Notice of Availability of a Draft Supplement Analysis for Disposal of Depleted Uranium Oxide Conversion Product Generated From Doe's Inventory of Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride, 15869-15871 [E7-6039]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 63 / Tuesday, April 3, 2007 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
The Historically Black Colleges and
Universities Capital Financing
Advisory Board
The Historically Black Colleges
and Universities Capital Financing
Board, Department of Education.
ACTION: Notice of an open meeting.
ycherry on PROD1PC64 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice sets forth the
schedule and proposed agenda of an
upcoming open meeting of the
Historically Black Colleges and
Universities Capital Financing Advisory
Board. The notice also describes the
functions of the Board. Notice of this
meeting is required by Section 10(a)(2)
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act
and is intended to notify the public of
their opportunity to attend.
DATES: Friday, April 20, 2007.
Time: 10 a.m.–2 p.m.
ADDRESSES: Xavier University,
University Center Building, 1 Drexel
Drive, New Orleans, Louisiana 70125.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Don
E. Watson, Executive Director,
Historically Black College and
University Capital Financing Program,
1990 K Street, NW., Washington, DC
20006; telephone: (202) 219–7037; fax:
(202) 502–7677; e-mail:
donald.watson@ed.gov.
Individuals who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339,
Monday through Friday between the
hours of 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern
Standard Time.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Historically Black College and
University Capital Financing Advisory
Board (Board) is authorized by Title III,
Part D, Section 347 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965, as amended in
1998 (20 U.S.C. 1066f). The Board is
established within the Department of
Education to provide advice and
counsel to the Secretary and the
designated bonding authority as to the
most effective and efficient means of
implementing construction financing on
historically black college and university
campuses and to advise Congress
regarding the progress made in
implementing the program. Specifically,
the Board will provide advice as to the
capital needs of Historically Black
Colleges and Universities, how those
needs can be met through the program,
and what additional steps might be
taken to improve the operation and
implementation of the construction
financing program.
The purpose of this meeting is to
review current program activities,
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provide guidance for 2007 activities,
and to make recommendations to the
Secretary on the current capital needs of
Historically Black Colleges and
Universities.
Individuals who will need
accommodations for a disability in order
to attend the meeting (e.g., interpreting
services, assistance listening devices, or
materials in alternative format) should
notify Don Watson at 202 219–7037, no
later than April 5, 2007. We will attempt
to meet requests for accommodations
after this date but cannot guarantee their
availability. The meeting site is
accessible to individuals with
disabilities.
An opportunity for public comment is
available on Friday, April 20, 2007
between 12:15 p.m.–12:45 p.m. Those
members of the public interested in
submitting written comments may do so
by submitting them to the attention of
Don E. Watson, 1990 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC, by Friday, April 13,
2007.
Records are kept of all Board
proceedings and are available for public
inspection at the Office of the
Historically Black College and
University Capital Financing Advisory
Board (Board), 1990 K Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20006, from the hours
of 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Eastern Standard
Time Monday through Friday (EST).
Electronic Access to This Document:
You may view this document, as well as
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text or Adobe Portable Document
Format (PDF) on the Internet at the
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federegister.
To use PDF you must have Adobe
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Access at: https://www.gpoaccess.gov/nara/
index.html.
James F. Manning,
Delegated the Authority of Assistant Secretary
for Postsecondary Education.
[FR Doc. E7–6090 Filed 4–2–07; 8:45 am]
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15869
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Availability of a Draft
Supplement Analysis for Disposal of
Depleted Uranium Oxide Conversion
Product Generated From Doe’s
Inventory of Depleted Uranium
Hexafluoride
AGENCY:
Department of Energy.
Notice of availability of a draft
supplement analysis.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: DOE has prepared a Draft
Supplement Analysis (SA) pursuant to
DOE regulations implementing the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA), 10 CFR 1021.314. The draft SA
addresses DOE’s proposal to dispose of
the depleted uranium oxide conversion
product at either the DOE-owned lowlevel radioactive waste disposal facility
at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) or at
EnergySolutions LLC, a commercial
low-level waste disposal facility in
Clive, Utah (EnergySolutions; formerly
known as Envirocare of Utah, Inc.).
In April 1999, the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) published a Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS)
for management of its Depleted
Uranium Hexafluoride (DUF6)
inventory. The PEIS included a generic
assessment of the disposal of depleted
uranium oxide conversion product (as
U3O8 or UO2) and concluded that
disposal of either product in shallow
earthen structures, vaults, or mines
would adequately protect human health
and the environment over the time
period considered, as long as the
disposal facility is located in a dry
environment and appropriately
engineered (e.g., the cover material is
maintained). Subsequently, DOE
prepared site-specific final
Environmental Impact Statements (EISs)
for construction and operation of DUF6
conversion facilities at the DOE’s
Paducah, Kentucky, and Portsmouth,
Ohio, sites in the Final Environmental
Impact Statement for Construction and
Operation of a Depleted Uranium
Hexafluoride Conversion Facility at the
Paducah, Kentucky Site, DOE/EIS–0359,
and the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for Construction and
Operation of a Depleted Uranium
Hexafluoride Conversion Facility at the
Portsmouth, Ohio Site, DOE/EIS–0360.
DOE published its Record of Decision
for Construction and Operation of a
Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride
Conversion Facility at the Paducah,
Kentucky Site, and Record of Decision
for Construction and Operation of a
Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride
Conversion Facility at the Portsmouth,
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 63 / Tuesday, April 3, 2007 / Notices
Ohio Site (RODs) on July 27, 2004 (69
FR 44649 and 69 FR 44654).
In each site-specific ROD, DOE
announced its decision to implement
the actions described as the preferred
alternative in the corresponding
conversion facility EIS, which included
the following actions:
• DOE will construct and operate a
conversion facility at Location A within
each of the Paducah and Portsmouth
sites.
• All shipments to and from the
conversion facility sites, including any
potential shipments of non-DUF6
cylinders currently stored at the East
Tennessee Technology Park (ETTP), will
be conducted by either truck or rail, as
appropriate. Cylinders will be shipped
in a manner that is consistent with U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT)
regulations for the shipment of UF6
cylinders.
• Current cylinder management
activities (handling, inspection,
monitoring, and maintenance) will
continue, consistent with Cylinder
Project Management Plan for Depleted
Uranium Hexafluoride, effective
October 2003, which covers actions
needed to meet safety and
environmental requirements, until
conversion can be accomplished.
• The aqueous hydrofluoric acid (HF)
produced during conversion will be
sold for use. If necessary, calcium
fluoride (CaF2) will be produced and
reused, or disposed of as appropriate.
• The depleted uranium oxide
conversion product will be reused to the
extent possible or packaged in emptied
cylinders for disposal at an appropriate
disposal facility. DOE plans to decide
the specific disposal location(s) for the
depleted uranium oxide conversion
product after additional appropriate
NEPA review. Accordingly, DOE will
continue to evaluate its disposal options
and will consider any further
information or comments relevant to
that decision. DOE will give a minimum
45-day notice before making the specific
disposal decision and will provide any
supplemental NEPA analysis for public
review and comment.
The conversion facility RODs did not
declare a decision regarding the location
for disposal of depleted uranium oxide
conversion product. The reason DOE
did not make its disposal decision at the
time it issued the RODs for construction
and operation of the two DUF6
conversion facilities is that it discovered
that it had, through an oversight, not
served copies of the draft and final sitespecific EISs (DOE 2004a, b) to the
States of Utah, home of
EnergySolutions, and Nevada, home of
NTS, as required in 40 CFR 1502.19. As
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a result, each ROD states DOE’s
intention to decide the specific disposal
location(s) for the depleted uranium
oxide conversion product after
additional appropriate NEPA review.
This draft SA addresses the additional
appropriate NEPA review committed to
in the earlier RODs. The draft SA
identifies no significant new
circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns that bear on
DOE’s decisions on disposal locations or
the impacts of those decisions. Based on
the draft SA that is the subject of this
Notice, DOE believes that a
supplemental EIS is not needed to
support amending the conversion
facility RODs to decide the disposal
location for the depleted uranium oxide
conversion product. The depleted
uranium oxide conversion product may
be disposed either at the
EnergySolutions low-level waste
disposal facility or at the NTS low-level
waste disposal facility. DOE plans to
issue amended RODs under the
conversion facility EISs no sooner than
45 days from the publication of this
Notice.
DOE will consider all public
comments on this matter submitted by
May 18, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
submitted electronically via the Web at
https://web.ead.anl.gov/uranium/ or by
regular mail. Written comments can be
mailed to: DU Disposal Supplement
Analysis Comment, Argonne National
Laboratory, Building 900, Mail Stop 3,
9700 S. Cass Avenue, Argonne, IL
60439.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Copies of the Supplement Analysis for
Disposal of Depleted Uranium Oxide
Conversion Product Generated From
DOE’s Inventory of Depleted Uranium
Hexafluoride (DOE/EIS–0359/0360–SA–
001) is available on the Depleted UF6
Management Information Network at:
https://web.ead.anl.gov/uranium/, and
on DOE’s NEPA Web site at https://
www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/whatsnew.html.
To request printed copies of this
document, please write: DU Disposal
Supplement Analysis Comment,
Argonne National Laboratory, Building
900, Mail Stop 3, 9700 S. Cass Avenue,
Argonne, IL 60439.
For further information on DOE’s
NEPA process, contact: Ms. Carol
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance, GC–20, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, Telephone:
202–586–4600, or leave a message at
1–800–472–2756.
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Uranium
Disposition Services, LLC (UDS) began
construction of the DUF6 conversion
facilities at Paducah, Kentucky and
Portsmouth, Ohio in July 2004. The
main products from the conversion of
DOE’s inventory of DUF6 will be
depleted uranium oxide conversion
product and aqueous hydrogen fluoride
(HF). The quantities of depleted
uranium oxide conversion product
produced annually will be
approximately 10,800 metric tons (t)
(11,800 tons) at Portsmouth and 14,300 t
(15,800 tons) at Paducah. UDS is
planning to sell the HF product to a
commercial user.
In addition to depleted uranium oxide
conversion product, two other products
from the conversion process require
disposal: (1) Emptied DUF6 cylinders
and (2) a relatively small quantity of
CaF2 (approximately 18 t [20 tons] at
Portsmouth and 24 t [26 tons] at
Paducah annually). UDS is planning to
use the emptied cylinders as disposal
containers for the depleted uranium
oxide conversion product. Therefore,
the emptied cylinders would become
part of the depleted uranium oxide
waste stream. Any cylinders not used as
disposal containers would be disposed
of as low-level waste at an appropriate
facility in compliance with applicable
regulations. The small quantity of CaF2
would be disposed with the unused
depleted uranium oxide. Therefore, the
unused depleted uranium oxide, most of
the emptied cylinders, and the small
quantity of CaF2 would be sent to the
same disposal facility.
The PEIS considered the
environmental impacts of six alternative
strategies for long-term management of
DOE’s DUF6 inventory. The alternative
strategies included: (1) Options for
continued storage of DUF6 in cylinders
at the three sites where it was stored
(Paducah, KY, Portsmouth, OH, and
ETTP in Oak Ridge, TN); (2) long-term
storage as DUF6 at a consolidated site;
(3) conversion of the DUF6 to an oxide
followed by long-term storage; (4)
conversion to an oxide or depleted
uranium metal followed by use; (5)
conversion to an oxide followed by
disposal; and (6) no action. The analyses
of the long-term storage and disposal
alternatives included the transportation
of the depleted uranium oxide to
generic storage or disposal sites located
155 mi (250 km), 620 mi (1,000 km), or
3,100 mi (5,000 km) from the conversion
facilities. DOE analyzed the impacts of
depleted uranium conversion product
disposal using generic assumptions
about disposal site characteristics,
rather than actual characteristics for any
particular disposal site. A technical
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 63 / Tuesday, April 3, 2007 / Notices
support document for the PEIS
investigated the feasibility of depleted
uranium disposal at six low-level waste
disposal facilities based on waste
acceptance criteria, available capacity,
and disposal cost (Depleted Uranium
Storage and Disposal Trade Study:
Summary Report, ORNL/TM–2000/10).
This document and subsequent followup studies have verified that the only
currently operating dry-environment,
low-level waste disposal facilities that
are feasible for disposal of the depleted
uranium oxide conversion product are
the NTS and EnergySolutions facilities.
Like the PEIS, site-specific EISs for
each conversion facility assumed that
depleted uranium oxide would be
classified as low-level waste. This
assumption is consistent with a recent
ruling by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) in the licensing
proceeding for a commercial uranium
enrichment facility (NRC 2005a,b,c,d
and 2006a,b). The site-specific EISs
stated that the disposal facility (or
facilities) would be (1) selected in a
manner consistent with DOE policies
and orders, and (2) authorized or
licensed to receive the conversion
products by DOE (in conformance with
DOE orders), the NRC (in conformance
with NRC regulations), or an NRC
agreement state agency (in conformance
with state laws and regulations
determined to be equivalent to NRC
regulations).
DOE is now proposing to amend the
site-specific RODs to decide that the
depleted uranium oxide conversion
product may be disposed of at either the
NTS or the EnergySolutions low-level
waste disposal facilities. Accordingly,
DOE has prepared the draft SA that is
the subject of this Notice. All other
aspects of the depleted DUF6 conversion
program remain as previously described
in the site-specific EISs and RODs.
The draft SA identifies no significant
new circumstances or information
relevant to environmental concerns that
bear on DOE’s decisions on disposal
locations or the impacts of those
decisions. Since issuance of the two
site-specific DUF6 conversion facility
final EISs, the following circumstances
have changed. In May 2006, a contract
was signed with Solvay Fluorides, a
commercial vendor, for purchase of the
HF co-product. On June 2, 2006, the
NRC issued an order that determined
that the Envirocare (now
EnergySolutions) site near Clive, Utah,
appears to be suitable for near-term
disposal of depleted uranium. The
transportation campaign has been
slightly modified to include more
cylinders per railcar with fewer
shipments per year. Impacts from the
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modified campaign for both operations
and accident scenarios are projected to
be about the same as those presented in
the site-specific EISs.
DOE believes, based on the analysis in
the draft SA, that disposal at either NTS
or EnergySolutions low-level waste
disposal facilities are reasonable
alternatives. Regarding the alternative of
disposal at the EnergySolutions facility,
DOE believes that adequate NEPA
documentation exists to support
disposal of any unused depleted
uranium oxide conversion product as
well as for emptied DUF6 cylinders that
would be used for disposal containers
and the small quantity of CaF2 that
would be generated during the
conversion process. With respect to NTS
low-level waste facility, the draft SA
analyses show that there is adequate
NEPA coverage for all actions leading
up to delivery at the NTS and that sitespecific NEPA coverage at the NTS is
adequate for disposal of up to 60,000 m3
of unused depleted uranium oxide
conversion product. Furthermore,
upcoming reviews of the NTS site-wide
EIS will evaluate disposal of additional
uranium oxide conversion product
volumes at NTS. Accordingly, DOE
believes that a supplemental EIS (or an
environmental assessment) is not
needed to support amending the sitespecific RODs to address disposal of the
depleted uranium oxide conversion
product.
DOE plans to issue amended RODs
under the conversion facility EISs no
sooner than 30 days after issuance of the
final SA. DOE will consider all public
comments on the draft SA submitted by
May 18, 2007.
Issued in Washington, DC, March 27, 2007.
Mark W. Frei,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program
Planning and Budget.
[FR Doc. E7–6039 Filed 4–2–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Extension of Time to Submit
Scoping Comments on the
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for the Global Nuclear
Energy Partnership
Office of Nuclear Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of extension of time to
submit scoping comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In response to public
requests, the Department of Energy
(DOE) announces an extension of time
to submit comments on the proposed
scope, alternatives, and environmental
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15871
issues to be analyzed in the
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement for the Global Nuclear Energy
Partnership (GNEP PEIS). This date has
been extended to June 4, 2007, thereby
giving an additional 61 days to provide
comments.
Please direct comments,
suggestions, or relevant information on
the GNEP PEIS to: Mr. Timothy A.
Frazier, GNEP PEIS Document Manager,
Office of Nuclear Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0119;
Telephone: 866–645–7803, Fax: 866–
645–7807, e-mail to: GNEPPEIS@nuclear.energy.gov. Please mark
envelopes, faxes, and e-mails: ‘‘GNEP
PEIS Comments.’’ Additional
information on GNEP may be found at
https://www.gnep.energy.gov.
ADDRESSES:
For
general information on DOE’s National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
process, please contact: Ms. Carol M.
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance, GC–20, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0103, 202–586–
4600, or by leaving a message at 1–800–
472–2756. Additional information
regarding DOE’s NEPA activities is
available on the DOE NEPA Web site at
https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa. This
notice is available at https://
www.eh.doe.gov/nepa and https://
www.gnep.energy.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
On
January 4, 2007, DOE published a
Notice of Intent (NOI) (72 FR 331) to
prepare the GNEP PEIS pursuant to the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq., and 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. With the publication of the
NOI, DOE began the PEIS scoping
period and invited Federal, state, and
local governments, Native American
Tribes, industry, other organizations,
and the public to provide comments on
the proposed scope, alternatives, and
environmental issues to be analyzed in
the GNEP PEIS. In response to public
requests, DOE is now extending the time
for submittal of scoping comments an
additional 61 days from April 4, 2007,
to June 4, 2007. DOE will consider all
comments received during the scoping
period in preparing the GNEP PEIS. Late
comments will be considered to the
extent practicable.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 63 (Tuesday, April 3, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15869-15871]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-6039]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Availability of a Draft Supplement Analysis for
Disposal of Depleted Uranium Oxide Conversion Product Generated From
Doe's Inventory of Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of availability of a draft supplement analysis.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: DOE has prepared a Draft Supplement Analysis (SA) pursuant to
DOE regulations implementing the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA), 10 CFR 1021.314. The draft SA addresses DOE's proposal to
dispose of the depleted uranium oxide conversion product at either the
DOE-owned low-level radioactive waste disposal facility at the Nevada
Test Site (NTS) or at EnergySolutions LLC, a commercial low-level waste
disposal facility in Clive, Utah (EnergySolutions; formerly known as
Envirocare of Utah, Inc.).
In April 1999, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) published a
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (PEIS) for management of
its Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride (DUF6) inventory. The PEIS
included a generic assessment of the disposal of depleted uranium oxide
conversion product (as U3O8 or UO2)
and concluded that disposal of either product in shallow earthen
structures, vaults, or mines would adequately protect human health and
the environment over the time period considered, as long as the
disposal facility is located in a dry environment and appropriately
engineered (e.g., the cover material is maintained). Subsequently, DOE
prepared site-specific final Environmental Impact Statements (EISs) for
construction and operation of DUF6 conversion facilities at
the DOE's Paducah, Kentucky, and Portsmouth, Ohio, sites in the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for Construction and Operation of a
Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride Conversion Facility at the Paducah,
Kentucky Site, DOE/EIS-0359, and the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for Construction and Operation of a Depleted Uranium
Hexafluoride Conversion Facility at the Portsmouth, Ohio Site, DOE/EIS-
0360. DOE published its Record of Decision for Construction and
Operation of a Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride Conversion Facility at the
Paducah, Kentucky Site, and Record of Decision for Construction and
Operation of a Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride Conversion Facility at the
Portsmouth,
[[Page 15870]]
Ohio Site (RODs) on July 27, 2004 (69 FR 44649 and 69 FR 44654).
In each site-specific ROD, DOE announced its decision to implement
the actions described as the preferred alternative in the corresponding
conversion facility EIS, which included the following actions:
DOE will construct and operate a conversion facility at
Location A within each of the Paducah and Portsmouth sites.
All shipments to and from the conversion facility sites,
including any potential shipments of non-DUF6 cylinders
currently stored at the East Tennessee Technology Park (ETTP), will be
conducted by either truck or rail, as appropriate. Cylinders will be
shipped in a manner that is consistent with U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT) regulations for the shipment of UF6
cylinders.
Current cylinder management activities (handling,
inspection, monitoring, and maintenance) will continue, consistent with
Cylinder Project Management Plan for Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride,
effective October 2003, which covers actions needed to meet safety and
environmental requirements, until conversion can be accomplished.
The aqueous hydrofluoric acid (HF) produced during
conversion will be sold for use. If necessary, calcium fluoride
(CaF2) will be produced and reused, or disposed of as
appropriate.
The depleted uranium oxide conversion product will be
reused to the extent possible or packaged in emptied cylinders for
disposal at an appropriate disposal facility. DOE plans to decide the
specific disposal location(s) for the depleted uranium oxide conversion
product after additional appropriate NEPA review. Accordingly, DOE will
continue to evaluate its disposal options and will consider any further
information or comments relevant to that decision. DOE will give a
minimum 45-day notice before making the specific disposal decision and
will provide any supplemental NEPA analysis for public review and
comment.
The conversion facility RODs did not declare a decision regarding
the location for disposal of depleted uranium oxide conversion product.
The reason DOE did not make its disposal decision at the time it issued
the RODs for construction and operation of the two DUF6 conversion
facilities is that it discovered that it had, through an oversight, not
served copies of the draft and final site-specific EISs (DOE 2004a, b)
to the States of Utah, home of EnergySolutions, and Nevada, home of
NTS, as required in 40 CFR 1502.19. As a result, each ROD states DOE's
intention to decide the specific disposal location(s) for the depleted
uranium oxide conversion product after additional appropriate NEPA
review.
This draft SA addresses the additional appropriate NEPA review
committed to in the earlier RODs. The draft SA identifies no
significant new circumstances or information relevant to environmental
concerns that bear on DOE's decisions on disposal locations or the
impacts of those decisions. Based on the draft SA that is the subject
of this Notice, DOE believes that a supplemental EIS is not needed to
support amending the conversion facility RODs to decide the disposal
location for the depleted uranium oxide conversion product. The
depleted uranium oxide conversion product may be disposed either at the
EnergySolutions low-level waste disposal facility or at the NTS low-
level waste disposal facility. DOE plans to issue amended RODs under
the conversion facility EISs no sooner than 45 days from the
publication of this Notice.
DATES: DOE will consider all public comments on this matter submitted
by May 18, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be submitted electronically via the Web at
https://web.ead.anl.gov/uranium/ or by regular mail. Written comments
can be mailed to: DU Disposal Supplement Analysis Comment, Argonne
National Laboratory, Building 900, Mail Stop 3, 9700 S. Cass Avenue,
Argonne, IL 60439.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Copies of the Supplement Analysis for
Disposal of Depleted Uranium Oxide Conversion Product Generated From
DOE's Inventory of Depleted Uranium Hexafluoride (DOE/EIS-0359/0360-SA-
001) is available on the Depleted UF6 Management Information
Network at: https://web.ead.anl.gov/uranium/, and on DOE's NEPA Web site
at https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/whatsnew.html. To request printed copies
of this document, please write: DU Disposal Supplement Analysis
Comment, Argonne National Laboratory, Building 900, Mail Stop 3, 9700
S. Cass Avenue, Argonne, IL 60439.
For further information on DOE's NEPA process, contact: Ms. Carol
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance, GC-20, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC
20585, Telephone: 202-586-4600, or leave a message at 1-800-472-2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Uranium Disposition Services, LLC (UDS)
began construction of the DUF6 conversion facilities at
Paducah, Kentucky and Portsmouth, Ohio in July 2004. The main products
from the conversion of DOE's inventory of DUF6 will be
depleted uranium oxide conversion product and aqueous hydrogen fluoride
(HF). The quantities of depleted uranium oxide conversion product
produced annually will be approximately 10,800 metric tons (t) (11,800
tons) at Portsmouth and 14,300 t (15,800 tons) at Paducah. UDS is
planning to sell the HF product to a commercial user.
In addition to depleted uranium oxide conversion product, two other
products from the conversion process require disposal: (1) Emptied
DUF6 cylinders and (2) a relatively small quantity of
CaF2 (approximately 18 t [20 tons] at Portsmouth and 24 t
[26 tons] at Paducah annually). UDS is planning to use the emptied
cylinders as disposal containers for the depleted uranium oxide
conversion product. Therefore, the emptied cylinders would become part
of the depleted uranium oxide waste stream. Any cylinders not used as
disposal containers would be disposed of as low-level waste at an
appropriate facility in compliance with applicable regulations. The
small quantity of CaF2 would be disposed with the unused
depleted uranium oxide. Therefore, the unused depleted uranium oxide,
most of the emptied cylinders, and the small quantity of
CaF2 would be sent to the same disposal facility.
The PEIS considered the environmental impacts of six alternative
strategies for long-term management of DOE's DUF6 inventory.
The alternative strategies included: (1) Options for continued storage
of DUF6 in cylinders at the three sites where it was stored
(Paducah, KY, Portsmouth, OH, and ETTP in Oak Ridge, TN); (2) long-term
storage as DUF6 at a consolidated site; (3) conversion of
the DUF6 to an oxide followed by long-term storage; (4)
conversion to an oxide or depleted uranium metal followed by use; (5)
conversion to an oxide followed by disposal; and (6) no action. The
analyses of the long-term storage and disposal alternatives included
the transportation of the depleted uranium oxide to generic storage or
disposal sites located 155 mi (250 km), 620 mi (1,000 km), or 3,100 mi
(5,000 km) from the conversion facilities. DOE analyzed the impacts of
depleted uranium conversion product disposal using generic assumptions
about disposal site characteristics, rather than actual characteristics
for any particular disposal site. A technical
[[Page 15871]]
support document for the PEIS investigated the feasibility of depleted
uranium disposal at six low-level waste disposal facilities based on
waste acceptance criteria, available capacity, and disposal cost
(Depleted Uranium Storage and Disposal Trade Study: Summary Report,
ORNL/TM-2000/10). This document and subsequent follow-up studies have
verified that the only currently operating dry-environment, low-level
waste disposal facilities that are feasible for disposal of the
depleted uranium oxide conversion product are the NTS and
EnergySolutions facilities.
Like the PEIS, site-specific EISs for each conversion facility
assumed that depleted uranium oxide would be classified as low-level
waste. This assumption is consistent with a recent ruling by the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) in the licensing proceeding for a
commercial uranium enrichment facility (NRC 2005a,b,c,d and 2006a,b).
The site-specific EISs stated that the disposal facility (or
facilities) would be (1) selected in a manner consistent with DOE
policies and orders, and (2) authorized or licensed to receive the
conversion products by DOE (in conformance with DOE orders), the NRC
(in conformance with NRC regulations), or an NRC agreement state agency
(in conformance with state laws and regulations determined to be
equivalent to NRC regulations).
DOE is now proposing to amend the site-specific RODs to decide that
the depleted uranium oxide conversion product may be disposed of at
either the NTS or the EnergySolutions low-level waste disposal
facilities. Accordingly, DOE has prepared the draft SA that is the
subject of this Notice. All other aspects of the depleted
DUF6 conversion program remain as previously described in
the site-specific EISs and RODs.
The draft SA identifies no significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental concerns that bear on DOE's
decisions on disposal locations or the impacts of those decisions.
Since issuance of the two site-specific DUF6 conversion
facility final EISs, the following circumstances have changed. In May
2006, a contract was signed with Solvay Fluorides, a commercial vendor,
for purchase of the HF co-product. On June 2, 2006, the NRC issued an
order that determined that the Envirocare (now EnergySolutions) site
near Clive, Utah, appears to be suitable for near-term disposal of
depleted uranium. The transportation campaign has been slightly
modified to include more cylinders per railcar with fewer shipments per
year. Impacts from the modified campaign for both operations and
accident scenarios are projected to be about the same as those
presented in the site-specific EISs.
DOE believes, based on the analysis in the draft SA, that disposal
at either NTS or EnergySolutions low-level waste disposal facilities
are reasonable alternatives. Regarding the alternative of disposal at
the EnergySolutions facility, DOE believes that adequate NEPA
documentation exists to support disposal of any unused depleted uranium
oxide conversion product as well as for emptied DUF6
cylinders that would be used for disposal containers and the small
quantity of CaF2 that would be generated during the
conversion process. With respect to NTS low-level waste facility, the
draft SA analyses show that there is adequate NEPA coverage for all
actions leading up to delivery at the NTS and that site-specific NEPA
coverage at the NTS is adequate for disposal of up to 60,000
m3 of unused depleted uranium oxide conversion product.
Furthermore, upcoming reviews of the NTS site-wide EIS will evaluate
disposal of additional uranium oxide conversion product volumes at NTS.
Accordingly, DOE believes that a supplemental EIS (or an environmental
assessment) is not needed to support amending the site-specific RODs to
address disposal of the depleted uranium oxide conversion product.
DOE plans to issue amended RODs under the conversion facility EISs
no sooner than 30 days after issuance of the final SA. DOE will
consider all public comments on the draft SA submitted by May 18, 2007.
Issued in Washington, DC, March 27, 2007.
Mark W. Frei,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program Planning and Budget.
[FR Doc. E7-6039 Filed 4-2-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P