Amendment to the Record of Decision for the Department of Energy's Waste Management Program: Treatment and Storage of Transuranic Waste, 12401-12403 [E8-4541]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 46 / Friday, March 7, 2008 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Fossil Energy
Ultra-Deepwater Advisory Committee;
Correction
Department of Energy.
Notice of Open Meeting
Correction.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Energy published
a notice of open meeting announcing a
meeting of the Ultra-Deepwater
Advisory Committee, 73 FR 8863. In FR
Doc. E8–2891, published on Friday,
February 15, 2008, page 8863, under
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, first
column, forty-sixth line, remove
‘‘onshore unconventional’’ and add in
its place ‘‘ultra-deepwater’’.
Issued in Washington, DC on March 3,
2008.
Rachel Samuel,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. E8–4536 Filed 3–6–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Amendment to the Record of Decision
for the Department of Energy’s Waste
Management Program: Treatment and
Storage of Transuranic Waste
Department of Energy.
Amendment to Record of
Decision.
AGENCY:
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy
(DOE), pursuant to DOE National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
Regulations (10 CFR 1021.315), is
amending the Record of Decision for the
Waste Management Program: Treatment
and Storage of Transuranic Waste
issued on January 20, 1998 (63 FR
3629), and amended previously
including on December 29, 2000 (65 FR
82985), and June 30, 2004 (69 FR
39446).
Under this amendment to its Record
of Decision (ROD), DOE intends to send
both contact-handled (CH) and remotehandled (RH) transuranic (TRU) waste
from certain generator sites as needed to
the Idaho National Laboratory (INL) to
be treated and characterized prior to the
shipment to the Waste Isolation Pilot
Plant (WIPP) for disposal. These sites
are: the Argonne National Laboratory
(ANL) (Argonne, IL); Bettis Atomic
Power Laboratory (BAPL) (West Mifflin,
PA); General Electric Vallecitos Nuclear
Center (GE) (Sunol, CA); the Hanford
Site, (Hanford) (Richland, WA); Knolls
Atomic Power Laboratory (Nuclear Fuel
Services) (KAPL–NFS) (Erwin, TN);
Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:46 Mar 06, 2008
Jkt 214001
(KAPL) (Schenectady, NY); Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL)
(Berkeley, CA); Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory (LLNL) (Livermore,
CA); the Nevada Test Site (NTS);
Separations Process Research Unit
(SPRU) (Schenectady, NY); Paducah
Gaseous Diffusion Plant (PGDP)
(Paducah, KY); and Sandia National
Laboratories (SNL) (Albuquerque, NM).
DOE expects that most of the waste
from these generator sites will be sent to
INL for treatment and characterization.
However, DOE may, when feasible,
characterize some waste at these
generator sites under the provisions of
the modified WIPP Hazardous Waste
Facility Permit that allow
characterization based solely on process
knowledge and ship that waste directly
to WIPP or, in the case of SNL, send
TRU waste to Los Alamos National
Laboratory to be characterized, in
accordance with the original (1998)
ROD. In addition, TRU waste from
Babcock and Wilcox (BW) (Lynchburg,
VA), and NRD L,L,C, (NRD) (Grand
Island, NY), will also be moved to INL
to be treated and characterized prior to
shipment to WIPP for disposal, only if
that waste meets waste acceptance
criteria for treatment at INL and is
determined to be defense waste as
required by the WIPP Land Withdrawal
Act for waste to be eligible for disposal
at WIPP.
TRU waste would be accepted for
treatment and characterization at INL
only in accordance with the provisions
of the settlement agreement in Public
Service Company of Colorado v. Batt
entered into between DOE and the State
of Idaho in 1995 (the Idaho Settlement
Agreement) and the Site Treatment
Plan. The Idaho Settlement Agreement
allows TRU waste from other DOE sites
to be treated at INL if it is treated within
6 months of receipt and shipped out of
Idaho within 6 months of treatment.
DOE would also continue to remove
TRU waste currently stored at INL in
accordance with the terms of the Idaho
Settlement Agreement.
In accordance with DOE NEPA
regulations (10 CFR 1021.314), DOE
prepared a supplement analysis (SA),
Supplement Analysis for the Treatment
of Transuranic Waste at the Idaho
National Laboratory (DOE/EIS–0200–
SA–03), to determine whether the
proposed treatment and characterization
of waste at INL prior to disposal at WIPP
is a substantial change to the proposed
action analyzed in DOE’s Waste
Management Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/
EIS–0200) (WM–PEIS) or whether there
are significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
12401
concerns such that a supplement to the
WM–PEIS or a new EIS is needed. Based
on the SA, DOE has determined that a
supplement to the WM–PEIS or a new
EIS is not needed.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Copies of the documents referenced
herein are available from the: Center for
Environmental Management
Information, P.O. Box 23769,
Washington, DC 20026–3769,
Telephone: 1–800–736–3282 (in
Washington, DC: 202–863–5084).
For further information on the
treatment, characterization of TRU
waste and disposal of TRU waste at
WIPP, contact: Casey Gadbury (CBFO),
U.S. Department of Energy, Carlsbad
Field Office, P.O. Box 3093, Carlsbad,
NM 88221. Telephone: 575–234–7372.
For further information on the DOE
program for the management of TRU
waste or this amendment to the ROD,
contact: Ms. Christine Gelles (EM–12),
Office of Environmental Management,
U.S. Department of Energy, 19001
Germantown Road, Germantown, MD
20874. Telephone: 301–903–1669.
For 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:
I. Background
TRU waste is waste that contains
alpha particle-emitting radionuclides
with atomic numbers greater than that
of uranium (92) and half-lives greater
than 20 years in concentrations greater
than 100 nanocuries per gram. TRU
waste is classified according to the
radiation dose at a package surface. CH–
TRU waste has a radiation dose rate at
a package surface of 200 millirem per
hour or less; this waste can safely be
handled directly by personnel. RH–TRU
waste has a radiation dose rate at a
package surface greater than 200
millirem per hour and must be handled
remotely (e.g., with machinery designed
to shield workers from radiation). Mixed
TRU waste contains both radioactive
and hazardous components.
Prior NEPA Review
In the WM–PEIS TRU Waste ROD (63
FR 3629, January 20, 1998), DOE
selected the Decentralized Alternative,
stating that ‘‘each of the Department’s
sites that currently has or will generate
TRU waste will prepare and store its
waste on site’’ prior to shipment to
E:\FR\FM\07MRN1.SGM
07MRN1
12402
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 46 / Friday, March 7, 2008 / Notices
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
WIPP.1 The WM–PEIS TRU Waste ROD
also noted that ‘‘in the future, the
Department may decide to ship
transuranic wastes from sites where it
may be impractical to prepare them for
disposal to sites where DOE has or will
have the necessary capability.’’ The
WM–PEIS TRU Waste ROD stated that
the sites that could receive TRU waste
shipments from other sites were the
Idaho National Engineering and
Environmental Laboratory (now referred
to as the Idaho National Laboratory or
INL), the Oak Ridge Reservation, the
Savannah River Site, and the Hanford
Site, and that such decisions would be
subject to appropriate review under
NEPA. In DOE/EIS–0290, Advanced
Mixed Waste Treatment Project Final
Environmental Impact Statement
(1999), DOE examined the impacts of
treating up to 120,000 cubic meters of
TRU from INL and other DOE sites at
the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment
Facility (AMWTF).
II. Change in the Proposed Action
DOE has identified up to 8,764 cubic
meters of CH–TRU waste and up to 255
cubic meters of RH–TRU waste, that
could be moved from various TRU
waste generator sites to INL for
treatment and characterization prior to
shipment to WIPP. At INL, the CH–TRU
waste would be treated at the AMWTF
to reduce the volume of the waste and
characterized for shipment to WIPP. The
RH–TRU waste would be treated during
repackaging to remove prohibited items
and characterized for shipment to WIPP
at the Idaho Nuclear Technology and
Engineering Center (INTEC), which is
located on the INL site. Four sites
(Hanford Site, INL, Oak Ridge
Reservation, and the Savannah River
Site) were identified in the 1998 ROD to
potentially receive waste from other
sites. INL has the capabilities to process
this TRU waste.
Approximately 2,067 shipments of
CH–TRU waste and 188 shipments of
RH–TRU waste could move to INL for
treatment and characterization.
Shipment of TRU wastes to INL for
treatment and characterization would
increase the efficiency of TRU waste
treatment and characterization
operations.
Once treated and characterized, the
off-site TRU wastes would be shipped
from INL to WIPP for disposal.
Approximately 795 shipments would be
required to transport the treated CH–
TRU waste to WIPP and approximately
1 The only exception to this decision was the
Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico,
which would have shipped its TRU waste to Los
Alamos for storage and processing before disposal
at WIPP.
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18:46 Mar 06, 2008
Jkt 214001
621 2 shipments would be required to
transport the treated RH–TRU waste to
WIPP.
III. Supplement Analysis
To determine whether the proposed
action would warrant a supplement to
the WM–PEIS, DOE prepared the SA
referred to above. The SA compared the
impacts of the proposed action to
impacts of alternatives involving
shipment of waste to INL for treatment
that were examined in the WM–PEIS or
in the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
Disposal Phase Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/
EIS–0026–S–2) (SEIS–II).3
The SA examined the impacts of
transporting TRU waste to INL for
treatment and characterization and the
impacts of transporting waste from INL
to WIPP for disposal. It also examined
potential transportation accident
impacts for waste proposed to be moved
in the TRUPACT–III container, which is
currently undergoing certification by the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
because some waste would be moved
from Hanford to INL in the TRUPACT–
III once it is certified. The transportation
impacts of the proposed shipments of
waste to INL and subsequent shipments
of treated waste to WIPP, including
accident impacts, were smaller than the
impacts predicted in the SEIS–II for
similar movements of waste to and from
INL except for the latent cancer fatalities
among workers.
Site impacts from packaging and
loading waste at the generator sites,
unloading waste at INL, and treating
waste at INL, including the impacts of
waste treatment accidents, were smaller
than the impacts predicted in the WM–
PEIS (Alternative 3) for similar
activities.
WIPP site impacts, including the
impact of potential accidents involving
the standard large waste box (that would
be transported in the TRUPACT–III once
2 The number of outbound RH–TRU shipments to
WIPP would be larger than the number of inbound
RH–TRU shipments to INL because waste is
assumed to move to WIPP in RH 72–B casks, which
hold a smaller volume of waste than the 10–160B
transportation containers that would be used
primarily for transportation to INL. The WIPP RH
waste handling process is designed to handle waste
packaged in an RH 72–B without using the hot cell.
Limitations on the amount of waste that can be
handled in the hot cell in the WIPP hazardous
waste facility RH waste permit will limit the use of
the 10–160B for shipments to WIPP, since waste
shipped in the 10–160B must be repackaged into a
facility canister in the hot cell prior to disposal.
3 The SEIS–II was used as a basis for comparison
of transportation impacts because the WM–PEIS did
not examine the impacts of shipping waste to WIPP
for disposal. The SEIS–II was also used as a basis
for comparison of WIPP site accident impacts
because the WM–PEIS did not examine those
impacts.
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
approved), would be equal to or smaller
than the impacts predicted in the SEIS–
II (Alternative 2B) for similar activities
at WIPP.
The SA also considered the potential
impacts of intentional destructive acts
(i.e., acts of sabotage or terrorism) and
estimated the impacts would be no
greater than the impacts of an accident
analyzed in the SA.
All of the impacts of the proposed
action are within the boundaries of the
impacts previously predicted in the
Regionalized Alternative 3 of the WM–
PEIS and the Action Alternative 2B of
the SEIS–II, except for the worker
transportation impacts. The increase in
worker transportation impacts is small
and is not expected to increase worker
mortality if the proposed action were
implemented. Based on the impact
analysis in the SA, DOE has determined
that the proposed action would not
present a substantial change relevant to
environmental concerns nor are there
significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental
concerns and bearing on the proposed
action or its impacts. Therefore, DOE
has determined that a supplement to the
WM–PEIS or a new EIS is not required
under 40 CFR 1502.9(c) or 10 CFR
1021.314 for this proposal. Both the
WM–PEIS and the WIPP SEIS–II
analyzed the impacts associated with
shipment, treatment, and
characterization of CH–TRU and RH–
TRU wastes at INL. The WIPP SEIS–II
examined the impacts of shipping these
wastes from INL to the WIPP for
disposal. In addition, the impacts of
treatment of CH–TRU at the AMTWF
and RH–waste at the INTEC were
evaluated using the same approach as
used for the AMTWF EIS.
IV. Decision
DOE has decided to ship up to 8,764
cubic meters of CH–TRU waste and up
to 255 cubic meters of RH–TRU waste
as needed from ANL, BAPL, BW, GE,
Hanford, KAPL–NFS, KAPL, LBL,
LLNL, NRD, PGDP, NTS, SPRU and
SNL, to INL for treatment and
characterization prior to shipment to
WIPP for disposal. After treatment and
characterization at INL, all of the waste
will be shipped to WIPP for disposal.
The BW and NRD waste will be shipped
to INL only if that waste is determined
to meet waste acceptance criteria for
treatment at INL and be defense waste
eligible for disposal at WIPP, as required
by the WIPP Land Withdrawal Act.
DOE may, where feasible, characterize
some of this waste at the generator sites
under the provisions of the WIPP permit
allowing characterization based on
process knowledge and ship that waste
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 46 / Friday, March 7, 2008 / Notices
directly to WIPP or, in the case of SNL,
ship the waste to Los Alamos National
Laboratory for characterization, in
accordance with the 1998 TRU Record
of Decision.
Waste will be accepted for treatment
and characterization at INL only if this
can be done in accordance with the
provisions of the Idaho Settlement
Agreement and the Site Treatment Plan.
The Idaho Settlement Agreement allows
TRU waste from other DOE sites to be
treated at INL if it is treated within 6
months of receipt and shipped out of
Idaho within 6 months of treatment.
DOE will also continue to remove TRU
waste currently stored at INL in
accordance with the terms of the Idaho
Settlement Agreement.
V. Basis for the Decision
Using the existing INL CH– and RH–
TRU waste program and facilities at INL
will avoid the time and expense of
establishing capability at sites that do
not currently have an existing program
or facilities. Also, the Advanced Mixed
Waste Treatment Facility at INL will
reduce the volume of some CH–TRU
waste (e.g., waste which consists
primarily of waste containers
overpacked in larger containers that
hold a relatively small volume of waste
when compared with the container
volume), thus reducing the volume of
this waste that would be disposed of at
WIPP.
Issued in Washington, DC this 27th day of
February 2008.
´
Ines R. Triay,
(Acting) Assistant Secretary for
Environmental Management.
[FR Doc. E8–4541 Filed 3–6–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
with Organized Electric Markets, 122
FERC ¶ 61,167 (2007). The technical
conference will be held from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m. (EDT), in the Commission
Meeting Room at the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426. All
interested persons are invited to attend.
Further notices with detailed
information will be issued in advance of
the conference.
A free webcast of this event is
available through www.ferc.gov. Anyone
with Internet access who desires to view
this event can do so by navigating to
ferc.gov’s Calendar of Events and
locating this event in the Calendar. The
event will contain a link to its webcast.
The Capitol Connection provides
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It also offers access to this event via
television in the Washington, DC, area
and via phone-bridge for a fee. If you
have any questions, visit
www.CapitolConnection.org or contact
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703–993–3100.
Commission conferences are
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or call toll free 1–866–208–3372 (voice)
or 202–208–1659 (TTY), or send a FAX
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For more information about this
conference, please contact:
David Mead, Office of Energy Market
Regulation, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
8028, David.Mead@ferc.gov.
Tina Ham, Office of the General
Counsel—Energy Markets, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–6224,
Tina.Ham@ferc.gov.
[Docket No. AD08–4–000]
Capacity Markets in Regions With
Organized Electric Markets; Notice of
Technical Conference
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8–4498 Filed 3–6–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
February 29, 2008.
Take notice that on May 7, 2008,
Commission staff will convene a
technical conference to discuss the
operation of forward capacity markets in
New England and the PJM region,
including the proposals for modifying
the design of those markets raised by
American Forest and Paper Association
and Portland Cement Association, et al.
in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
issued in Docket No. RM07–19–000, et
al. Wholesale Competition in Regions
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:46 Mar 06, 2008
Jkt 214001
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
Combined Notice of Filings # 1
February 29, 2008.
Take notice that the Commission
received the following exempt
wholesale generator filings:
Docket Numbers: EG08–44–000
Applicants: Starwood Power-Midway,
LLC.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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12403
Description: Starwood PowerMidway, LLC Notice of SelfCertification of Exempt Wholesale
Generator Status.
Filed Date: 02/27/2008.
Accession Number: 20080227–5035.
Comment Date: 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Wednesday, March 19, 2008.
Take notice that the Commission
received the following electric rate
filings:
Docket Numbers: ER00–2268–025;
ER07–428–004; ER99–4122–026; ER99–
4124–022; EL07–82–001.
Applicants: Pinnacle West Capital
Corporation; Pinnacle West Marketing &
Trading Co, LLC; APS Energy Services
Co Inc.; Arizona Public Service
Company.
Description: Electric Compliance
Refund Report of the Pinnacle West
Companies.
Filed Date: 02/28/2008.
Accession Number: 20080228–5074.
Comment Date: 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Thursday, March 20, 2008.
Docket Numbers: ER02–1437–006.
Applicants: Triton Power Michigan
LLC.
Description: Notice of Non-Material
Change in Status of Triton Power
Michigan LLC.
Filed Date: 02/28/2008.
Accession Number: 20080228–5037.
Comment Date: 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Thursday, March 20, 2008.
Docket Numbers: ER07–1199–002.
Applicants: Airtricity Munnsville
Wind Farm, LLC.
Description: Airtricity Munnsville
Wind Farm, LLC submits Substitute
Original Sheet 4 and 5 to reflect their
deletion under ER07–1199.
Filed Date: 02/25/2008.
Accession Number: 20080228–0164.
Comment Date: 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Monday, March 17, 2008.
Docket Numbers: ER08–413–001;
EC08–33–001.
Applicants: Startrans IO, LLC.
Description: Startrans IO, LLC submits
their response to FERC’s 2/22/08
deficiency letter.
Filed Date: 02/27/2008.
Accession Number: 20080228–0297.
Comment Date: 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Monday, March 10, 2008.
Docket Numbers: ER08–441–001.
Applicants: Velocity American Energy
Master I, L.P.
Description: Velocity American
Energy Master I, LP submits an
Amendment to the application for Order
Accepting Market Based Rate Tariff etc.
Filed Date: 02/27/2008.
Accession Number: 20080229–0071.
Comment Date: 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Wednesday, March 19, 2008.
E:\FR\FM\07MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 46 (Friday, March 7, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12401-12403]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-4541]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Amendment to the Record of Decision for the Department of
Energy's Waste Management Program: Treatment and Storage of Transuranic
Waste
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Amendment to Record of Decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE), pursuant to DOE National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Regulations (10 CFR 1021.315), is
amending the Record of Decision for the Waste Management Program:
Treatment and Storage of Transuranic Waste issued on January 20, 1998
(63 FR 3629), and amended previously including on December 29, 2000 (65
FR 82985), and June 30, 2004 (69 FR 39446).
Under this amendment to its Record of Decision (ROD), DOE intends
to send both contact-handled (CH) and remote-handled (RH) transuranic
(TRU) waste from certain generator sites as needed to the Idaho
National Laboratory (INL) to be treated and characterized prior to the
shipment to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) for disposal. These
sites are: the Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) (Argonne, IL); Bettis
Atomic Power Laboratory (BAPL) (West Mifflin, PA); General Electric
Vallecitos Nuclear Center (GE) (Sunol, CA); the Hanford Site, (Hanford)
(Richland, WA); Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory (Nuclear Fuel Services)
(KAPL-NFS) (Erwin, TN); Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory (KAPL)
(Schenectady, NY); Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL)
(Berkeley, CA); Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL)
(Livermore, CA); the Nevada Test Site (NTS); Separations Process
Research Unit (SPRU) (Schenectady, NY); Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant
(PGDP) (Paducah, KY); and Sandia National Laboratories (SNL)
(Albuquerque, NM).
DOE expects that most of the waste from these generator sites will
be sent to INL for treatment and characterization. However, DOE may,
when feasible, characterize some waste at these generator sites under
the provisions of the modified WIPP Hazardous Waste Facility Permit
that allow characterization based solely on process knowledge and ship
that waste directly to WIPP or, in the case of SNL, send TRU waste to
Los Alamos National Laboratory to be characterized, in accordance with
the original (1998) ROD. In addition, TRU waste from Babcock and Wilcox
(BW) (Lynchburg, VA), and NRD L,L,C, (NRD) (Grand Island, NY), will
also be moved to INL to be treated and characterized prior to shipment
to WIPP for disposal, only if that waste meets waste acceptance
criteria for treatment at INL and is determined to be defense waste as
required by the WIPP Land Withdrawal Act for waste to be eligible for
disposal at WIPP.
TRU waste would be accepted for treatment and characterization at
INL only in accordance with the provisions of the settlement agreement
in Public Service Company of Colorado v. Batt entered into between DOE
and the State of Idaho in 1995 (the Idaho Settlement Agreement) and the
Site Treatment Plan. The Idaho Settlement Agreement allows TRU waste
from other DOE sites to be treated at INL if it is treated within 6
months of receipt and shipped out of Idaho within 6 months of
treatment. DOE would also continue to remove TRU waste currently stored
at INL in accordance with the terms of the Idaho Settlement Agreement.
In accordance with DOE NEPA regulations (10 CFR 1021.314), DOE
prepared a supplement analysis (SA), Supplement Analysis for the
Treatment of Transuranic Waste at the Idaho National Laboratory (DOE/
EIS-0200-SA-03), to determine whether the proposed treatment and
characterization of waste at INL prior to disposal at WIPP is a
substantial change to the proposed action analyzed in DOE's Waste
Management Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/EIS-0200)
(WM-PEIS) or whether there are significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental concerns such that a supplement
to the WM-PEIS or a new EIS is needed. Based on the SA, DOE has
determined that a supplement to the WM-PEIS or a new EIS is not needed.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Copies of the documents referenced herein are available from the:
Center for Environmental Management Information, P.O. Box 23769,
Washington, DC 20026-3769, Telephone: 1-800-736-3282 (in Washington,
DC: 202-863-5084).
For further information on the treatment, characterization of TRU
waste and disposal of TRU waste at WIPP, contact: Casey Gadbury (CBFO),
U.S. Department of Energy, Carlsbad Field Office, P.O. Box 3093,
Carlsbad, NM 88221. Telephone: 575-234-7372.
For further information on the DOE program for the management of
TRU waste or this amendment to the ROD, contact: Ms. Christine Gelles
(EM-12), Office of Environmental Management, U.S. Department of Energy,
19001 Germantown Road, Germantown, MD 20874. Telephone: 301-903-1669.
For 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:
I. Background
TRU waste is waste that contains alpha particle-emitting
radionuclides with atomic numbers greater than that of uranium (92) and
half-lives greater than 20 years in concentrations greater than 100
nanocuries per gram. TRU waste is classified according to the radiation
dose at a package surface. CH-TRU waste has a radiation dose rate at a
package surface of 200 millirem per hour or less; this waste can safely
be handled directly by personnel. RH-TRU waste has a radiation dose
rate at a package surface greater than 200 millirem per hour and must
be handled remotely (e.g., with machinery designed to shield workers
from radiation). Mixed TRU waste contains both radioactive and
hazardous components.
Prior NEPA Review
In the WM-PEIS TRU Waste ROD (63 FR 3629, January 20, 1998), DOE
selected the Decentralized Alternative, stating that ``each of the
Department's sites that currently has or will generate TRU waste will
prepare and store its waste on site'' prior to shipment to
[[Page 12402]]
WIPP.\1\ The WM-PEIS TRU Waste ROD also noted that ``in the future, the
Department may decide to ship transuranic wastes from sites where it
may be impractical to prepare them for disposal to sites where DOE has
or will have the necessary capability.'' The WM-PEIS TRU Waste ROD
stated that the sites that could receive TRU waste shipments from other
sites were the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory
(now referred to as the Idaho National Laboratory or INL), the Oak
Ridge Reservation, the Savannah River Site, and the Hanford Site, and
that such decisions would be subject to appropriate review under NEPA.
In DOE/EIS-0290, Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Project Final
Environmental Impact Statement (1999), DOE examined the impacts of
treating up to 120,000 cubic meters of TRU from INL and other DOE sites
at the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Facility (AMWTF).
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\1\ The only exception to this decision was the Sandia National
Laboratories in New Mexico, which would have shipped its TRU waste
to Los Alamos for storage and processing before disposal at WIPP.
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II. Change in the Proposed Action
DOE has identified up to 8,764 cubic meters of CH-TRU waste and up
to 255 cubic meters of RH-TRU waste, that could be moved from various
TRU waste generator sites to INL for treatment and characterization
prior to shipment to WIPP. At INL, the CH-TRU waste would be treated at
the AMWTF to reduce the volume of the waste and characterized for
shipment to WIPP. The RH-TRU waste would be treated during repackaging
to remove prohibited items and characterized for shipment to WIPP at
the Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center (INTEC), which is
located on the INL site. Four sites (Hanford Site, INL, Oak Ridge
Reservation, and the Savannah River Site) were identified in the 1998
ROD to potentially receive waste from other sites. INL has the
capabilities to process this TRU waste.
Approximately 2,067 shipments of CH-TRU waste and 188 shipments of
RH-TRU waste could move to INL for treatment and characterization.
Shipment of TRU wastes to INL for treatment and characterization would
increase the efficiency of TRU waste treatment and characterization
operations.
Once treated and characterized, the off-site TRU wastes would be
shipped from INL to WIPP for disposal. Approximately 795 shipments
would be required to transport the treated CH-TRU waste to WIPP and
approximately 621 \2\ shipments would be required to transport the
treated RH-TRU waste to WIPP.
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\2\ The number of outbound RH-TRU shipments to WIPP would be
larger than the number of inbound RH-TRU shipments to INL because
waste is assumed to move to WIPP in RH 72-B casks, which hold a
smaller volume of waste than the 10-160B transportation containers
that would be used primarily for transportation to INL. The WIPP RH
waste handling process is designed to handle waste packaged in an RH
72-B without using the hot cell. Limitations on the amount of waste
that can be handled in the hot cell in the WIPP hazardous waste
facility RH waste permit will limit the use of the 10-160B for
shipments to WIPP, since waste shipped in the 10-160B must be
repackaged into a facility canister in the hot cell prior to
disposal.
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III. Supplement Analysis
To determine whether the proposed action would warrant a supplement
to the WM-PEIS, DOE prepared the SA referred to above. The SA compared
the impacts of the proposed action to impacts of alternatives involving
shipment of waste to INL for treatment that were examined in the WM-
PEIS or in the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Disposal Phase Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/EIS-0026-S-2) (SEIS-II).\3\
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\3\ The SEIS-II was used as a basis for comparison of
transportation impacts because the WM-PEIS did not examine the
impacts of shipping waste to WIPP for disposal. The SEIS-II was also
used as a basis for comparison of WIPP site accident impacts because
the WM-PEIS did not examine those impacts.
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The SA examined the impacts of transporting TRU waste to INL for
treatment and characterization and the impacts of transporting waste
from INL to WIPP for disposal. It also examined potential
transportation accident impacts for waste proposed to be moved in the
TRUPACT-III container, which is currently undergoing certification by
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, because some waste would be moved
from Hanford to INL in the TRUPACT-III once it is certified. The
transportation impacts of the proposed shipments of waste to INL and
subsequent shipments of treated waste to WIPP, including accident
impacts, were smaller than the impacts predicted in the SEIS-II for
similar movements of waste to and from INL except for the latent cancer
fatalities among workers.
Site impacts from packaging and loading waste at the generator
sites, unloading waste at INL, and treating waste at INL, including the
impacts of waste treatment accidents, were smaller than the impacts
predicted in the WM-PEIS (Alternative 3) for similar activities.
WIPP site impacts, including the impact of potential accidents
involving the standard large waste box (that would be transported in
the TRUPACT-III once approved), would be equal to or smaller than the
impacts predicted in the SEIS-II (Alternative 2B) for similar
activities at WIPP.
The SA also considered the potential impacts of intentional
destructive acts (i.e., acts of sabotage or terrorism) and estimated
the impacts would be no greater than the impacts of an accident
analyzed in the SA.
All of the impacts of the proposed action are within the boundaries
of the impacts previously predicted in the Regionalized Alternative 3
of the WM-PEIS and the Action Alternative 2B of the SEIS-II, except for
the worker transportation impacts. The increase in worker
transportation impacts is small and is not expected to increase worker
mortality if the proposed action were implemented. Based on the impact
analysis in the SA, DOE has determined that the proposed action would
not present a substantial change relevant to environmental concerns nor
are there significant new circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns and bearing on the proposed action or its
impacts. Therefore, DOE has determined that a supplement to the WM-PEIS
or a new EIS is not required under 40 CFR 1502.9(c) or 10 CFR 1021.314
for this proposal. Both the WM-PEIS and the WIPP SEIS-II analyzed the
impacts associated with shipment, treatment, and characterization of
CH-TRU and RH-TRU wastes at INL. The WIPP SEIS-II examined the impacts
of shipping these wastes from INL to the WIPP for disposal. In
addition, the impacts of treatment of CH-TRU at the AMTWF and RH-waste
at the INTEC were evaluated using the same approach as used for the
AMTWF EIS.
IV. Decision
DOE has decided to ship up to 8,764 cubic meters of CH-TRU waste
and up to 255 cubic meters of RH-TRU waste as needed from ANL, BAPL,
BW, GE, Hanford, KAPL-NFS, KAPL, LBL, LLNL, NRD, PGDP, NTS, SPRU and
SNL, to INL for treatment and characterization prior to shipment to
WIPP for disposal. After treatment and characterization at INL, all of
the waste will be shipped to WIPP for disposal. The BW and NRD waste
will be shipped to INL only if that waste is determined to meet waste
acceptance criteria for treatment at INL and be defense waste eligible
for disposal at WIPP, as required by the WIPP Land Withdrawal Act.
DOE may, where feasible, characterize some of this waste at the
generator sites under the provisions of the WIPP permit allowing
characterization based on process knowledge and ship that waste
[[Page 12403]]
directly to WIPP or, in the case of SNL, ship the waste to Los Alamos
National Laboratory for characterization, in accordance with the 1998
TRU Record of Decision.
Waste will be accepted for treatment and characterization at INL
only if this can be done in accordance with the provisions of the Idaho
Settlement Agreement and the Site Treatment Plan. The Idaho Settlement
Agreement allows TRU waste from other DOE sites to be treated at INL if
it is treated within 6 months of receipt and shipped out of Idaho
within 6 months of treatment. DOE will also continue to remove TRU
waste currently stored at INL in accordance with the terms of the Idaho
Settlement Agreement.
V. Basis for the Decision
Using the existing INL CH- and RH-TRU waste program and facilities
at INL will avoid the time and expense of establishing capability at
sites that do not currently have an existing program or facilities.
Also, the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Facility at INL will reduce
the volume of some CH-TRU waste (e.g., waste which consists primarily
of waste containers overpacked in larger containers that hold a
relatively small volume of waste when compared with the container
volume), thus reducing the volume of this waste that would be disposed
of at WIPP.
Issued in Washington, DC this 27th day of February 2008.
Ines R. Triay,
(Acting) Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management.
[FR Doc. E8-4541 Filed 3-6-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P