los Alamos
National Laboratory (64 FR 50797,
September 20, 1999).
• 1999 ROD for the EIS for Site-wide
Operation of Sandia National
Laboratories (64 FR 69996, December
15, 1999).
• 2000 Amended ROD for the Nevada
Test Site EIS (65 FR 10061, February 25,
2000).
• 2002 ROD for the Site-wide EIS for
the Oak Ridge Y–12 National Security
Complex (67 FR 11296, March 13,
2002).
• 2002 ROD for the EIS for the
Relocation of Technical Area 18
Capabilities and Materials at the Los
Alamos National Laboratory (67 FR
79906, December 31, 2002).
• 2004 ROD for the EIS for the
Chemistry and Metallurgy Research
Building Replacement Project, Los
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Alamos National Laboratory (69 FR
6967, February 12, 2004).
• 2005 ROD for the Site-wide EIS for
Continued Operation of Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory and
Supplemental Stockpile Stewardship
and Management Programmatic EIS (70
FR 71491, November 29, 2005).
Nuclear Weapons Complex: The
current nuclear weapons complex
consists of eight major facilities located
in seven states. NNSA maintains a
limited capability to design and
manufacture nuclear weapons; provides
surveillance of and maintains nuclear
weapons currently in the stockpile; and
dismantles retired nuclear weapons.
Major facilities and their primary
responsibilities within the nuclear
weapons complex are listed below:
Savannah River Site (SRS) (Aiken,
South Carolina)—Extracts tritium (when
the Tritium Extraction Facility becomes
operational in 2007); provides loading,
unloading and surveillance of tritium
reservoirs. SRS does not maintain
Category I/II 3 quantities of special
nuclear material (SNM) 4 associated
with weapons activities, but does
maintain Category I/II quantities of SNM
associated with other Department
activities (e.g., environmental
management).
Pantex Plant (PX) (Amarillo, Texas)—
Dismantles retired weapons; fabricates
high-explosives components; assembles
high explosive, nuclear, and nonnuclear components into nuclear
weapons; repairs and modifies weapons;
and evaluates and performs non-nuclear
testing of weapons. Maintains Category
I/II quantities of SNM for the weapons
program and material no longer needed
by the weapons program.
Y–12 National Security Complex (Y–
12) (Oak Ridge, Tennessee)—
Manufactures nuclear weapons
secondaries, cases, and other weapons
components; evaluates and performs
testing of weapon components;
maintains Category I/II quantities of
SNM; conducts dismantlement, storage,
and disposition of nuclear weapons
materials; and supplies SNM for use in
naval reactors.
Kansas City Plant (KCP) (Kansas City,
Missouri)—Manufactures and acquires
3 Category I/II quantities of special nuclear
material are determined by grouping materials by
type, attractiveness level, and quantity. These
grouping parameters are defined in DOE Manual
470.4–6, Nuclear Material Control and
Accountability [see https://www.directives.doe.gov].
4 As defined in section 11 of the Atomic Energy
Act of 1954, special nuclear material are: (1)
Plutonium, uranium enriched in the isotope 233 or
in the isotope 235, and any other material which
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
determines to be special nuclear material; or (2) any
material artificially enriched by plutonium or
uranium 233 or 235.
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non-nuclear weapons components; and
evaluates and performs testing of
weapon components. No Category I/II
quantities of SNM are maintained at the
KCP.
Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory (LLNL) (Livermore,
California)—Conducts research and
development of nuclear weapons;
designs and tests advanced technology
concepts; designs weapons; maintains a
limited capability to fabricate
plutonium components; and provides
safety and reliability assessments of the
stockpile. Maintains Category I/II
quantities of SNM associated with the
weapons program and material no
longer needed by the weapons program.
Los Alamos National Laboratory
(LANL) (Los Alamos, New Mexico)—
Conducts research and development of
nuclear weapons; designs and tests
advanced technology concepts; designs
weapons; provides safety and reliability
assessments of the stockpile; maintains
interim production capabilities for
limited quantities of plutonium
components (e.g., pits); and
manufactures nuclear weapon
detonators for the stockpile. Maintains
Category I/II quantities of SNM
associated with the nuclear weapons
program and material no longer needed
by the weapons program.
Sandia National Laboratories (SNL)
(Albuquerque, New Mexico; Livermore,
California)—Conducts system
engineering of nuclear weapons; designs
and develops non-nuclear components;
conducts field and laboratory nonnuclear testing; conducts research and
development in support of the nuclear
weapon non-nuclear design;
manufactures non-nuclear weapon
components; provides safety and
reliability assessments of the stockpile;
and manufactures neutron generators for
the stockpile. Maintains Category I/II
quantities of SNM associated with the
nuclear weapons program.
Nevada Test Site (NTS) (Las Vegas,
Nevada)—Maintains capability to
conduct underground nuclear testing;
conducts experiments involving nuclear
material and high explosives; provides
capability to disposition a damaged
nuclear weapon or improvised nuclear
device; conducts non-nuclear
experiments; and conducts research and
training on nuclear safeguards,
criticality safety and emergency
response. Maintains Category I/II
quantities of SNM associated with the
nuclear weapons program.
Purpose and Need for the Stockpile
Stewardship and Management Program:
Under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954
(42 U.S.C. 2011 et seq.), DOE is
responsible for providing nuclear
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weapons to support the United States’
national security strategy. The National
Nuclear Security Administration Act
(Pub. L. 106–65, Title XXXII) assigned
this responsibility to NNSA within
DOE. One of the primary missions of
NNSA is to provide the nation with safe
and reliable nuclear weapons,
components and capabilities, and to
accomplish this in a way that protects
the environment and the health and
safety of workers and the public.
Changes in national security needs
and budgets have necessitated changes
in the way NNSA meets its
responsibilities regarding the nation’s
nuclear stockpile. As a result of a
changed security environment,
unilateral decisions by the United States
and international arms control
agreements, the nation’s stockpile is
significantly smaller today and by 2012,
it will be the smallest since the
Eisenhower administration (1953–1961).
The Treaty of Moscow will eventually
lead to a level of 1,700–2,200
operationally-deployed strategic nuclear
weapons.
However, nuclear deterrence will
continue to be a cornerstone of United
States national security policy, and
NNSA must continue to meet its
responsibilities for ensuring the safety
and reliability of the nation’s nuclear
weapons stockpile. The current policy is
contained in the Nuclear Posture
Review, submitted to Congress in early
2002, which states that the United
States will:
• Change the size, composition and
character of the nuclear weapons
stockpile in a way that reflects that the
Cold War is over;
• Achieve a credible deterrent with
the lowest possible number of nuclear
warheads consistent with national
security needs, including obligations to
allies; and
• Transform the NNSA nuclear
weapons complex into a responsive
infrastructure that supports the specific
stockpile requirements established by
the President and maintains the
essential United States nuclear
capabilities needed for an uncertain
global future.
Complex 2030 SEIS: NNSA has been
evaluating how to establish a more
responsive nuclear weapons complex
infrastructure since the Nuclear Posture
Review was transmitted to Congress in
early 2002. The Stockpile Stewardship
Conference in 2003, the Department of
Defense Strategic Capabilities
Assessment in 2004, the
recommendations of the Secretary of
Energy Advisory Board (SEAB) Task
Force on the Nuclear Weapons Complex
Infrastructure in 2005, and the Defense
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Science Board Task Force on Nuclear
Capabilities in 2006 have provided
information for NNSA’s evaluations.
In early 2006, NNSA developed a
planning scenario for what the nuclear
weapons complex would look like in
2030. See https://www.nnsa.doe.gov for
more information regarding Complex
2030 planning. The Complex 2030
planning scenario incorporates many of
the decisions NNSA has already made
based on the evaluations in the SSM
PEIS, Tritium Supply and Recycling
PEIS, and other NEPA documents. See
discussion in background above. The
following table identifies which
components of Complex 2030 are based
on the existing SSM PEIS and Tritium
PEIS RODs, including RODs for
subsequent tiered EISs:
SSM
PEIS
ROD
Components of Complex 2030 that reflect earlier decisions
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Maintain but reduce the existing weapon assembly capacity located at Pantex ...................................................
Maintain but reduce the high-explosives fabrication capacity at Pantex ................................................................
Maintain but reduce the existing uranium, secondary, and case fabrication capacity at the Y–12 Plant at Oak
Ridge ....................................................................................................................................................................
Reduce the non-nuclear component fabrication capacity at the Kansas City Plant ...............................................
Reestablish limited pit fabrication capability at Los Alamos National Laboratory while evaluating the need for a
larger capability ....................................................................................................................................................
Irradiate tritium producing rods in commercial light water reactors; construct and operate a new Tritium Extraction Facility at DOE’s Savannah River Site .........................................................................................................
Types of Decisions that Would Be
Based on the Complex 2030 SEIS: The
decisions set forth in the Complex 2030
ROD would:
• Identify the future missions of the
SSM Program and the nuclear weapons
complex; and
• Determine the configuration of the
future weapons complex needed to
accomplish the SSM Program.
For specific programs or facilities,
NNSA may need to prepare additional
NEPA documents to implement the
decisions announced in the ROD. The
baseline that will be used for the
analyses of program and facility needs
in the SEIS is 1,700–2,200
operationally-deployed strategic nuclear
weapons, in addition to augmentation
weapons, reliability-reserve weapons
and weapons required to meet NATO
commitments. The numbers are
consistent with international armscontrol agreements. Consistent with
national security policy directives,
replacement warhead design concepts
may be pursued under the alternatives
as a means of, for example, enhancing
safety and security, improving
manufacturing practices, reducing
surveillance needs, and reducing need
for underground tests.
The SEIS will evaluate reasonable
alternatives for future transformation of
the nuclear weapons complex. The
Proposed Action and alternatives to the
Proposed Action will assume continued
implementation of the following prior
siting decisions that DOE made in the
SSM PEIS and Tritium PEIS RODs,
including RODs for subsequent tiered
EISs:
• Location of the weapon assembly/
disassembly operations at the Pantex
Plant in Texas.
• Location of uranium, secondary,
and case fabrication at the Y–12
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National Security Complex in
Tennessee.
• Location of tritium extraction,
loading and unloading, and support
operations at the Savannah River Site in
South Carolina.
NNSA does not believe it is necessary
to identify additional alternatives
beyond those present in the SSM PEIS.
Regarding the uranium, secondary, and
case fabrication at Y–12, NNSA is
currently preparing a Y–12 Site-wide
EIS to evaluate reasonable alternatives
for the continued modernization of the
Y–12 capabilities. The Complex 2030
SEIS will incorporate any decisions
made pursuant to the Y–12 Site-wide
EIS.
While the Complex 2030 planning
scenario proposes to consolidate further
non-nuclear production activities
performed at the Kansas City Plant, this
proposal will be evaluated in a separate
NEPA analysis, as was done in the
1990s. NNSA believes that it is
appropriate to separate the analyses of
the transformation of non-nuclear
production from the SEIS because
decisions regarding those activities
would neither significantly affect nor be
affected by decisions regarding the
transformation of nuclear production
activities.
The SSM PEIS ROD announced
NNSA’s decision to establish a small
interim pit production capacity at
LANL. In the 1999 LANL Site-wide EIS
ROD, NNSA announced it would
achieve a pit production capacity at
LANL of up to 20 pits per year. The
2006 draft LANL Site-wide EIS
evaluates a proposal for a production
capacity of 50 certified pits annually.
This proposed capacity is based on an
annual production rate of 80 pits per
year in order to provide NNSA with
sufficient flexibility to obtain 50
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Tritium
PEIS
ROD
X
X
........................
........................
X
X
........................
........................
X
........................
........................
X
certified pits. Any decisions made
pursuant to the LANL Site-wide EIS will
be included in the Complex 2030 SEIS.
Based upon the studies 5 and analyses
that led to NNSA’s development of the
Complex 2030 scenario, NNSA has
developed alternatives that are intended
to facilitate public comment on the
scope of the SEIS. NNSA’s decisions
regarding implementation of Complex
2030 will be based on the following
alternatives, or a combination of those
alternatives.
The Proposed Action—Transform to a
More Modern, Cost-Effective Nuclear
Weapons Complex (Complex 2030).
This alternative would undertake the
following actions to continue the
transformation of NNSA’s nuclear
weapons complex:
• Select a site to construct and
operate a consolidated plutonium center
for long-term R&D, surveillance, and
manufacturing operations for a baseline
capacity of 125 qualified pits per year at
a site with existing Category I/II SNM.
• Reduce the number of sites with
Category I/II SNM and consolidate SNM
to fewer locations within each given
site.
• Consolidate, relocate or eliminate
duplicative facilities and programs and
improve operating efficiencies,
including at facilities for nuclear
materials storage, tritium R&D, high
explosives R&D, environmental testing,
and hydrotesting facilities.
• Identify one or more sites for
conducting NNSA flight test operations.
5 The Stockpile Stewardship Conference in 2003,
the Department of Defense Strategic Capabilities
Assessment in 2004, the recommendations of the
Secretary of Energy Advisory Board (SEAB) Task
Force on the Nuclear Weapons Complex
Infrastructure in 2005, and the recommendations of
the Defense Science Board Task Force on Nuclear
Capabilities in 2006.
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 202 / Thursday, October 19, 2006 / Notices
Existing DOD and DOE test ranges (e.g.,
White Sands Missile Range in New
Mexico and Nevada Test Site in Nevada)
would be considered as alternatives to
the continued operation of the Tonopah
Test Range in Nevada.
• Accelerate dismantlement
activities.
The DOE sites that will be considered
as potential locations for the
consolidated plutonium center and
consolidation of Category I/II SNM
include: Los Alamos, Nevada Test Site,
Pantex Plant, Y–12 National Security
Complex, and the Savannah River Site.
Other DOE sites are not considered
reasonable alternative locations because
they do not satisfy certain criteria such
as population encroachment, or mission
compatibility or synergy with the site’s
existing mission.
Alternatives to the Proposed Action
No Action Alternative. The No Action
Alternative represents the status quo as
it exists today and is presently planned.
It includes the continued
implementation of decisions made
pursuant to the SSM PEIS and the
Tritium Supply and Recycling PEIS (as
summarized above) and related sitespecific EISs and EAs. These decisions
are contained in RODs and Findings of
No Significant Impact (FONSIs),
including those discussed above, and
copies can be located on the DOE NEPA
Document Web page at https://
www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/documents.html.
The No Action Alternative would also
include any decisions made as a result
of the new Y–12 Site-wide EIS and the
LANL Site-wide EIS once these EISs are
finished. NNSA expects to issue RODs
on these EISs prior to publication of the
draft Complex 2030 SEIS.
The No Action Alternative is
illustrated in the following matrix:
Sites (no action alternative)
Capability
KCP
Weapons assembly/Disassembly ....................................................
Nonnuclear components ..................................................................
Nuclear components:
—Pits ........................................................................................
—Secondaries and cases .........................................................
High explosives components ...........................................................
Tritium Extraction, Loading and Unloading .....................................
High explosives R&D .......................................................................
Tritium R&D .....................................................................................
Large Scale Hydrotesting ................................................................
Category I/II SNM Storage ..............................................................
The No Action Alternative also
includes continuation of environmental
testing at current locations and flighttesting activities at the Tonopah Test
Range in Nevada.
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Reduced Operations and CapabilityBased Complex Alternative
In this alternative, NNSA would
maintain a basic capability for
manufacturing technologies for all
stockpile weapons, as well as laboratory
and experimental capabilities to support
stockpile decisions, but would reduce
production facilities to a ‘‘capabilitybased’’ 6 capacity. This alternative
would not have a production capacity
sufficient to meet current national
security objectives. This alternative
would be defined as follows:
• Do not construct and operate a
consolidated plutonium center for longterm R&D, surveillance, and
manufacturing operations; and do not
expand pit production at LANL beyond
50 certified pits per year.
• Reduce the number of sites with
Category I/II SNM and consolidate SNM
to fewer locations within a given site.
• Consolidate, relocate or eliminate
duplicative facilities and programs and
improve operating efficiencies,
including at facilities for nuclear
6 The capability to manufacture and assemble
nuclear weapons at a nominal level.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:50 Oct 18, 2006
Jkt 211001
LANL
LLNL
NTS
Y–12
PX
SNL
SRS
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X
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X
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X
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X
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X
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X
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X
X
X
X
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X
X
X
X
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X
X
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X
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X
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X
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X
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X
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X
............
X
materials storage, tritium R&D, high
explosives R&D, environmental testing
facilities, and hydrotesting facilities.
• Identify one or more sites for
conducting NNSA flight test operations.
Existing DOD and DOE test ranges (e.g.
White Sands Missile Range in New
Mexico and Nevada Test Site in Nevada)
would be considered as potential
alternatives to the continued operation
of the Tonopah Test Range in Nevada.
• Production capacities at Pantex,
Y–12, and the Savannah River Site
would be considered for further
reductions limited by the capabilitybased capacity.
• NNSA would continue
dismantlement activities.
Proposal Not Being Considered for
Further Analysis. The SEAB Task Force
on the Nuclear Weapons Complex
Infrastructure recommended that NNSA
pursue a consolidated nuclear
production center (CNPC) as a single
facility for all research, development,
and production activities relating to
nuclear weapons that involve significant
amounts (i.e. Category I/II quantities) of
SNM. The CNPC, as envisioned by the
SEAB Task Force, would contain all the
nuclear weapons manufacturing,
production, assembly, and disassembly
facilities and associated weapon
surveillance and maintenance activities
for the stockpile weapons. The CNPC
would include the plutonium activities
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
of the consolidated plutonium center
proposed by NNSA in its Complex 2030
vision, as well as the consolidated
activities of the uranium, tritium, and
high explosive operations. DOE believes
that creation of a CNPC is not a
reasonable alternative and does not
intend to analyze it as an alternative in
the SEIS because of the technical and
schedule issues involved in
constructing a CNPC, as well as
associated costs. NNSA invites and will
consider comments on this matter
during the scoping process.
The SEAB Task Force developed three
business cases for transforming the
nuclear weapons complex, two of which
were characterized as high risk. Its
preferred least-risk option was to
establish a CNPC ‘‘quickly’’ by
accelerating site selection, NEPA
analyses, regulatory approvals, and
construction. The Task Force assumed
that NNSA could, under these
circumstances, begin operating a CNPC
in 2015, start consolidation of SNM
shortly thereafter, accelerate
dismantlements, and begin other major
transformational activities. Until the
CNPC was completed, NNSA would
have to maintain, and in some cases
improve, existing production and
research facilities. According to the
Task Force’s estimates, this option
would require an additional 1 billion
dollars per year for weapons programs
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
19OCN1
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
61736
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 202 / Thursday, October 19, 2006 / Notices
activities for the next 10 years, and lead
to a net savings through 2030 of 15
billion dollars.
Accelerated construction of a CNPC
would not allow NNSA to avoid
immediate expenditures to restore and
modernize interim production
capabilities to meet essential Life
Extension Program (LEP) schedules and
support the existing stockpile during the
next decade. LEP is the refurbishment of
nuclear weapons parts and components
to extend the weapon deployment life.
NNSA has concluded that the SEAB
Task Force underestimated the
nonfinancial challenges of constructing
a CNPC. A CNPC would require moving
a unique and highly skilled workforce to
a new location. It would require NNSA
to obtain significant regulatory
approvals rapidly, and to construct a
unique and complex facility on a tight
schedule. It would put many of the
significant aspects of the weapons
complex transformation into ‘‘one
basket’’—until the CNPC began
operations, all the other facilities and
activities would be delayed. NNSA’s
Proposed Action would achieve many of
the benefits of the CNPC approach—
consolidation of SNM and facilities,
integrated R&D and production
involving SNM, and aggressive
dismantlements—in a way that
addresses immediate national security
needs in a technically feasible and
affordable manner.
Nuclear Materials Consolidation: DOE
is pursuing SNM consolidation from all
DOE sites including those that comprise
the nuclear weapons complex. The SEIS
will look at alternatives for the storage
and consolidation of nuclear materials
within the nuclear weapons complex
including materials needed to maintain
the United States’ nuclear weapons
arsenal. There is a potential overlap
between the SEIS and the activities of
the Department’s other nuclear
materials consolidation activities, and
DOE will ensure that there is
appropriate coordination between the
two activities.
Supplemental Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement on
Stockpile Stewardship and Management
for a Modern Pit Facility: NNSA issued
a Draft Supplemental Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement on
Stockpile Stewardship and Management
for a Modern Pit Facility (MPF) on June
4, 2003 (68 FR 33487; also 68 FR 33934,
June 6, 2003) that analyzed alternatives
for producing the plutonium pits that
are an essential component of nuclear
weapons. On January 28, 2004, NNSA
announced that it was indefinitely
postponing any decision on how it
would obtain a large capacity pit
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:50 Oct 18, 2006
Jkt 211001
manufacturing facility. Because the
Complex 2030 SEIS will analyze
alternatives for plutonium-related
activities that include pit production,
DOE, effective upon publication of this
NOI, cancels the MPF PEIS.
Public Scoping Process: The scoping
process is an opportunity for the public
to assist the NNSA in determining the
issues for analysis. NNSA will hold
public scoping meetings at locations
identified in this NOI. The purpose of
these meetings is to provide the public
with an opportunity to present oral and
written comments, ask questions, and
discuss concerns regarding the
transformation of the nuclear weapons
complex and the SEIS with NNSA
officials. Comments and
recommendations can also be
communicated to NNSA as discussed
earlier in this notice.
Complex 2030 PEIS Supplement
Preparation Process: The SEIS
preparation process begins with the
publication of this NOI in the Federal
Register. NNSA will consider all public
comments that it receives during the
public comment period in preparing the
draft SEIS. NNSA expects to issue the
draft SEIS for public review during the
summer of 2007. Public comments on
the draft SEIS will be received during a
comment period of at least 45 days
following the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s publication of the
Notice of Availability in the Federal
Register. Notices placed in local
newspapers will specify dates and
locations for public hearings on the
draft SEIS and will establish a schedule
for submitting comments on the draft
SEIS, including a final date for
submission of comments. Issuance of
the final SEIS is scheduled for 2008.
Classified Material: NNSA will review
classified material while preparing the
SEIS. Within the limits of classification,
NNSA will provide the public as much
information as possible to assist its
understanding and ability to comment.
Any classified material needed to
explain the purpose and need for the
action, or the analyses in the SEIS, will
be segregated into a classified appendix
or supplement, which will not be
available for public review. However, all
unclassified information or results of
calculations using classified data will be
reported in the unclassified section of
the SEIS, to the extent possible in
accordance with federal classification
requirements.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Issued in Washington, DC on October 11,
2006.
Linton F. Brooks,
Administrator, National Nuclear Security
Administration.
[FR Doc. E6–17508 Filed 10–18–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. IC07–538–000; FERC–538]
Commission Information Collection
Activities, Proposed Collection;
Comment Request; Extension
October 13, 2006.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, DOE.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In compliance with the
requirements of Section 3506(c) (2) (a)
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–13), the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Commission) is
soliciting public comment on the
specific aspects of the information
collection described below.
DATES: Comments on the collection of
information are due by December 21,
2006.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the proposed
collection of information can be
obtained from and written comments
may be submitted to the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, Attn: Michael
Miller, Office of the Executive Director,
ED–34, 888 First Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20426. Comments may
be filed either in paper format or
electronically. Those parties filing
electronically do not need to make a
paper filing. For paper filings, the
original and 14 copies of such
comments should be submitted to the
Office of the Secretary, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426 and
refer to Docket No. IC07–538–000.
Documents filed electronically via the
Internet must be prepared in
WordPerfect, MS Word, Portable
Document Format, or ASCII format. To
file the document, access the
Commission’s Web site at https://
www.ferc.gov and click on ‘‘Make an Efiling,’’ and then follow the instructions
for each screen. First time users will
have to establish a user name and
password. The Commission will send an
automatic acknowledgement to the
sender’s e-mail address upon receipt of
comments.
All comments may be viewed, printed
or downloaded remotely via the Internet
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
19OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 202 (Thursday, October 19, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 61731-61736]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-17508]
[[Page 61731]]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Supplement to the Stockpile
Stewardship and Management Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement--Complex 2030
AGENCY: National Nuclear Security Administration, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of intent.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), an agency
within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE or Department), announces its
intent to prepare a Supplement to the Stockpile Stewardship and
Management Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement--Complex 2030
(Complex 2030 SEIS or SEIS, DOE/EIS-0236-S4), pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the
Council on Environmental Quality's (CEQ's) and DOE's regulations
implementing NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508 and 10 CFR part 1021,
respectively). The SEIS will analyze the environmental impacts from the
continued transformation of the United States' nuclear weapons complex
by implementing NNSA's vision of the complex as it would exist in 2030,
which the Department refers to as Complex 2030, as well as
alternatives. Since the end of the Cold War, there continue to be
significant changes in the requirements for the nation's nuclear
arsenal, including reductions in the number of nuclear weapons. To
fulfill its responsibilities for certifying the safety and reliability
of nuclear weapons without underground testing, DOE proposed and
implemented the Stockpile Stewardship and Management (SSM) Program in
the 1990s. Stockpile Stewardship includes activities required to
maintain a high level of confidence in the safety and reliability of
nuclear weapons in the absence of underground testing, and in the
capability of the United States to resume nuclear testing if directed
by the President. Stockpile Management activities include
dismantlement, maintenance, evaluation, repair, and replacement of
weapons and their components in the existing stockpile.
NNSA's proposed action is to continue currently planned
modernization activities and select a site for a consolidated plutonium
center for long-term research and development, surveillance, and pit
\1\ manufacturing; consolidate special nuclear materials throughout the
complex; consolidate, relocate, or eliminate duplicative facilities and
programs and improve operating efficiencies; identify one or more sites
for conducting NNSA flight test operations; and accelerate nuclear
weapons dismantlement activities. This Notice of Intent (NOI), the
initial step in the NEPA process, informs the public of NNSA's
intention to prepare the Complex 2030 SEIS, announces the schedule for
public scoping meetings, and solicits public input. Following the
scoping period, NNSA will prepare and issue a draft of the Complex 2030
SEIS that will describe the Complex 2030 proposal, the alternatives
analyzed, and potential impacts of the proposal and the alternatives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A pit is the central core of a nuclear weapon typically
containing plutonium-239 that undergoes fission when compressed by
high explosives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This NOI also announces that NNSA has cancelled the previously
planned Supplemental Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement on
Stockpile Stewardship and Management for a Modern Pit Facility (DOE/
EIS-0236-S2).
DATES: NNSA invites comments on the scope of the Complex 2030 SEIS. The
public scoping period starts with the publication of this NOI in the
Federal Register and will continue through January 17, 2006. Scoping
comments received after this date will be considered to the extent
practicable. NNSA will hold public scoping meetings to discuss issues
and receive oral and written comments on the scope of the Complex 2030
SEIS. The locations, dates, and times for these public scoping meetings
are listed below and will be announced by additional appropriate means.
NNSA requests federal agencies that desire to be designated as
cooperating agencies on the SEIS to contact NNSA's Office of
Transformation at the address listed under ADDRESSES by the end of the
scoping period.
North Augusta, South Carolina, North Augusta Community Center, 495
Brookside Avenue. November 9, 2006, 11 a.m.--3 p.m., 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Oak Ridge City Center Club Room, 333 Main Street.
November 13, 2006, 11 a.m.--3 p.m., 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Amarillo, Texas, Amarillo Globe-News Center, Education Room, 401 S.
Buchanan. November 15, 2006, 11 a.m.--3 p.m., 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Las Vegas, Nevada, Cashman Center, 850 Las Vegas Boulevard North (at
Washington). November 28, 2006. 11 a.m.--3 p.m., 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Tonopah, Nevada, Tonopah Convention Center, 301 Brougher Avenue.
November 29, 2006, 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Socorro, New Mexico, Macey Center (at New Mexico Tech), 801 Leroy
Place. December 4, 2006, 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Albuquerque, New Mexico, Albuquerque Convention Center, 401 2nd St. NW.
December 5, 2006, 11 a.m.--3 p.m., 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Los Alamos, New Mexico, Mesa Public Library, 2400 Central Avenue.
December 6, 2006, 10:30 a.m.--2:30 p.m.
Santa Fe, New Mexico, Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo
Road. December 6, 2006, 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
Livermore, California, Robert Livermore Community Center, 4444 East
Avenue. December 12, 2006, 11 a.m.--3 p.m.
Tracy, California, Tracy Community Center, 950 East Street. December
12, 2006, 6 p.m.--10 p.m.
U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Room 1E-245,
Washington, DC. December 14, 2006, 1 p.m.--5 p.m.
NNSA officials will be available to informally discuss the Complex
2030 proposal during the first hour. Following this, NNSA intends to
hold a plenary session at each scoping meeting in which officials will
explain the Complex 2030 proposal and the SEIS, including preliminary
alternatives. The meetings will provide the public with an opportunity
to provide oral and written comments to NNSA on the scope of the SEIS.
Input from the scoping meetings will assist NNSA in preparing the draft
SEIS.
ADDRESSES: General questions concerning the NOI can be asked by calling
toll-free 1-800-832-0885 (ext. 63519), e-mailing to
Complex2030@nnsa.doe.gov, or writing to Theodore A. Wyka, Complex 2030
SEIS Document Manager, Office of Transformation, U.S. Department of
Energy, NA-10.1, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585.
Written comments on the scope of the SEIS or requests to be placed on
the document distribution list can be sent to the Complex 2030 SEIS
Document Manager. Additional information regarding Complex 2030 is
available on Complex2030PEIS.com.
For general information on the DOE NEPA process, please contact
Carol M. Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance,
U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington,
DC 20585, (202) 586-4600 or 1-800-472-2756. Additional information
regarding DOE NEPA activities and access to many DOE NEPA documents are
available on the Internet through the DOE NEPA Web site at https://
www.eh.doe.gov/nepa.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 61732]]
Background: The early days of the nuclear weapons complex after
World War II saw a rapid build-up of capability and capacity to support
the growth of the stockpile to fight the Cold War. By the 1960s, the
United States had built a large stockpile of nuclear weapons, and the
nation began to focus on improving, rather than expanding, the
stockpile. NNSA's predecessor agencies began to consolidate operations
and close some production facilities. In the 1980s, facilities were
shut down across the nuclear weapons complex, including certain
facilities at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina; the Oak Ridge
Reservation in Tennessee; the Rocky Flats Plant in Colorado; the
Fernald Site in Ohio; the Hanford Reservation in Washington; and
elsewhere.
Prior DOE NEPA Reviews: DOE completed a Nuclear Weapons Complex
Reconfiguration (``Complex-21'') Study in January 1991, which
identified significant cost savings that could be achieved by further
downsizing of the nuclear weapons complex.
DOE then initiated a programmatic EIS (Reconfiguration PEIS)
examining alternatives for reconfiguring the nuclear weapons complex.
However, in December 1991, the Department decided to separate proposals
for transforming non-nuclear production from the Reconfiguration PEIS
because (1) proposals to consolidate non-nuclear facilities might not
require preparation of an EIS, and (2) proposals and decisions
regarding transformation of non-nuclear production would neither
significantly affect nor be affected by proposals and decisions
regarding transformation of nuclear production. On January 27, 1992,
the Department issued an NOI (57 FR 3046) to prepare an environmental
assessment (DOE/EA-0792) for the consolidation of non-nuclear
production activities within the nuclear weapons complex. Following the
collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States reduced the budget for
the nuclear weapons program. President George H. W. Bush imposed a
moratorium in 1992 on underground nuclear testing.
On September 14, 1993, DOE published a Finding of No Significant
Impact (FONSI) regarding its proposal to consolidate non-nuclear
component production (58 FR 48043). This proposal included termination
of non-nuclear production missions at the Mound Plant in Ohio, the
Pinellas Plant in Florida, and the Rocky Flats Plant in Colorado. The
electrical and mechanical manufacturing functions were consolidated at
the Kansas City Plant. Detonators and beryllium capabilities for
technology and pit support were consolidated at Los Alamos National
Laboratory (LANL) in New Mexico, and neutron generator production was
relocated to Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico.
In October 1993, President William J. Clinton issued Presidential
Decision Directive 15 (PDD-15), which directed DOE to establish the
Stockpile Stewardship Program. PDD-15 significantly redirected the
nuclear weapons program. Throughout the Cold War, the Department of
Defense (DOD) and DOE's nuclear weapons laboratories had based a
portion of their confidence in the reliability of nuclear weapons on
performance data from atmospheric and underground tests. To ensure
weapons reliability during the moratorium on testing, DOE proposed to
invest in new scientific tools to assess the complex phenomena involved
in the detonation of nuclear weapons. DOE also began to develop
sophisticated tools and computer-based simulation techniques to assess
various aging phenomena as nuclear weapons continued to serve well
beyond their originally anticipated lifetimes. These actions enhanced
research and development (R&D) and deferred spending on the production
complex.
DOE concluded in October 1994 that the alternatives described in
the Reconfiguration PEIS no longer contained realistic proposals for
reconfiguration of the nuclear weapons complex. That conclusion was
based on several factors, including: comments offered at the September-
October 1993 Reconfiguration PEIS scoping meetings; the anticipation
that no production of new nuclear weapons types would be required for
the foreseeable future; budget constraints; and the Department's
decision to prepare a separate PEIS on Storage and Disposition of
Weapons-Usable Fissile Materials (DOE/EIS-0229; NOI published June 21,
1994, 59 FR 17344).
Consequently, the Department separated the Reconfiguration PEIS
into two new PEISs: (1) A Tritium Supply and Recycling PEIS (DOE/EIS-
0161); and (2) the SSM PEIS (DOE/EIS-0236). The Final PEIS for Tritium
Supply and Recycling was issued on October 27, 1995 (60 FR 55021). In
its Record of Decision (ROD) on May 14, 1999 (64 FR 26369 \2\), DOE
decided it would produce the tritium needed to maintain the nuclear
arsenal at commercial light water reactors owned and operated by the
Tennessee Valley Authority and extract tritium at a new DOE-owned
Tritium Extraction Facility at the Savannah River Site. With regard to
the SSM PEIS, DOE issued an NOI on June 6, 1995 (60 FR 31291), a final
SSM PEIS on November 19, 1996 (61 FR 58871), and a ROD on December 26,
1996 (61 FR 68014) announcing its decision to transform the weapons
production complex by (1) reducing the weapon assembly capacity located
at the Pantex Plant in Texas; (2) reducing the high-explosives
fabrication capacity at Pantex; (3) reducing the uranium, secondary,
and case fabrication capacity in the Y-12 National Security Complex in
Tennessee; (4) reducing nonnuclear component fabrication capacity at
the Kansas City Plant; and (5) reestablishing a modest interim pit
fabrication capability at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico
while evaluating the need for greater pit manufacturing capacity in the
future.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ This ROD also contains decisions for the EIS for
Construction and Operation of a Tritium Extraction Facility at the
Savannah River Site (DOE/EIS-0271) and EIS for the Production of
Tritium in a Commercial Light Water Reactor (DOE/EIS-0288).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with the decisions in the SSM PEIS, the Non-nuclear
Consolidation Environmental Assessment (EA), and the Tritium Supply and
Recycling PEIS, DOE began transforming the nuclear weapons complex to
its present configuration. DOE has also prepared other EISs that
facilitated the transformation of the complex. The relevant RODs for
these site-wide and project-specific EISs are listed below:
1996 ROD for the EIS for the Nevada Test Site and Off-Site
Locations in the State of Nevada (61 FR 65551, December 13, 1996).
1997 ROD for the EIS for the Continued Operation of the
Pantex Plant and Associated Storage of Nuclear Weapon Components (62 FR
3880, January 27, 1997).
1999 ROD for the Site-wide EIS for Continued Operation of
the Los Alamos National Laboratory (64 FR 50797, September 20, 1999).
1999 ROD for the EIS for Site-wide Operation of Sandia
National Laboratories (64 FR 69996, December 15, 1999).
2000 Amended ROD for the Nevada Test Site EIS (65 FR
10061, February 25, 2000).
2002 ROD for the Site-wide EIS for the Oak Ridge Y-12
National Security Complex (67 FR 11296, March 13, 2002).
2002 ROD for the EIS for the Relocation of Technical Area
18 Capabilities and Materials at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (67
FR 79906, December 31, 2002).
2004 ROD for the EIS for the Chemistry and Metallurgy
Research Building Replacement Project, Los
[[Page 61733]]
Alamos National Laboratory (69 FR 6967, February 12, 2004).
2005 ROD for the Site-wide EIS for Continued Operation of
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Supplemental Stockpile
Stewardship and Management Programmatic EIS (70 FR 71491, November 29,
2005).
Nuclear Weapons Complex: The current nuclear weapons complex
consists of eight major facilities located in seven states. NNSA
maintains a limited capability to design and manufacture nuclear
weapons; provides surveillance of and maintains nuclear weapons
currently in the stockpile; and dismantles retired nuclear weapons.
Major facilities and their primary responsibilities within the nuclear
weapons complex are listed below:
Savannah River Site (SRS) (Aiken, South Carolina)--Extracts tritium
(when the Tritium Extraction Facility becomes operational in 2007);
provides loading, unloading and surveillance of tritium reservoirs. SRS
does not maintain Category I/II \3\ quantities of special nuclear
material (SNM) \4\ associated with weapons activities, but does
maintain Category I/II quantities of SNM associated with other
Department activities (e.g., environmental management).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Category I/II quantities of special nuclear material are
determined by grouping materials by type, attractiveness level, and
quantity. These grouping parameters are defined in DOE Manual 470.4-
6, Nuclear Material Control and Accountability [see https://
www.directives.doe.gov].
\4\ As defined in section 11 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
special nuclear material are: (1) Plutonium, uranium enriched in the
isotope 233 or in the isotope 235, and any other material which the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission determines to be special nuclear
material; or (2) any material artificially enriched by plutonium or
uranium 233 or 235.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pantex Plant (PX) (Amarillo, Texas)--Dismantles retired weapons;
fabricates high-explosives components; assembles high explosive,
nuclear, and non-nuclear components into nuclear weapons; repairs and
modifies weapons; and evaluates and performs non-nuclear testing of
weapons. Maintains Category I/II quantities of SNM for the weapons
program and material no longer needed by the weapons program.
Y-12 National Security Complex (Y-12) (Oak Ridge, Tennessee)--
Manufactures nuclear weapons secondaries, cases, and other weapons
components; evaluates and performs testing of weapon components;
maintains Category I/II quantities of SNM; conducts dismantlement,
storage, and disposition of nuclear weapons materials; and supplies SNM
for use in naval reactors.
Kansas City Plant (KCP) (Kansas City, Missouri)--Manufactures and
acquires non-nuclear weapons components; and evaluates and performs
testing of weapon components. No Category I/II quantities of SNM are
maintained at the KCP.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) (Livermore,
California)--Conducts research and development of nuclear weapons;
designs and tests advanced technology concepts; designs weapons;
maintains a limited capability to fabricate plutonium components; and
provides safety and reliability assessments of the stockpile. Maintains
Category I/II quantities of SNM associated with the weapons program and
material no longer needed by the weapons program.
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) (Los Alamos, New Mexico)--
Conducts research and development of nuclear weapons; designs and tests
advanced technology concepts; designs weapons; provides safety and
reliability assessments of the stockpile; maintains interim production
capabilities for limited quantities of plutonium components (e.g.,
pits); and manufactures nuclear weapon detonators for the stockpile.
Maintains Category I/II quantities of SNM associated with the nuclear
weapons program and material no longer needed by the weapons program.
Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) (Albuquerque, New Mexico;
Livermore, California)--Conducts system engineering of nuclear weapons;
designs and develops non-nuclear components; conducts field and
laboratory non-nuclear testing; conducts research and development in
support of the nuclear weapon non-nuclear design; manufactures non-
nuclear weapon components; provides safety and reliability assessments
of the stockpile; and manufactures neutron generators for the
stockpile. Maintains Category I/II quantities of SNM associated with
the nuclear weapons program.
Nevada Test Site (NTS) (Las Vegas, Nevada)--Maintains capability to
conduct underground nuclear testing; conducts experiments involving
nuclear material and high explosives; provides capability to
disposition a damaged nuclear weapon or improvised nuclear device;
conducts non-nuclear experiments; and conducts research and training on
nuclear safeguards, criticality safety and emergency response.
Maintains Category I/II quantities of SNM associated with the nuclear
weapons program.
Purpose and Need for the Stockpile Stewardship and Management
Program: Under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2011 et seq.),
DOE is responsible for providing nuclear weapons to support the United
States' national security strategy. The National Nuclear Security
Administration Act (Pub. L. 106-65, Title XXXII) assigned this
responsibility to NNSA within DOE. One of the primary missions of NNSA
is to provide the nation with safe and reliable nuclear weapons,
components and capabilities, and to accomplish this in a way that
protects the environment and the health and safety of workers and the
public.
Changes in national security needs and budgets have necessitated
changes in the way NNSA meets its responsibilities regarding the
nation's nuclear stockpile. As a result of a changed security
environment, unilateral decisions by the United States and
international arms control agreements, the nation's stockpile is
significantly smaller today and by 2012, it will be the smallest since
the Eisenhower administration (1953-1961). The Treaty of Moscow will
eventually lead to a level of 1,700-2,200 operationally-deployed
strategic nuclear weapons.
However, nuclear deterrence will continue to be a cornerstone of
United States national security policy, and NNSA must continue to meet
its responsibilities for ensuring the safety and reliability of the
nation's nuclear weapons stockpile. The current policy is contained in
the Nuclear Posture Review, submitted to Congress in early 2002, which
states that the United States will:
Change the size, composition and character of the nuclear
weapons stockpile in a way that reflects that the Cold War is over;
Achieve a credible deterrent with the lowest possible
number of nuclear warheads consistent with national security needs,
including obligations to allies; and
Transform the NNSA nuclear weapons complex into a
responsive infrastructure that supports the specific stockpile
requirements established by the President and maintains the essential
United States nuclear capabilities needed for an uncertain global
future.
Complex 2030 SEIS: NNSA has been evaluating how to establish a more
responsive nuclear weapons complex infrastructure since the Nuclear
Posture Review was transmitted to Congress in early 2002. The Stockpile
Stewardship Conference in 2003, the Department of Defense Strategic
Capabilities Assessment in 2004, the recommendations of the Secretary
of Energy Advisory Board (SEAB) Task Force on the Nuclear Weapons
Complex Infrastructure in 2005, and the Defense
[[Page 61734]]
Science Board Task Force on Nuclear Capabilities in 2006 have provided
information for NNSA's evaluations.
In early 2006, NNSA developed a planning scenario for what the
nuclear weapons complex would look like in 2030. See https://
www.nnsa.doe.gov for more information regarding Complex 2030 planning.
The Complex 2030 planning scenario incorporates many of the decisions
NNSA has already made based on the evaluations in the SSM PEIS, Tritium
Supply and Recycling PEIS, and other NEPA documents. See discussion in
background above. The following table identifies which components of
Complex 2030 are based on the existing SSM PEIS and Tritium PEIS RODs,
including RODs for subsequent tiered EISs:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Components of Complex 2030 that Tritium PEIS
reflect earlier decisions SSM PEIS ROD ROD
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maintain but reduce the existing X ...............
weapon assembly capacity located at
Pantex...............................
Maintain but reduce the high- X ...............
explosives fabrication capacity at
Pantex...............................
Maintain but reduce the existing X ...............
uranium, secondary, and case
fabrication capacity at the Y-12
Plant at Oak Ridge...................
Reduce the non-nuclear component X ...............
fabrication capacity at the Kansas
City Plant...........................
Reestablish limited pit fabrication X ...............
capability at Los Alamos National
Laboratory while evaluating the need
for a larger capability..............
Irradiate tritium producing rods in ............... X
commercial light water reactors;
construct and operate a new Tritium
Extraction Facility at DOE's Savannah
River Site...........................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Types of Decisions that Would Be Based on the Complex 2030 SEIS:
The decisions set forth in the Complex 2030 ROD would:
Identify the future missions of the SSM Program and the
nuclear weapons complex; and
Determine the configuration of the future weapons complex
needed to accomplish the SSM Program.
For specific programs or facilities, NNSA may need to prepare
additional NEPA documents to implement the decisions announced in the
ROD. The baseline that will be used for the analyses of program and
facility needs in the SEIS is 1,700-2,200 operationally-deployed
strategic nuclear weapons, in addition to augmentation weapons,
reliability-reserve weapons and weapons required to meet NATO
commitments. The numbers are consistent with international arms-control
agreements. Consistent with national security policy directives,
replacement warhead design concepts may be pursued under the
alternatives as a means of, for example, enhancing safety and security,
improving manufacturing practices, reducing surveillance needs, and
reducing need for underground tests.
The SEIS will evaluate reasonable alternatives for future
transformation of the nuclear weapons complex. The Proposed Action and
alternatives to the Proposed Action will assume continued
implementation of the following prior siting decisions that DOE made in
the SSM PEIS and Tritium PEIS RODs, including RODs for subsequent
tiered EISs:
Location of the weapon assembly/disassembly operations at
the Pantex Plant in Texas.
Location of uranium, secondary, and case fabrication at
the Y-12 National Security Complex in Tennessee.
Location of tritium extraction, loading and unloading, and
support operations at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina.
NNSA does not believe it is necessary to identify additional
alternatives beyond those present in the SSM PEIS. Regarding the
uranium, secondary, and case fabrication at Y-12, NNSA is currently
preparing a Y-12 Site-wide EIS to evaluate reasonable alternatives for
the continued modernization of the Y-12 capabilities. The Complex 2030
SEIS will incorporate any decisions made pursuant to the Y-12 Site-wide
EIS.
While the Complex 2030 planning scenario proposes to consolidate
further non-nuclear production activities performed at the Kansas City
Plant, this proposal will be evaluated in a separate NEPA analysis, as
was done in the 1990s. NNSA believes that it is appropriate to separate
the analyses of the transformation of non-nuclear production from the
SEIS because decisions regarding those activities would neither
significantly affect nor be affected by decisions regarding the
transformation of nuclear production activities.
The SSM PEIS ROD announced NNSA's decision to establish a small
interim pit production capacity at LANL. In the 1999 LANL Site-wide EIS
ROD, NNSA announced it would achieve a pit production capacity at LANL
of up to 20 pits per year. The 2006 draft LANL Site-wide EIS evaluates
a proposal for a production capacity of 50 certified pits annually.
This proposed capacity is based on an annual production rate of 80 pits
per year in order to provide NNSA with sufficient flexibility to obtain
50 certified pits. Any decisions made pursuant to the LANL Site-wide
EIS will be included in the Complex 2030 SEIS.
Based upon the studies \5\ and analyses that led to NNSA's
development of the Complex 2030 scenario, NNSA has developed
alternatives that are intended to facilitate public comment on the
scope of the SEIS. NNSA's decisions regarding implementation of Complex
2030 will be based on the following alternatives, or a combination of
those alternatives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The Stockpile Stewardship Conference in 2003, the Department
of Defense Strategic Capabilities Assessment in 2004, the
recommendations of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board (SEAB)
Task Force on the Nuclear Weapons Complex Infrastructure in 2005,
and the recommendations of the Defense Science Board Task Force on
Nuclear Capabilities in 2006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Proposed Action--Transform to a More Modern, Cost-Effective
Nuclear Weapons Complex (Complex 2030). This alternative would
undertake the following actions to continue the transformation of
NNSA's nuclear weapons complex:
Select a site to construct and operate a consolidated
plutonium center for long-term R&D, surveillance, and manufacturing
operations for a baseline capacity of 125 qualified pits per year at a
site with existing Category I/II SNM.
Reduce the number of sites with Category I/II SNM and
consolidate SNM to fewer locations within each given site.
Consolidate, relocate or eliminate duplicative facilities
and programs and improve operating efficiencies, including at
facilities for nuclear materials storage, tritium R&D, high explosives
R&D, environmental testing, and hydrotesting facilities.
Identify one or more sites for conducting NNSA flight test
operations.
[[Page 61735]]
Existing DOD and DOE test ranges (e.g., White Sands Missile Range in
New Mexico and Nevada Test Site in Nevada) would be considered as
alternatives to the continued operation of the Tonopah Test Range in
Nevada.
Accelerate dismantlement activities.
The DOE sites that will be considered as potential locations for
the consolidated plutonium center and consolidation of Category I/II
SNM include: Los Alamos, Nevada Test Site, Pantex Plant, Y-12 National
Security Complex, and the Savannah River Site. Other DOE sites are not
considered reasonable alternative locations because they do not satisfy
certain criteria such as population encroachment, or mission
compatibility or synergy with the site's existing mission.
Alternatives to the Proposed Action
No Action Alternative. The No Action Alternative represents the
status quo as it exists today and is presently planned. It includes the
continued implementation of decisions made pursuant to the SSM PEIS and
the Tritium Supply and Recycling PEIS (as summarized above) and related
site-specific EISs and EAs. These decisions are contained in RODs and
Findings of No Significant Impact (FONSIs), including those discussed
above, and copies can be located on the DOE NEPA Document Web page at
https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/documents.html.
The No Action Alternative would also include any decisions made as
a result of the new Y-12 Site-wide EIS and the LANL Site-wide EIS once
these EISs are finished. NNSA expects to issue RODs on these EISs prior
to publication of the draft Complex 2030 SEIS.
The No Action Alternative is illustrated in the following matrix:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sites (no action alternative)
Capability -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KCP LANL LLNL NTS Y-12 PX SNL SRS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Weapons assembly/Disassembly.... ........ ........ ........ X ........ X ........ ........
Nonnuclear components........... X X ........ ........ ........ ........ X ........
Nuclear components:
--Pits...................... ........ X ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........
--Second aries and cases.... ........ ........ ........ ........ X ........ ........ ........
High explosives components...... ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ X ........ ........
Tritium Extraction, Loading and ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ ........ X
Unloading......................
High explosives R&D............. ........ X X ........ ........ X X ........
Tritium R&D..................... ........ X X ........ ........ ........ ........ X
Large Scale Hydrotesting........ ........ X X X ........ ........ ........ ........
Category I/II SNM Storage....... ........ X X X X X X X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The No Action Alternative also includes continuation of
environmental testing at current locations and flight-testing
activities at the Tonopah Test Range in Nevada.
Reduced Operations and Capability-Based Complex Alternative
In this alternative, NNSA would maintain a basic capability for
manufacturing technologies for all stockpile weapons, as well as
laboratory and experimental capabilities to support stockpile
decisions, but would reduce production facilities to a ``capability-
based'' \6\ capacity. This alternative would not have a production
capacity sufficient to meet current national security objectives. This
alternative would be defined as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The capability to manufacture and assemble nuclear weapons
at a nominal level.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Do not construct and operate a consolidated plutonium
center for long-term R&D, surveillance, and manufacturing operations;
and do not expand pit production at LANL beyond 50 certified pits per
year.
Reduce the number of sites with Category I/II SNM and
consolidate SNM to fewer locations within a given site.
Consolidate, relocate or eliminate duplicative facilities
and programs and improve operating efficiencies, including at
facilities for nuclear materials storage, tritium R&D, high explosives
R&D, environmental testing facilities, and hydrotesting facilities.
Identify one or more sites for conducting NNSA flight test
operations. Existing DOD and DOE test ranges (e.g. White Sands Missile
Range in New Mexico and Nevada Test Site in Nevada) would be considered
as potential alternatives to the continued operation of the Tonopah
Test Range in Nevada.
Production capacities at Pantex, Y-12, and the Savannah
River Site would be considered for further reductions limited by the
capability-based capacity.
NNSA would continue dismantlement activities.
Proposal Not Being Considered for Further Analysis. The SEAB Task
Force on the Nuclear Weapons Complex Infrastructure recommended that
NNSA pursue a consolidated nuclear production center (CNPC) as a single
facility for all research, development, and production activities
relating to nuclear weapons that involve significant amounts (i.e.
Category I/II quantities) of SNM. The CNPC, as envisioned by the SEAB
Task Force, would contain all the nuclear weapons manufacturing,
production, assembly, and disassembly facilities and associated weapon
surveillance and maintenance activities for the stockpile weapons. The
CNPC would include the plutonium activities of the consolidated
plutonium center proposed by NNSA in its Complex 2030 vision, as well
as the consolidated activities of the uranium, tritium, and high
explosive operations. DOE believes that creation of a CNPC is not a
reasonable alternative and does not intend to analyze it as an
alternative in the SEIS because of the technical and schedule issues
involved in constructing a CNPC, as well as associated costs. NNSA
invites and will consider comments on this matter during the scoping
process.
The SEAB Task Force developed three business cases for transforming
the nuclear weapons complex, two of which were characterized as high
risk. Its preferred least-risk option was to establish a CNPC
``quickly'' by accelerating site selection, NEPA analyses, regulatory
approvals, and construction. The Task Force assumed that NNSA could,
under these circumstances, begin operating a CNPC in 2015, start
consolidation of SNM shortly thereafter, accelerate dismantlements, and
begin other major transformational activities. Until the CNPC was
completed, NNSA would have to maintain, and in some cases improve,
existing production and research facilities. According to the Task
Force's estimates, this option would require an additional 1 billion
dollars per year for weapons programs
[[Page 61736]]
activities for the next 10 years, and lead to a net savings through
2030 of 15 billion dollars.
Accelerated construction of a CNPC would not allow NNSA to avoid
immediate expenditures to restore and modernize interim production
capabilities to meet essential Life Extension Program (LEP) schedules
and support the existing stockpile during the next decade. LEP is the
refurbishment of nuclear weapons parts and components to extend the
weapon deployment life. NNSA has concluded that the SEAB Task Force
underestimated the nonfinancial challenges of constructing a CNPC. A
CNPC would require moving a unique and highly skilled workforce to a
new location. It would require NNSA to obtain significant regulatory
approvals rapidly, and to construct a unique and complex facility on a
tight schedule. It would put many of the significant aspects of the
weapons complex transformation into ``one basket''--until the CNPC
began operations, all the other facilities and activities would be
delayed. NNSA's Proposed Action would achieve many of the benefits of
the CNPC approach--consolidation of SNM and facilities, integrated R&D
and production involving SNM, and aggressive dismantlements--in a way
that addresses immediate national security needs in a technically
feasible and affordable manner.
Nuclear Materials Consolidation: DOE is pursuing SNM consolidation
from all DOE sites including those that comprise the nuclear weapons
complex. The SEIS will look at alternatives for the storage and
consolidation of nuclear materials within the nuclear weapons complex
including materials needed to maintain the United States' nuclear
weapons arsenal. There is a potential overlap between the SEIS and the
activities of the Department's other nuclear materials consolidation
activities, and DOE will ensure that there is appropriate coordination
between the two activities.
Supplemental Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement on
Stockpile Stewardship and Management for a Modern Pit Facility: NNSA
issued a Draft Supplemental Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement
on Stockpile Stewardship and Management for a Modern Pit Facility (MPF)
on June 4, 2003 (68 FR 33487; also 68 FR 33934, June 6, 2003) that
analyzed alternatives for producing the plutonium pits that are an
essential component of nuclear weapons. On January 28, 2004, NNSA
announced that it was indefinitely postponing any decision on how it
would obtain a large capacity pit manufacturing facility. Because the
Complex 2030 SEIS will analyze alternatives for plutonium-related
activities that include pit production, DOE, effective upon publication
of this NOI, cancels the MPF PEIS.
Public Scoping Process: The scoping process is an opportunity for
the public to assist the NNSA in determining the issues for analysis.
NNSA will hold public scoping meetings at locations identified in this
NOI. The purpose of these meetings is to provide the public with an
opportunity to present oral and written comments, ask questions, and
discuss concerns regarding the transformation of the nuclear weapons
complex and the SEIS with NNSA officials. Comments and recommendations
can also be communicated to NNSA as discussed earlier in this notice.
Complex 2030 PEIS Supplement Preparation Process: The SEIS
preparation process begins with the publication of this NOI in the
Federal Register. NNSA will consider all public comments that it
receives during the public comment period in preparing the draft SEIS.
NNSA expects to issue the draft SEIS for public review during the
summer of 2007. Public comments on the draft SEIS will be received
during a comment period of at least 45 days following the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency's publication of the Notice of
Availability in the Federal Register. Notices placed in local
newspapers will specify dates and locations for public hearings on the
draft SEIS and will establish a schedule for submitting comments on the
draft SEIS, including a final date for submission of comments. Issuance
of the final SEIS is scheduled for 2008.
Classified Material: NNSA will review classified material while
preparing the SEIS. Within the limits of classification, NNSA will
provide the public as much information as possible to assist its
understanding and ability to comment. Any classified material needed to
explain the purpose and need for the action, or the analyses in the
SEIS, will be segregated into a classified appendix or supplement,
which will not be available for public review. However, all
unclassified information or results of calculations using classified
data will be reported in the unclassified section of the SEIS, to the
extent possible in accordance with federal classification requirements.
Issued in Washington, DC on October 11, 2006.
Linton F. Brooks,
Administrator, National Nuclear Security Administration.
[FR Doc. E6-17508 Filed 10-18-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P