Amended Record of Decision: Storage of Surplus Plutonium Materials at the Savannah River Site, 51807-51811 [E7-17840]
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[FR Doc. E7–17843 Filed 9–10–07; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Amended Record of Decision: Storage
of Surplus Plutonium Materials at the
Savannah River Site
Department of Energy.
Amended Record of Decision.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) is amending the Record of
Decision (ROD) for the Storage and
Disposition of Weapons—Usable Fissile
Materials Programmatic Environmental
Impact Statement (DOE/EIS–0229, 1996;
Storage and Disposition PEIS).
Specifically, DOE has decided to take
the actions necessary to transfer
approximately 2,511 additional 3013compliant packages 1 containing surplus
non-pit weapons-usable plutonium
metals and oxides to the Savannah River
Site (SRS), near Aiken, South Carolina.
Approximately 2,300 containers will be
transferred from the Hanford Site
(Hanford) near Richland, Washington;
115 containers will be transferred from
the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory (LLNL) in California; and 96
containers will be transferred from the
Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)
in New Mexico. All 3013 containers will
be shipped inside Type B shipping
packages (e.g., 9975 packages) in Safe
Secure Transports (SSTs). In addition,
DOE could transfer the equivalent of
about one thousand 3013 containers, in
the form of unirradiated fuel assemblies
originally intended for the Fast Flux
Test Facility (FFTF) at Hanford, and
miscellaneous fuel pins that that were
not put into fuel assemblies, to the
SRS.2 At a lower priority and only if
adequate storage space is available, DOE
will transfer approximately five
hundred additional 3013 containers
from LLNL and LANL to provide
operational flexibility in the laboratories
and to alleviate the demands there on
storage capacity needed to support
nuclear weapons research missions.
Surplus plutonium in 3013-compliant
containers will be stored in the K-Area
Material Storage (KAMS) facility and
FFTF fuel will be stored in the K-Area
complex.
This action will consolidate storage of
surplus, non-pit weapons-usable
plutonium from Hanford, LANL, and
LLNL at SRS, pending disposition.3
1A
container that complies with DOE–STD–3013,
Stabilization, Packaging, and Storage of PlutoniumBearing Materials.
2 The use of FFTF and the unirradiated fuel
currently at Hanford is being considered in
conjunction with the evaluation of reasonable
alternatives in the Global Nuclear Energy
Partnership (GNEP) Programmatic EIS. The planned
shipment of the FFTF unirradiated fuel to SRS is
scheduled for the second half of Fiscal Year 2009.
If FFTF is still being considered as part of GNEP
following completion of the PEIS (expected in
2008), DOE may choose not to ship the unirradiated
FFTF fuel to SRS.
3 Based on DOE’s current surplus plutonium
disposition plans, DOE expects to disposition the
surplus plutonium stored in KAMs in less than 20
years. DOE has analyzed the potential
environmental impacts of storage of such
plutonium in KAMs for up to 50 years.
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DOE has prepared a Supplement
Analysis (SA), Storage of Surplus
Plutonium Materials at the Savannah
River Site (DOE/EIS–0229–SA–4,
August 2007), in accordance with DOE
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) regulations (10 CFR 1021.314)
to determine whether consolidated
storage of this plutonium is a substantial
change to the proposed action or
whether there are significant new
circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns such that a
supplemental EIS or a new EIS would
be needed. Based on the SA, DOE has
determined that no further review under
NEPA is required.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Copies of NEPA documents related to
this decision, including this Amended
ROD, are available on DOE’s NEPA Web
site at: https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa. To
request copies of these documents,
please contact: The Center for
Environmental Management
Information, P.O. Box 23769,
Washington, DC 202–586–3769,
Telephone: 800–736–3282 (in
Washington, DC: 202–863–5084).
For further information concerning
the storage of surplus, non-pit
plutonium at the SRS, contact: Andrew
R. Grainger, NEPA Compliance Officer,
Savannah River Operations Office, U.S.
Department of Energy, P.O. Box B,
Aiken, South Carolina 29802,
Telephone: (803) 952–8001, E-mail:
drew.grainger@srs.gov.
For information on DOE’s NEPA
process, 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 20585–0119, (202) 586–
4600, or leave a message at (800) 472–
2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
At the end of the Cold War, the
United States declared large quantities
of plutonium and uranium surplus to
the defense needs of the nation. At that
time, materials were in various forms
and various stages of the material
manufacturing and weapons fabrication
processes and located at several
weapons complex sites that DOE had
operated in the preceding decades. DOE
began the process of placing these
materials in safe, stable configurations
suitable for storage until disposition
strategies could be developed and
implemented. Through a series of
decisions supported by appropriate
NEPA analyses, DOE has decided to
store surplus, non-pit, weapons-usable
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plutonium materials at SRS facilities
pending disposition. DOE’s Supplement
Analysis, Storage of Surplus Plutonium
Materials at the Savannah River Site,
(DOE/EIS–0229–SA–4, August 2007),
describes the NEPA reviews and DOE’s
decisions regarding transportation and
storage of plutonium materials. Prior
NEPA reviews and accompanying
decisions that are directly related to
today’s decision are described in the
following paragraphs.
In an April 19, 2002 (67 FR 19432),
Amended Record of Decision (ROD),
DOE announced its decision to
immediately consolidate long-term
storage in the K-Area Material Storage
(KAMS) facility at SRS of surplus, nonpit plutonium from the Rocky Flats
Environmental Technology Site
(RFETS). In addition, DOE noted that
cancellation of the then-planned
immobilization facility for surplus
plutonium disposition and the selection
of the long-term storage alternative at
SRS removed the basis for the
contingency contained in previous
RODs (which conditioned transport of
surplus, non-pit plutonium from RFETS
to SRS on the selection of SRS as the
site for the immobilization facilities),
and amended those RODs accordingly.
DOE also stated that long-term storage of
surplus plutonium and the ultimate
disposition of that plutonium were
separate actions, and that combining
long-term storage and disposition was
not required to implement either
decision, and served no significant
programmatic objective. Transfer of
plutonium materials from RFETS to SRS
was completed in 2003 and these
materials are stored in 3013 containers
inside 9975 shipping packages in the
KAMS facility. In the 2002 Amended
ROD, DOE left unchanged it’s prior
decision to store surplus, non-pit
plutonium at Hanford, Idaho National
Laboratory (INL), and LANL, pending
disposition (or movement to lag storage
at the disposition facility).4
Following the events of September 11,
2001, DOE revised the threat criteria
and the postulated capabilities of those
who might perpetrate acts of violence
against DOE assets. As a result of this
new threat guidance, DOE determined
4 DOE indicated in the Storage and Disposition
PEIS ROD (DOE, 1997) that 0.3 metric tons of
plutonium stored at LLNL was primarily research
and development and operational feedstock
material not surplus to government needs, and that
the material would continue to be stored for use at
LLNL. DOE has since determined that there is no
programmatic need for this material, and that
transferring the material to SRS for long-term
storage would reduce surveillance costs at LLNL. In
1999, DOE determined that 3 to 4 metric tons of
plutonium material will be retained at the Idaho
National Laboratory for potential future use.
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that the consolidation of plutonium at
SRS into one location—KAMS—and
enhancement of the security of that
location, would provide the most
advantageous means to meet this
challenge and assure the safety and
security of the stored material.
Therefore, DOE cancelled a project to
install stored surveillance and
stabilization capability to ensure
compliance with DOE–STD–3013 in FArea and decided to construct the KArea Interim Surveillance (KIS) project
and the Container Surveillance and
Storage Capability (CSSC) project in the
K-Area complex. DOE prepared an
environmental assessment, Safeguards
and Security Upgrades for Storage of
Plutonium Materials at the Savannah
River Site (DOE/EA–1538, December
2005) and issued a Finding of No
Significant Impact (FONSI) in December
of 2005, to address the impacts of these
and related security projects. The EA
addressed surplus plutonium materials
in the SRS inventory as of December
2005. The KIS Project, which became
operational in June 2007, and the CSSC
project, which is currently scheduled
for operations in 2010, will provide
surveillance and stabilization capability
and capacity for storage of 3013
containers outside of KAMS (but in the
K-Area complex) adequate to support
the surveillance program required by
DOE–STD–3013.
Decision: Consistent with DOE’s prior
decision to reduce over time the number
of locations where the various forms of
plutonium are stored, DOE has decided
to consolidate storage of surplus, nonpit, weapons-usable plutonium from
Hanford, LANL, and LLNL at SRS,
pending disposition. Following
appropriate congressional notification,
in accordance with section 3155 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2002 (Pub. L. 107–107), DOE
will transfer, over a period of about two
to three years, approximately 2,511
additional 3013-compliant packages 5
containing plutonium metals and oxides
to SRS. Approximately 2,300 containers
will be transferred from Hanford, 115
containers will be transferred from
LLNL, and 96 containers will be
transferred from LANL. All 3013
containers will be shipped inside Type
B shipping packages (e.g., 9975
packages) in Safe Secure Transports
(SSTs). All containers will be certified
compliant with DOE–STD–3013 and
Department of Transportation
requirements prior to shipment, and
5 A 3013 container has a maximum capacity of
about 4.4 kilograms of plutonium. However, few
containers have the maximum amount of
plutonium.
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DOE will acquire and obtain
certification of additional shipping
containers, if needed.
In addition, DOE could transfer the
equivalent of about one thousand 3013
containers, in the form of unirradiated
fuel assemblies and miscellaneous fuel
pins originally intended for the Fast
Flux Test Facility (FFTF) at Hanford, to
the SRS.6 This material will be shipped
in Type B shipping packages, in SSTs,
and stored in the K-Area Complex in the
Type B shipping packages, pending
disposition. DOE will monitor the
condition of the shipping packages
while in storage to insure their integrity,
including inspection of seals to monitor
for corrosion or leakage. DOE will
continue to store RFETS and SRS
surplus, non-pit plutonium in
approximately 2,800 containers inside
Type B shipping packages at SRS.
Storage will be in compliance with
applicable Technical Safety
Requirements (TSRs) and Safety
Analysis Reports (SARs), and the total
mass of stored plutonium will be
significantly less than 15 metric tons.
DOE has previously evaluated storage of
non-pit surplus plutonium from RFETS
and other DOE sites, as needed, in
KAMS (Supplement Analysis for Storing
Plutonium in the Actinide Packaging
and Storage Facility and the Building K–
105 at the Savannah River Site. (DOE/
EIS–0229–SA–1, July 1998).
In addition, DOE will transfer
approximately five hundred 3013
containers from LLNL and LANL to
remove surplus inventory, provide
operational flexibility, and to alleviate
the demands there on storage capacity
needed to support nuclear weapons
research missions. This transfer will
take place only if storage space is
available in KAMS. Space is limited by
the number of storage positions allowed
in recognition of the spacing
requirements dictated by the TSRs and
SARs. DOE could increase the number
of storage spaces by modifying the
storage configuration after review, and
revision as necessary, of the safety
authorization basis.
DOE will use the KAMS facility for
consolidated storage. Nearby areas of
the K-Area complex, where the KIS is
and CSSC will be located, will be used
for surveillance and restabilization
activities. Storage spaces necessary to
support surveillance activities are
available in the K-Area complex.
Unirradiated FFTF fuel will also be
stored in the K-Area complex.
Basis for Decision: DOE’s decision to
consolidate surplus plutonium at SRS
will reduce the number of sites with
6 See
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special nuclear material; enhance the
security of these materials; reduce the
risk plutonium poses to the public and
environment; reduce or avoid the costs
associated with plutonium storage,
surveillance and monitoring, and
security at multiple sites; and relocate
the material to DOE’s planned site for
surplus plutonium disposition.
Plutonium consolidation has been
encouraged by independent reviews of
DOE’s activities, including the
Government Accountability Office
(GAO) in its July 2005 report entitled
Securing U.S. Nuclear Materials: DOE
Needs to Take Action to Safely
Consolidate Plutonium (GAO–05–665)
and recently by the Defense Nuclear
Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB). In its
June 26, 2007, report to Congress, the
DNFSB stated: ‘‘The Board believes
consolidation of excess plutonium into
a single, robust facility suitable for
extended retrievable storage is logical
from a safety perspective. DOE should
aggressively pursue consolidation of its
excess plutonium.’’ Furthermore,
transferring within the next two to three
years all the surplus plutonium
currently at Hanford to SRS would
enhance security and avoid the
expenditure of about $200 million for
security upgrades to be compliant with
DOE’s 2005 Design Basis Threat (DBT)
guidance, as well as tens of millions of
dollars more each year for security and
monitoring to continue storing the
material at Hanford.
Separately from the consolidation and
storage activities DOE is announcing
today, DOE is preparing a Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for
Surplus Plutonium Disposition at the
Savannah River Site to evaluate the
potential environmental impacts of
alternative methods to disposition
surplus, non-pit plutonium materials.
The action alternatives identified in the
Notice of Intent (72 FR 14543; March 28,
2007) for this Supplemental EIS involve:
(1) A glass can-in-canister approach that
would be installed in K-Area; (2) a
ceramic can-in-canister approach that
would be installed in K-Area; and (3)
the Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel
Fabrication Facility, currently under
construction at SRS. In conjunction
with any of these alternatives, DOE
would utilize the existing H-Canyon and
Defense Waste Processing Facility
(DWPF) for the disposition of up to
about four metric tons of surplus, nonpit plutonium materials. DOE’s
selection of one or more of these
alternatives would ensure that surplus,
weapons-usable plutonium that is
currently at SRS, or that would be
shipped to SRS as a result of the actions
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evaluated in this SA, would be placed
in a form that would facilitate a
disposition path out of South Carolina.
Supplement Analysis: DOE prepared a
Supplement Analysis (Storage of
Surplus Plutonium Materials at the
Savannah River Site, (DOE/EIS–0229–
SA–4, August 2007) to determine if
consolidating storage at SRS of surplus,
non-pit, weapons-usable plutonium
from Hanford, LLNL, and LANL
represented new circumstances or
information requiring preparation of a
supplemental EIS or a new EIS. The
environmental impacts discussed in the
SA are described in the following
paragraphs.
Transportation
DOE will ship plutonium materials
compliant with the DOE-STD–3013 in
3013 packages inside Type B shipping
containers (e.g., 9975 containers) from
Hanford, LLNL, and LANL to KAMS at
SRS using SSTs. DOE will ship
unirradiated FFTF fuel from Hanford to
SRS in Type B shipping packages (e.g.,
the Hanford Un-irradiated Fuel Package)
in SSTs. At KAMS, the 9975 containers
will be received and stored; the 3013
packages will not be removed from the
9975 shipping containers. The Type B
shipping packages containing the
unirradiated FFTF fuel will be stored in
the K-Area complex at SRS.
DOE previously evaluated the impacts
of transporting 17 metric tons of nonpit, surplus plutonium to SRS in the
Surplus Plutonium Disposition (SPD)
EIS (DOE/EIS–0283, 1999), which
addressed alternatives for disposition
and was tiered from the Storage and
Disposition PEIS. In the SPD EIS
Alternative 3, DOE analyzed the
transportation of surplus pit and non-pit
plutonium to SRS. Table L–1 of the SPD
EIS summarized the material shipments;
included were surplus non-pit weaponsusable plutonium materials from
Hanford, LLNL, LANL, RFETS, and INL
(Argonne National Laboratory—West).
The Hanford material specifically
included FFTF fuel pins and
assemblies. Alternative 3 included
shipment of a greater quantity of
surplus, non-pit plutonium materials to
SRS than does the consolidation
decision DOE is announcing today.
In the SPD EIS, DOE estimated that
normal (incident-free) transportation
operations could result in 0.024 latent
cancer fatalities (LCF) among
transportation workers and 0.034 LCF in
the total affected population over the
duration of the transportation activities.
In preparing the SPD EIS, DOE used a
dose conversion factor of 5 × 10¥4
deaths per rem of dose to the affected
population. Currently, DOE
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51809
recommends a dose conversion factor of
6 × 10¥4 deaths per rem. Using the
currently recommended dose
conversion factor, the estimated risk
would be about 0.029 LCF among
transport workers and about 0.041 LCF
in the total affected population. In
addition, DOE estimated that 0.019
nonradiological fatalities could occur as
a result of vehicular emissions. DOE
also estimated the impacts of accident
scenarios, and in all cases the risk of a
fatality is less than one. No accidents
occurred during shipment of the RFETS
plutonium to the SRS.
DOE has analyzed the impacts of
transporting plutonium from Hanford,
LLNL, and LANL (as well as INL and
RFETS) to SRS in the SPD EIS. That
analysis assumed that surplus non-pit
plutonium would be transported in
Type B containers in SSTs, just as DOE
will do for the consolidation action
announced today. DOE will make all
shipments in shipping packages with
current certificates, consistent with
Department of Transportation
requirements and DOE’s prior NEPA
reviews. The transportation required to
implement this action is a subset of the
transportation activities evaluated in the
SPD EIS.
Storage
The KAMS facility requires no
physical modification to accommodate
the proposed storage of surplus, non-pit,
weapons-usable plutonium from
Hanford, LLNL, and LANL. The
environmental impacts of storage of
fissile material at SRS were presented in
the Interim Management of Nuclear
Materials EIS (DOE/EIS–0220, October
1995) and the Storage and Disposition
PEIS. These two EISs contain calculated
annual impacts presented over specific
time periods. DOE also evaluated
storage of surplus plutonium materials
from RFETS and other sites, as needed,
in 3013 containers inside Type B
shipping containers in KAMS, and
concluded that KAMS storage for up to
50 years did not represent significant
new information relevant to
environmental concerns, and that
additional NEPA review was not
required (DOE/EIS–0229–SA–01, 1998).
The consolidated storage action DOE is
announcing today involves the same
forms of surplus plutonium and the
same shipping and storage containers
(which would be certified Type B
containers), as DOE has previously
analyzed.
DOE has initiated two projects to
provide the stored plutonium
surveillance and restabilization
capability required as part of the
monitoring program that is an integral
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part of DOE–STD–3013. The KIS
project, which became operational in
June 2007, provides limited, temporary
surveillance capability until the CSSC
project is completed. Current plans call
for the CSSC to be operational in 2010.
DOE completed an EA (DOE/EA–1538,
December 2005) evaluating the impacts
of construction and operation of KIS
and CSSC in the K-Area complex (near
but not in KAMS), and related security
upgrades in K-Area. Storage space
adequate for the needs of the KIS and
CSSC surveillance activities are
provided outside of KAMS and a
limited number of 3013 containers will
be temporarily stored without Type B
shipping containers when CSSC
becomes operational. DOE evaluated the
impacts of these actions in the EA, and
determined the impacts would not be
significant (Finding of No Significant
Impact (FONSI), (DOE/EA–1538,
December 2005). While the inventory in
KAMS will increase as a result of the
transfer and storage of surplus non-pit
plutonium from Hanford, LLNL, and
LANL, the number of 3013 containers
stored outside of KAMS, or undergoing
surveillance activities requiring opening
of the cans, will not increase. The
number of cans undergoing surveillance
activities is limited by the facility safety
analysis and technical safety
requirements, and neither would change
as a result of storing more material in
KAMS. Therefore, DOE’s action is not
different in regard to surveillance
actions than those DOE has previously
evaluated and found to be insignificant.
DOE has found no anomalous
conditions in either the 3013 containers
or the stored plutonium material in the
DOE–STD–3013 surveillance program.
Similarly, performance of the Type B
shipping containers has been as
expected, with no instances of
unacceptable performance. The K-Area
Structural Assessment Program,
mentioned in the 2002 ROD, has not
revealed any condition or degradation
that would affect the structural integrity
of the facility.
Unirradiated fuel from the FFTF
facility at Hanford will be stored in
Type B shipping packages in the K-Area
transfer bay in the K-Area complex.
Storage of FFTF fuel in Type B shipping
containers in the K-Area transfer bay
will provide a level of safety equivalent
to that resulting from storage of
plutonium in 3013 containers inside
9975 shipping packages in KAMS. In
addition, DOE evaluated the storage of
irradiated tritium-producing burnable
absorber rods in Type B shipping
containers (the same configuration for
the storage of FFTF fuel) in the K-Area
transfer bay (DOE/EA–1528, Storage of
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Tritium-Producing Burnable Absorber
Rods in K-Area Transfer Bay at SRS,
June 2005) and found the environmental
impacts to be insignificant (FONSI,
DOE/EA–1528, June 2005).
Intentional Destructive Acts
DOE provides substantial safeguards
and security measures for both
transportation and storage of plutonium.
Safeguards and security are designed to
prevent theft or diversion of materials,
and to prevent exposure of workers and
the public to radiation from the material
during transportation and storage. DOE
recognizes that an attack against surplus
plutonium cargo may cause very
undesirable consequences, such as
release of radionuclides into the
environment.
Following the events of September 11,
2001, DOE is continuing to consider and
implement measures to minimize the
risk and consequences of potential
terrorist attacks on DOE facilities and
activities. DOE conducts vulnerability
assessments and risk analyses in
accordance with DOE Order 470.3A,
Design Basis Threat Policy and DOE
Order 470.4A, Safeguards and Security
Program. The safeguards applied to
protecting the K-Area complex involve
a dynamic process of enhancement to
meet threats, and those safeguards will
evolve over time. It is not possible to
predict whether intentional destructive
acts would occur at these locations, or
the nature or types of attacks.
Nevertheless, DOE has evaluated
security scenarios involving malevolent
or terrorist acts in an effort to assess
potential vulnerabilities and identify
improvements to security procedures
and response measures. The physical
security protection strategy is based on
a graded and layered approach
supported by a guard force trained to
detect, deter, and neutralize adversary
activities. Facilities are protected by
staffed and automated access control
systems, barriers, surveillance systems
and intrusion detection systems.
Plutonium materials intended for
consolidated storage would be received
and stored in the K-Area Complex. DOE
evaluated accident scenarios during
storage of plutonium materials in the
Interim Management of Nuclear
Materials EIS (DOE/EIS–0220, October
1995). DOE finds that the accident
impacts are representative of the
potential impacts of intentional
destructive acts against the facilities
proposed for consolidated storage,
particularly in light of the robust nature
of the facilities themselves and the
improved security and response
measures that have been put in place in
recent years.
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In the SPD EIS, DOE evaluated the
impacts of a severe accident while
transporting plutonium oxide material
in Type B shipping containers in Safe
Secure Transports (SSTs). The
hypothetical accidents modeled for the
impact assessment involve either a longterm fire or tremendous impact of
crushing forces. In the case of crushing
forces, a fire would have to be burning
in order to spread the plutonium as
modeled. These accidents were assumed
to cause a ground-level release of 10
percent of the radioactive material in
the SST. These accidents fall within the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s
severity Category VIII, with an accident
frequency in rural areas of about 1 ×
10¥7 per year (once in 10 million years).
DOE estimated that if such an accident
were to occur in an urban area as many
as 114 cancer fatalities could result. In
addition, the accident itself would cause
a number of non-radiological fatalities,
depending upon the specific
circumstances.
In reviewing the nature and
consequences of the accident scenarios
described in the SPD EIS, DOE finds
that the consequences bound the
consequences of a hypothetical terrorist
attack on an SST carrying surplus nonpit plutonium. Because of the robust
nature of the Type B containers and the
SSTs, and because shipments are
protected, DOE finds it unlikely that an
attack could generate the forces required
to release as much material as
postulated for a severe accident.
Therefore, DOE expects the potential
consequences of a terrorist attack on a
shipment of surplus, non-pit plutonium
to be equal to or less than those of a
severe accident.
Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board
Report to Congress
In December 2003, the Defense
Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB)
issued a Report to Congress on
Plutonium Storage at the Department of
Energy’s Savannah River Site. The
DNFSB is an independent Federal
agency chartered by Congress to provide
recommendations to the Department of
Energy on the safety of defense nuclear
facilities. The Board’s report contains
proposals for enhancing the safety,
reliability, and functionality of
plutonium storage at SRS; one proposal
concerns KAMS and four concern
F-Area. However, subsequent to
issuance of the Board’s report, DOE
decided to utilize only KAMS and the
K-Area complex for storage of
plutonium and for future stabilization
and packaging operations, and to
deinventory F-Area of all plutonium
prior to the end of 2006.
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 11, 2007 / Notices
With respect to KAMS, the Board
proposed that fire protection systems be
installed and that unnecessary
combustibles be eliminated. In response
to this proposal, the Department
determined that fire suppression
equipment would be installed in the
Neutron Multiplicity Counting Room of
KAMS, fire detection equipment would
be installed throughout KAMS, and the
cable combustible load in the actuator
tower above KAMS would be removed.
DOE completed removal of the actuator
tower cables in August 2006. DOE plans
to begin installation of a fire detection
system in KAMS in 2007 and complete
it in 2008. DOE also plans to begin
installation of a fire suppression system
in the Neutron Multiplicity Counting
Room in 2008 and complete the
installation in 2009.
In addition, the fire protection posture
designed into KAMS was to minimize
both transient and fixed combustibles
within the facility such that the
remaining worst possible fire could not
cause a release of plutonium. The walls
separating the KAMS facility from the
remainder of the K-Reactor building
were fabricated into a two-hour fire
boundary. Combustibles outside the
facility fire boundaries were minimized,
contained, or mitigated to ensure the
KAMS facility fire boundaries were
rated longer than any credible fire
would burn.
Supplement Analysis Conclusion And
Determination: DOE has fully evaluated
transportation of surplus, non-pit
plutonium materials for SRS and storage
at SRS of such materials from Hanford
and LANL in the Storage and
Disposition PEIS and SPD EIS. The
action announced today, consolidated
storage of surplus, non-pit plutonium
materials at SRS, including
transportation of the materials to SRS, is
addressed in the Storage and
Disposition PEIS, the SPD EIS, and
other NEPA reviews addressed above.
DOE evaluated the potential impacts of
conducting plutonium surveillance and
stabilization activities required by DOE–
STD–3013 in the Environmental
Assessment for the Safeguards and
Security Upgrades for Storage of
Plutonium Materials at the Savannah
River Site, and found the impacts to be
insignificant. Some of these documents
are now 10 or more years old. However,
DOE has reviewed the analyses and
assumptions relevant to the potential
environmental impacts of the actions
described herein and found any changes
to be insignificant.
DOE’s 2007 SA shows that the
potential environmental impacts
associated with the further
consolidation of surplus non-pit,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:06 Sep 10, 2007
Jkt 211001
weapons-usable plutonium from
Hanford, LLNL and LANL would not be
a significant change from the potential
environmental impacts associated with
the alternatives analyzed in previous
NEPA reviews. DOE is not proposing a
substantial change that is relevant to
environmental concerns. No significant
new circumstances or information
bearing on the proposed action and
relevant to environmental concerns are
presented by the proposed
consolidation of plutonium storage.
Therefore, DOE does not need to
conduct additional NEPA review prior
to transferring surplus non-pit
plutonium materials from Hanford,
LLNL, and LANL to SRS for
consolidated storage pending
disposition, as described above.
Issued in Washington, DC, this 5th day of
September, 2007.
James A. Rispoli,
Assistant Secretary for Environmental
Management.
[FR Doc. E7–17840 Filed 9–10–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. ER07–1222–000; Docket No.
ER07–1223–000]
CR Clearing, LLC; Cow Branch Wind
Power, LLC; Notice of Issuance of
Order
September 4, 2007.
CR Clearing, LLC and Cow Branch
Wind Power, LLC (collectively, ‘‘the
Applicants’’) filed applications for
market-based rate authority, with
accompanying market-based rate tariffs.
The proposed market-based rate tariffs
provide for the sale of energy and
capacity at market-based rates. The
Applicants also requested waivers of
various Commission regulations. In
particular, the Applicants requested that
the Commission grant blanket approvals
under 18 CFR part 34 of all future
issuances of securities and assumptions
of liability by the Applicants.
On August 31, 2007, pursuant to
delegated authority, the Director,
Division of Tariffs and Market
Development-West, granted the requests
for blanket approval under part 34
(Director’s Order). The Director’s Order
also stated that the Commission would
publish a separate notice in the Federal
Register establishing a period of time for
the filing of protests. Accordingly, any
person desiring to be heard concerning
the blanket approvals of issuances of
securities or assumptions of liability by
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
51811
the Applicants, should file a protest
with the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, in accordance
with Rules 211 and 214 of the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure. 18 CFR 385.211, 385.214
(2004).
Notice is hereby given that the
deadline for filing protests is October 1,
2007.
Absent a request to be heard in
opposition to such blanket approvals by
the deadline above, the Applicants are
authorized to issue securities and
assume obligations or liabilities as a
guarantor, indorser, surety, or otherwise
in respect of any security of another
person; provided that such issuance or
assumption is for some lawful object
within the corporate purposes of the
Applicants, compatible with the public
interest, and is reasonably necessary or
appropriate for such purposes.
The Commission reserves the right to
require a further showing that neither
public nor private interests will be
adversely affected by continued
approvals of the Applicants’ issuance of
securities or assumptions of liability.
Copies of the full text of the Director’s
Order are available from the
Commission’s Public Reference Room,
888 First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426. The Order may also be viewed
on the Commission’s Web site at
https://www.ferc.gov, using the eLibrary
link. Enter the docket number excluding
the last three digits in the docket
number filed to access the document.
Comments, protests, and interventions
may be filed electronically via the
internet in lieu of paper. See, 18 CFR
385.2001(a)(1)(iii) and the instructions
on the Commission’s Web site under the
‘‘e-Filing’’ link. The Commission
strongly encourages electronic filings.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–17855 Filed 9–10–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. ER07–1246–000]
Harvest Windfarm, LLC; Notice of
Issuance of Order
September 4, 2007.
Harvest Windfarm, LLC (Harvest)
filed an application for market-based
rate authority, with an accompanying
tariff. The proposed market-based rate
tariff provides for the sale of energy and
E:\FR\FM\11SEN1.SGM
11SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 175 (Tuesday, September 11, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51807-51811]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-17840]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Amended Record of Decision: Storage of Surplus Plutonium
Materials at the Savannah River Site
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Amended Record of Decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is amending the Record of
Decision (ROD) for the Storage and Disposition of Weapons--Usable
Fissile Materials Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/EIS-
0229, 1996; Storage and Disposition PEIS). Specifically, DOE has
decided to take the actions necessary to transfer approximately 2,511
additional 3013-compliant packages \1\ containing surplus non-pit
weapons-usable plutonium metals and oxides to the Savannah River Site
(SRS), near Aiken, South Carolina. Approximately 2,300 containers will
be transferred from the Hanford Site (Hanford) near Richland,
Washington; 115 containers will be transferred from the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California; and 96 containers
will be transferred from the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in
New Mexico. All 3013 containers will be shipped inside Type B shipping
packages (e.g., 9975 packages) in Safe Secure Transports (SSTs). In
addition, DOE could transfer the equivalent of about one thousand 3013
containers, in the form of unirradiated fuel assemblies originally
intended for the Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF) at Hanford, and
miscellaneous fuel pins that that were not put into fuel assemblies, to
the SRS.\2\ At a lower priority and only if adequate storage space is
available, DOE will transfer approximately five hundred additional 3013
containers from LLNL and LANL to provide operational flexibility in the
laboratories and to alleviate the demands there on storage capacity
needed to support nuclear weapons research missions. Surplus plutonium
in 3013-compliant containers will be stored in the K-Area Material
Storage (KAMS) facility and FFTF fuel will be stored in the K-Area
complex.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A container that complies with DOE-STD-3013, Stabilization,
Packaging, and Storage of Plutonium-Bearing Materials.
\2\ The use of FFTF and the unirradiated fuel currently at
Hanford is being considered in conjunction with the evaluation of
reasonable alternatives in the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership
(GNEP) Programmatic EIS. The planned shipment of the FFTF
unirradiated fuel to SRS is scheduled for the second half of Fiscal
Year 2009. If FFTF is still being considered as part of GNEP
following completion of the PEIS (expected in 2008), DOE may choose
not to ship the unirradiated FFTF fuel to SRS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This action will consolidate storage of surplus, non-pit weapons-
usable plutonium from Hanford, LANL, and LLNL at SRS, pending
disposition.\3\ DOE has prepared a Supplement Analysis (SA), Storage of
Surplus Plutonium Materials at the Savannah River Site (DOE/EIS-0229-
SA-4, August 2007), in accordance with DOE National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) regulations (10 CFR 1021.314) to determine whether
consolidated storage of this plutonium is a substantial change to the
proposed action or whether there are significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental concerns such that a supplemental
EIS or a new EIS would be needed. Based on the SA, DOE has determined
that no further review under NEPA is required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Based on DOE's current surplus plutonium disposition plans,
DOE expects to disposition the surplus plutonium stored in KAMs in
less than 20 years. DOE has analyzed the potential environmental
impacts of storage of such plutonium in KAMs for up to 50 years.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Copies of NEPA documents related to
this decision, including this Amended ROD, are available on DOE's NEPA
Web site at: https://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa. To request copies of these
documents, please contact: The Center for Environmental Management
Information, P.O. Box 23769, Washington, DC 202-586-3769, Telephone:
800-736-3282 (in Washington, DC: 202-863-5084).
For further information concerning the storage of surplus, non-pit
plutonium at the SRS, contact: Andrew R. Grainger, NEPA Compliance
Officer, Savannah River Operations Office, U.S. Department of Energy,
P.O. Box B, Aiken, South Carolina 29802, Telephone: (803) 952-8001, E-
mail: drew.grainger@srs.gov.
For information on DOE's NEPA process, 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
20585-0119, (202) 586-4600, or leave a message at (800) 472-2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
At the end of the Cold War, the United States declared large
quantities of plutonium and uranium surplus to the defense needs of the
nation. At that time, materials were in various forms and various
stages of the material manufacturing and weapons fabrication processes
and located at several weapons complex sites that DOE had operated in
the preceding decades. DOE began the process of placing these materials
in safe, stable configurations suitable for storage until disposition
strategies could be developed and implemented. Through a series of
decisions supported by appropriate NEPA analyses, DOE has decided to
store surplus, non-pit, weapons-usable
[[Page 51808]]
plutonium materials at SRS facilities pending disposition. DOE's
Supplement Analysis, Storage of Surplus Plutonium Materials at the
Savannah River Site, (DOE/EIS-0229-SA-4, August 2007), describes the
NEPA reviews and DOE's decisions regarding transportation and storage
of plutonium materials. Prior NEPA reviews and accompanying decisions
that are directly related to today's decision are described in the
following paragraphs.
In an April 19, 2002 (67 FR 19432), Amended Record of Decision
(ROD), DOE announced its decision to immediately consolidate long-term
storage in the K-Area Material Storage (KAMS) facility at SRS of
surplus, non-pit plutonium from the Rocky Flats Environmental
Technology Site (RFETS). In addition, DOE noted that cancellation of
the then-planned immobilization facility for surplus plutonium
disposition and the selection of the long-term storage alternative at
SRS removed the basis for the contingency contained in previous RODs
(which conditioned transport of surplus, non-pit plutonium from RFETS
to SRS on the selection of SRS as the site for the immobilization
facilities), and amended those RODs accordingly. DOE also stated that
long-term storage of surplus plutonium and the ultimate disposition of
that plutonium were separate actions, and that combining long-term
storage and disposition was not required to implement either decision,
and served no significant programmatic objective. Transfer of plutonium
materials from RFETS to SRS was completed in 2003 and these materials
are stored in 3013 containers inside 9975 shipping packages in the KAMS
facility. In the 2002 Amended ROD, DOE left unchanged it's prior
decision to store surplus, non-pit plutonium at Hanford, Idaho National
Laboratory (INL), and LANL, pending disposition (or movement to lag
storage at the disposition facility).\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ DOE indicated in the Storage and Disposition PEIS ROD (DOE,
1997) that 0.3 metric tons of plutonium stored at LLNL was primarily
research and development and operational feedstock material not
surplus to government needs, and that the material would continue to
be stored for use at LLNL. DOE has since determined that there is no
programmatic need for this material, and that transferring the
material to SRS for long-term storage would reduce surveillance
costs at LLNL. In 1999, DOE determined that 3 to 4 metric tons of
plutonium material will be retained at the Idaho National Laboratory
for potential future use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the events of September 11, 2001, DOE revised the threat
criteria and the postulated capabilities of those who might perpetrate
acts of violence against DOE assets. As a result of this new threat
guidance, DOE determined that the consolidation of plutonium at SRS
into one location--KAMS--and enhancement of the security of that
location, would provide the most advantageous means to meet this
challenge and assure the safety and security of the stored material.
Therefore, DOE cancelled a project to install stored surveillance and
stabilization capability to ensure compliance with DOE-STD-3013 in F-
Area and decided to construct the K-Area Interim Surveillance (KIS)
project and the Container Surveillance and Storage Capability (CSSC)
project in the K-Area complex. DOE prepared an environmental
assessment, Safeguards and Security Upgrades for Storage of Plutonium
Materials at the Savannah River Site (DOE/EA-1538, December 2005) and
issued a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) in December of 2005,
to address the impacts of these and related security projects. The EA
addressed surplus plutonium materials in the SRS inventory as of
December 2005. The KIS Project, which became operational in June 2007,
and the CSSC project, which is currently scheduled for operations in
2010, will provide surveillance and stabilization capability and
capacity for storage of 3013 containers outside of KAMS (but in the K-
Area complex) adequate to support the surveillance program required by
DOE-STD-3013.
Decision: Consistent with DOE's prior decision to reduce over time
the number of locations where the various forms of plutonium are
stored, DOE has decided to consolidate storage of surplus, non-pit,
weapons-usable plutonium from Hanford, LANL, and LLNL at SRS, pending
disposition. Following appropriate congressional notification, in
accordance with section 3155 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2002 (Pub. L. 107-107), DOE will transfer, over a
period of about two to three years, approximately 2,511 additional
3013-compliant packages \5\ containing plutonium metals and oxides to
SRS. Approximately 2,300 containers will be transferred from Hanford,
115 containers will be transferred from LLNL, and 96 containers will be
transferred from LANL. All 3013 containers will be shipped inside Type
B shipping packages (e.g., 9975 packages) in Safe Secure Transports
(SSTs). All containers will be certified compliant with DOE-STD-3013
and Department of Transportation requirements prior to shipment, and
DOE will acquire and obtain certification of additional shipping
containers, if needed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ A 3013 container has a maximum capacity of about 4.4
kilograms of plutonium. However, few containers have the maximum
amount of plutonium.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, DOE could transfer the equivalent of about one
thousand 3013 containers, in the form of unirradiated fuel assemblies
and miscellaneous fuel pins originally intended for the Fast Flux Test
Facility (FFTF) at Hanford, to the SRS.\6\ This material will be
shipped in Type B shipping packages, in SSTs, and stored in the K-Area
Complex in the Type B shipping packages, pending disposition. DOE will
monitor the condition of the shipping packages while in storage to
insure their integrity, including inspection of seals to monitor for
corrosion or leakage. DOE will continue to store RFETS and SRS surplus,
non-pit plutonium in approximately 2,800 containers inside Type B
shipping packages at SRS. Storage will be in compliance with applicable
Technical Safety Requirements (TSRs) and Safety Analysis Reports
(SARs), and the total mass of stored plutonium will be significantly
less than 15 metric tons. DOE has previously evaluated storage of non-
pit surplus plutonium from RFETS and other DOE sites, as needed, in
KAMS (Supplement Analysis for Storing Plutonium in the Actinide
Packaging and Storage Facility and the Building K-105 at the Savannah
River Site. (DOE/EIS-0229-SA-1, July 1998).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See footnote 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, DOE will transfer approximately five hundred 3013
containers from LLNL and LANL to remove surplus inventory, provide
operational flexibility, and to alleviate the demands there on storage
capacity needed to support nuclear weapons research missions. This
transfer will take place only if storage space is available in KAMS.
Space is limited by the number of storage positions allowed in
recognition of the spacing requirements dictated by the TSRs and SARs.
DOE could increase the number of storage spaces by modifying the
storage configuration after review, and revision as necessary, of the
safety authorization basis.
DOE will use the KAMS facility for consolidated storage. Nearby
areas of the K-Area complex, where the KIS is and CSSC will be located,
will be used for surveillance and restabilization activities. Storage
spaces necessary to support surveillance activities are available in
the K-Area complex. Unirradiated FFTF fuel will also be stored in the
K-Area complex.
Basis for Decision: DOE's decision to consolidate surplus plutonium
at SRS will reduce the number of sites with
[[Page 51809]]
special nuclear material; enhance the security of these materials;
reduce the risk plutonium poses to the public and environment; reduce
or avoid the costs associated with plutonium storage, surveillance and
monitoring, and security at multiple sites; and relocate the material
to DOE's planned site for surplus plutonium disposition. Plutonium
consolidation has been encouraged by independent reviews of DOE's
activities, including the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in its
July 2005 report entitled Securing U.S. Nuclear Materials: DOE Needs to
Take Action to Safely Consolidate Plutonium (GAO-05-665) and recently
by the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB). In its June 26,
2007, report to Congress, the DNFSB stated: ``The Board believes
consolidation of excess plutonium into a single, robust facility
suitable for extended retrievable storage is logical from a safety
perspective. DOE should aggressively pursue consolidation of its excess
plutonium.'' Furthermore, transferring within the next two to three
years all the surplus plutonium currently at Hanford to SRS would
enhance security and avoid the expenditure of about $200 million for
security upgrades to be compliant with DOE's 2005 Design Basis Threat
(DBT) guidance, as well as tens of millions of dollars more each year
for security and monitoring to continue storing the material at
Hanford.
Separately from the consolidation and storage activities DOE is
announcing today, DOE is preparing a Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement for Surplus Plutonium Disposition at the Savannah River Site
to evaluate the potential environmental impacts of alternative methods
to disposition surplus, non-pit plutonium materials. The action
alternatives identified in the Notice of Intent (72 FR 14543; March 28,
2007) for this Supplemental EIS involve: (1) A glass can-in-canister
approach that would be installed in K-Area; (2) a ceramic can-in-
canister approach that would be installed in K-Area; and (3) the Mixed
Oxide (MOX) Fuel Fabrication Facility, currently under construction at
SRS. In conjunction with any of these alternatives, DOE would utilize
the existing H-Canyon and Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF) for
the disposition of up to about four metric tons of surplus, non-pit
plutonium materials. DOE's selection of one or more of these
alternatives would ensure that surplus, weapons-usable plutonium that
is currently at SRS, or that would be shipped to SRS as a result of the
actions evaluated in this SA, would be placed in a form that would
facilitate a disposition path out of South Carolina.
Supplement Analysis: DOE prepared a Supplement Analysis (Storage of
Surplus Plutonium Materials at the Savannah River Site, (DOE/EIS-0229-
SA-4, August 2007) to determine if consolidating storage at SRS of
surplus, non-pit, weapons-usable plutonium from Hanford, LLNL, and LANL
represented new circumstances or information requiring preparation of a
supplemental EIS or a new EIS. The environmental impacts discussed in
the SA are described in the following paragraphs.
Transportation
DOE will ship plutonium materials compliant with the DOE-STD-3013
in 3013 packages inside Type B shipping containers (e.g., 9975
containers) from Hanford, LLNL, and LANL to KAMS at SRS using SSTs. DOE
will ship unirradiated FFTF fuel from Hanford to SRS in Type B shipping
packages (e.g., the Hanford Un-irradiated Fuel Package) in SSTs. At
KAMS, the 9975 containers will be received and stored; the 3013
packages will not be removed from the 9975 shipping containers. The
Type B shipping packages containing the unirradiated FFTF fuel will be
stored in the K-Area complex at SRS.
DOE previously evaluated the impacts of transporting 17 metric tons
of non-pit, surplus plutonium to SRS in the Surplus Plutonium
Disposition (SPD) EIS (DOE/EIS-0283, 1999), which addressed
alternatives for disposition and was tiered from the Storage and
Disposition PEIS. In the SPD EIS Alternative 3, DOE analyzed the
transportation of surplus pit and non-pit plutonium to SRS. Table L-1
of the SPD EIS summarized the material shipments; included were surplus
non-pit weapons-usable plutonium materials from Hanford, LLNL, LANL,
RFETS, and INL (Argonne National Laboratory--West). The Hanford
material specifically included FFTF fuel pins and assemblies.
Alternative 3 included shipment of a greater quantity of surplus, non-
pit plutonium materials to SRS than does the consolidation decision DOE
is announcing today.
In the SPD EIS, DOE estimated that normal (incident-free)
transportation operations could result in 0.024 latent cancer
fatalities (LCF) among transportation workers and 0.034 LCF in the
total affected population over the duration of the transportation
activities. In preparing the SPD EIS, DOE used a dose conversion factor
of 5 x 10-\4\ deaths per rem of dose to the affected
population. Currently, DOE recommends a dose conversion factor of 6 x
10-\4\ deaths per rem. Using the currently recommended dose
conversion factor, the estimated risk would be about 0.029 LCF among
transport workers and about 0.041 LCF in the total affected population.
In addition, DOE estimated that 0.019 nonradiological fatalities could
occur as a result of vehicular emissions. DOE also estimated the
impacts of accident scenarios, and in all cases the risk of a fatality
is less than one. No accidents occurred during shipment of the RFETS
plutonium to the SRS.
DOE has analyzed the impacts of transporting plutonium from
Hanford, LLNL, and LANL (as well as INL and RFETS) to SRS in the SPD
EIS. That analysis assumed that surplus non-pit plutonium would be
transported in Type B containers in SSTs, just as DOE will do for the
consolidation action announced today. DOE will make all shipments in
shipping packages with current certificates, consistent with Department
of Transportation requirements and DOE's prior NEPA reviews. The
transportation required to implement this action is a subset of the
transportation activities evaluated in the SPD EIS.
Storage
The KAMS facility requires no physical modification to accommodate
the proposed storage of surplus, non-pit, weapons-usable plutonium from
Hanford, LLNL, and LANL. The environmental impacts of storage of
fissile material at SRS were presented in the Interim Management of
Nuclear Materials EIS (DOE/EIS-0220, October 1995) and the Storage and
Disposition PEIS. These two EISs contain calculated annual impacts
presented over specific time periods. DOE also evaluated storage of
surplus plutonium materials from RFETS and other sites, as needed, in
3013 containers inside Type B shipping containers in KAMS, and
concluded that KAMS storage for up to 50 years did not represent
significant new information relevant to environmental concerns, and
that additional NEPA review was not required (DOE/EIS-0229-SA-01,
1998). The consolidated storage action DOE is announcing today involves
the same forms of surplus plutonium and the same shipping and storage
containers (which would be certified Type B containers), as DOE has
previously analyzed.
DOE has initiated two projects to provide the stored plutonium
surveillance and restabilization capability required as part of the
monitoring program that is an integral
[[Page 51810]]
part of DOE-STD-3013. The KIS project, which became operational in June
2007, provides limited, temporary surveillance capability until the
CSSC project is completed. Current plans call for the CSSC to be
operational in 2010. DOE completed an EA (DOE/EA-1538, December 2005)
evaluating the impacts of construction and operation of KIS and CSSC in
the K-Area complex (near but not in KAMS), and related security
upgrades in K-Area. Storage space adequate for the needs of the KIS and
CSSC surveillance activities are provided outside of KAMS and a limited
number of 3013 containers will be temporarily stored without Type B
shipping containers when CSSC becomes operational. DOE evaluated the
impacts of these actions in the EA, and determined the impacts would
not be significant (Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI), (DOE/EA-
1538, December 2005). While the inventory in KAMS will increase as a
result of the transfer and storage of surplus non-pit plutonium from
Hanford, LLNL, and LANL, the number of 3013 containers stored outside
of KAMS, or undergoing surveillance activities requiring opening of the
cans, will not increase. The number of cans undergoing surveillance
activities is limited by the facility safety analysis and technical
safety requirements, and neither would change as a result of storing
more material in KAMS. Therefore, DOE's action is not different in
regard to surveillance actions than those DOE has previously evaluated
and found to be insignificant.
DOE has found no anomalous conditions in either the 3013 containers
or the stored plutonium material in the DOE-STD-3013 surveillance
program. Similarly, performance of the Type B shipping containers has
been as expected, with no instances of unacceptable performance. The K-
Area Structural Assessment Program, mentioned in the 2002 ROD, has not
revealed any condition or degradation that would affect the structural
integrity of the facility.
Unirradiated fuel from the FFTF facility at Hanford will be stored
in Type B shipping packages in the K-Area transfer bay in the K-Area
complex. Storage of FFTF fuel in Type B shipping containers in the K-
Area transfer bay will provide a level of safety equivalent to that
resulting from storage of plutonium in 3013 containers inside 9975
shipping packages in KAMS. In addition, DOE evaluated the storage of
irradiated tritium-producing burnable absorber rods in Type B shipping
containers (the same configuration for the storage of FFTF fuel) in the
K-Area transfer bay (DOE/EA-1528, Storage of Tritium-Producing Burnable
Absorber Rods in K-Area Transfer Bay at SRS, June 2005) and found the
environmental impacts to be insignificant (FONSI, DOE/EA-1528, June
2005).
Intentional Destructive Acts
DOE provides substantial safeguards and security measures for both
transportation and storage of plutonium. Safeguards and security are
designed to prevent theft or diversion of materials, and to prevent
exposure of workers and the public to radiation from the material
during transportation and storage. DOE recognizes that an attack
against surplus plutonium cargo may cause very undesirable
consequences, such as release of radionuclides into the environment.
Following the events of September 11, 2001, DOE is continuing to
consider and implement measures to minimize the risk and consequences
of potential terrorist attacks on DOE facilities and activities. DOE
conducts vulnerability assessments and risk analyses in accordance with
DOE Order 470.3A, Design Basis Threat Policy and DOE Order 470.4A,
Safeguards and Security Program. The safeguards applied to protecting
the K-Area complex involve a dynamic process of enhancement to meet
threats, and those safeguards will evolve over time. It is not possible
to predict whether intentional destructive acts would occur at these
locations, or the nature or types of attacks. Nevertheless, DOE has
evaluated security scenarios involving malevolent or terrorist acts in
an effort to assess potential vulnerabilities and identify improvements
to security procedures and response measures. The physical security
protection strategy is based on a graded and layered approach supported
by a guard force trained to detect, deter, and neutralize adversary
activities. Facilities are protected by staffed and automated access
control systems, barriers, surveillance systems and intrusion detection
systems.
Plutonium materials intended for consolidated storage would be
received and stored in the K-Area Complex. DOE evaluated accident
scenarios during storage of plutonium materials in the Interim
Management of Nuclear Materials EIS (DOE/EIS-0220, October 1995). DOE
finds that the accident impacts are representative of the potential
impacts of intentional destructive acts against the facilities proposed
for consolidated storage, particularly in light of the robust nature of
the facilities themselves and the improved security and response
measures that have been put in place in recent years.
In the SPD EIS, DOE evaluated the impacts of a severe accident
while transporting plutonium oxide material in Type B shipping
containers in Safe Secure Transports (SSTs). The hypothetical accidents
modeled for the impact assessment involve either a long-term fire or
tremendous impact of crushing forces. In the case of crushing forces, a
fire would have to be burning in order to spread the plutonium as
modeled. These accidents were assumed to cause a ground-level release
of 10 percent of the radioactive material in the SST. These accidents
fall within the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's severity Category VIII,
with an accident frequency in rural areas of about 1 x
10-\7\ per year (once in 10 million years). DOE estimated
that if such an accident were to occur in an urban area as many as 114
cancer fatalities could result. In addition, the accident itself would
cause a number of non-radiological fatalities, depending upon the
specific circumstances.
In reviewing the nature and consequences of the accident scenarios
described in the SPD EIS, DOE finds that the consequences bound the
consequences of a hypothetical terrorist attack on an SST carrying
surplus non-pit plutonium. Because of the robust nature of the Type B
containers and the SSTs, and because shipments are protected, DOE finds
it unlikely that an attack could generate the forces required to
release as much material as postulated for a severe accident.
Therefore, DOE expects the potential consequences of a terrorist attack
on a shipment of surplus, non-pit plutonium to be equal to or less than
those of a severe accident.
Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board Report to Congress
In December 2003, the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board
(DNFSB) issued a Report to Congress on Plutonium Storage at the
Department of Energy's Savannah River Site. The DNFSB is an independent
Federal agency chartered by Congress to provide recommendations to the
Department of Energy on the safety of defense nuclear facilities. The
Board's report contains proposals for enhancing the safety,
reliability, and functionality of plutonium storage at SRS; one
proposal concerns KAMS and four concern F-Area. However, subsequent to
issuance of the Board's report, DOE decided to utilize only KAMS and
the K-Area complex for storage of plutonium and for future
stabilization and packaging operations, and to deinventory F-Area of
all plutonium prior to the end of 2006.
[[Page 51811]]
With respect to KAMS, the Board proposed that fire protection
systems be installed and that unnecessary combustibles be eliminated.
In response to this proposal, the Department determined that fire
suppression equipment would be installed in the Neutron Multiplicity
Counting Room of KAMS, fire detection equipment would be installed
throughout KAMS, and the cable combustible load in the actuator tower
above KAMS would be removed. DOE completed removal of the actuator
tower cables in August 2006. DOE plans to begin installation of a fire
detection system in KAMS in 2007 and complete it in 2008. DOE also
plans to begin installation of a fire suppression system in the Neutron
Multiplicity Counting Room in 2008 and complete the installation in
2009.
In addition, the fire protection posture designed into KAMS was to
minimize both transient and fixed combustibles within the facility such
that the remaining worst possible fire could not cause a release of
plutonium. The walls separating the KAMS facility from the remainder of
the K-Reactor building were fabricated into a two-hour fire boundary.
Combustibles outside the facility fire boundaries were minimized,
contained, or mitigated to ensure the KAMS facility fire boundaries
were rated longer than any credible fire would burn.
Supplement Analysis Conclusion And Determination: DOE has fully
evaluated transportation of surplus, non-pit plutonium materials for
SRS and storage at SRS of such materials from Hanford and LANL in the
Storage and Disposition PEIS and SPD EIS. The action announced today,
consolidated storage of surplus, non-pit plutonium materials at SRS,
including transportation of the materials to SRS, is addressed in the
Storage and Disposition PEIS, the SPD EIS, and other NEPA reviews
addressed above. DOE evaluated the potential impacts of conducting
plutonium surveillance and stabilization activities required by DOE-
STD-3013 in the Environmental Assessment for the Safeguards and
Security Upgrades for Storage of Plutonium Materials at the Savannah
River Site, and found the impacts to be insignificant. Some of these
documents are now 10 or more years old. However, DOE has reviewed the
analyses and assumptions relevant to the potential environmental
impacts of the actions described herein and found any changes to be
insignificant.
DOE's 2007 SA shows that the potential environmental impacts
associated with the further consolidation of surplus non-pit, weapons-
usable plutonium from Hanford, LLNL and LANL would not be a significant
change from the potential environmental impacts associated with the
alternatives analyzed in previous NEPA reviews. DOE is not proposing a
substantial change that is relevant to environmental concerns. No
significant new circumstances or information bearing on the proposed
action and relevant to environmental concerns are presented by the
proposed consolidation of plutonium storage. Therefore, DOE does not
need to conduct additional NEPA review prior to transferring surplus
non-pit plutonium materials from Hanford, LLNL, and LANL to SRS for
consolidated storage pending disposition, as described above.
Issued in Washington, DC, this 5th day of September, 2007.
James A. Rispoli,
Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management.
[FR Doc. E7-17840 Filed 9-10-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P