Revised Record of Decision for the Environmental Impact Statement on a Proposed Nuclear Weapons Nonproliferation Policy Concerning Foreign Research Reactor Spent Nuclear Fuel, 4173-4175 [E9-1279]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 14 / Friday, January 23, 2009 / Notices
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Issued in Washington, DC, on January 15,
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Rachel Samuel,
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[FR Doc. E9–1379 Filed 1–22–09; 8:45 am]
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Issued at Washington, DC on January 16,
2009.
Rachel Samuel,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–1381 Filed 1–22–09; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Revised Record of Decision for the
Environmental Impact Statement on a
Proposed Nuclear Weapons
Nonproliferation Policy Concerning
Foreign Research Reactor Spent
Nuclear Fuel
AGENCY: National Nuclear Security
Administration, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Revised Record of Decision.
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy
(DOE) is further revising the Record of
Decision (61 FR 25092; May 17, 1996)
on the Environmental Impact Statement
on a Proposed Nuclear Weapons
Nonproliferation Policy Concerning
Foreign Research Reactor Spent Nuclear
Fuel (FRR SNF EIS) (DOE/EIS–0218,
February 1996) to allow the United
States to transport up to 1 metric ton
heavy metal (MTHM) (1.1 tons) of spent
nuclear fuel (Gap Material SNF) from
foreign research reactor (FRR) locations
to the United States and safely store this
Gap Material at a DOE site pending
disposition. Gap Material consists
primarily 1 of a limited quantity of (1)
SNF containing non-U.S.-origin highly
enriched uranium (HEU) and (2) SNF
containing U.S.-origin HEU that was not
previously addressed in the FRR SNF
EIS. DOE prepared a Supplement
Analysis of the FRR SNF EIS in
accordance with DOE’s National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
Implementing Procedures (10 CFR Part
1021). This analysis addressed the
potential health and environmental
impacts of accepting Gap Material SNF
and concluded that the recovery and
transport of this material to the United
States would constitute neither
substantial changes to the proposed
action nor significant new
circumstances relevant to
environmental concerns bearing on the
proposed action evaluated in the FRR
SNF EIS. Acceptance of Gap Material
SNF would not cause the total quantity
of SNF projected to be received under
DOE’s FRR SNF Acceptance Program to
exceed the estimates analyzed in the
FRR SNF EIS.
ADDRESSES: The Supplement Analysis
will be available on DOE’s NEPA Web
1 The GAP Material addressed in this Revised
Record of Decision also includes certain non-U.S.origin unirradiated fuel (fresh fuel) containing HEU.
E:\FR\FM\23JAN1.SGM
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4174
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 14 / Friday, January 23, 2009 / Notices
site at https://www.gc.energy.doe.gov/
NEPA and in DOE Public Reading
Rooms as follows: U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Room G–051, Washington, DC
20585, (202) 586–5955. The public
reading room is open from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The
University of South Carolina—Aiken
Library, 471 University Parkway, Aiken,
South Carolina 29801, (803) 641–3320.
The library is open from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information on DOE’s Foreign
Research Reactor Spent Nuclear Fuel
Acceptance Program or this Revised
Record of Decision, contact: Mr.
Andrew Bieniawski, Assistant Deputy
Administrator for Defense
Nonproliferation, Office of Global
Threat Reduction (NA–21), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, Attn: 955
L’Enfant, 202–586–9215.
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, (202) 586–4600,
or leave a message at (800) 472–2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Background
DOE, with the Department of State as
a cooperating agency, issued the FRR
SNF EIS (DOE/EIS–0218) in February
1996. The FRR SNF EIS considered the
potential environmental impacts of a
proposed policy to accept and manage
in the United States SNF and target
material from foreign research reactors
(FRRs). DOE issued a Record of Decision
(ROD) which was published in the
Federal Register on May 17, 1996 (61
FR 25092) announcing its decision to
implement the proposed policy as
identified in the Preferred Alternative
contained in the FRR SNF EIS, subject
to additional stipulations specified in
Section VII of the ROD. This FRR SNF
Acceptance Policy provides for
acceptance of 19.2 tons of SNF
containing HEU enriched in the United
States from research reactors located in
41 countries. In a separate Federal
Register Notice (61 FR 26507; May 28,
1996), DOE announced the fee policy for
accepting FRR SNF.
Five previous revisions to the original
ROD have been issued: On July 25, 1996
(61 FR 38720), and August 25, 2008 (73
FR 5004), the ROD was revised to
provide the FRR SNF Acceptance
Program with greater flexibility about
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18:32 Jan 22, 2009
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the location where it takes title to FRR
SNF. On July 19, 2000 (65 FR 44767),
the ROD was revised to reflect DOE’s
decision to increase the number of
transportation casks allowable per
shipment. On December 1, 2004 (69 FR
69901), the ROD was revised to extend
the expiration date for irradiation for a
limited amount of FRR SNF (not to
exceed the 19.2 tons originally eligible
and to include a small number of SNF
elements from the Replacement
Research Reactor in Australia). In
addition, on April 13, 1999 (64 FR
18006), DOE announced a clarification
to the fee policy in the event of a change
in the economic status of the country
from which the SNF would be removed.
Purpose and Need for Action
Reducing the threat posed by the
proliferation of nuclear weapons is a
foremost goal of the United States. To
continue to meet DOE’s objective of
reducing, and eventually eliminating,
HEU from civil commerce worldwide,
DOE needs to extend its FRR SNF
Acceptance Policy to certain SNF,
called Gap Material SNF, which is not
currently covered under the policy. This
Gap Material SNF consists of up to 1
MTHM (1.1 tons) FRR SNF containing
HEU that is either non-U.S. origin or is
of U.S. origin but was not addressed
previously in the FRR SNF EIS. This
Gap Material SNF will come from
research reactors and not commercial
power plants.
Proposed Action
DOE proposes to bring this Gap
Material SNF to the United States for
management if the material poses a
threat to national security, is susceptible
for use in an improvised nuclear device,
presents a high risk of terrorist threat,
and has no other reasonable pathway to
assure security from theft or diversion.
DOE proposes to revise the FRR SNF
Acceptance Program Record of Decision
to include transport of Gap Material
SNF from FRR locations to the United
States if the material meets the above
criteria and safely store Gap Material
SNF at the DOE Savannah River Site in
South Carolina pending disposition.
Gap Material SNF consists of up to 1
MTHM (1.1 tons) of SNF containing
either non-U.S.-origin HEU or U.S.origin HEU that was not previously
addressed in the FRR SNF EIS. The total
amount of potentially eligible SNF
under the FRR SNF Acceptance Program
would remain unchanged from the 19.2
tons of SNF analyzed in the FRR SNF
EIS and cited in the May 17, 1996 (61
FR 25092) ROD announcing the FRR
SNF Acceptance Policy.
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NEPA Review
DOE prepared its Supplement
Analysis (SA) for U.S. Disposition of
Gap Material—Spent Nuclear Fuel
(DOE/EIS–0218–SA–4) in accordance
with DOE’s NEPA Implementing
Procedures (10 CFR Part 1021) to
determine whether a supplement to the
FRR SNF EIS or a new EIS is required.
The SA evaluated the potential
environmental impacts of the transport
by ship of Gap Material SNF to a United
States seaport, the unloading of ships at
the seaport and the transfer of the Gap
Material SNF to transport vehicles, the
overland transport (by truck or rail) of
Gap Material SNF to the Savannah River
Site, and the acceptance and storage of
the Gap Material SNF, pending
disposition. The SA also evaluated
overland transport of Gap Material SNF
from Canada to the Savannah River Site.
Including Gap Material SNF, the total
quantity of SNF to be received under the
FRR SNF Acceptance Program is
expected to be smaller than the quantity
analyzed in the FRR SNF EIS because
some countries with material analyzed
under the FRR SNF EIS elected not to
participate in the FRR SNF Acceptance
Program.
Collective doses projected to be
received by ship crew members and
seaport workers for implementing the
FRR SNF Acceptance Program
(including Gap Material SNF) are
expected to be smaller than the doses
projected in the FRR SNF EIS.
Experience with receipt of FRR SNF has
indicated that the external radiation
levels at the surfaces of transport casks
containing FRR SNF have been
significantly smaller than those levels
assumed for the FRR SNF EIS.
Nonetheless, DOE plans to extend the
mitigation action plan announced in the
May 1996 ROD and currently in place
for FRR SNF to Gap Material SNF to
ensure that individual ship crew
member doses are maintained as low as
reasonably achievable and less than 100
millirem in a year.
With respect to routine overland
transport of FRR SNF to the Savannah
River Site, the analysis was updated
from that in the FRR SNF EIS to reflect
projected population increases along
representative transportation routes and
the Department’s currently
recommended dose-to-risk conversion
factor for estimating risks from radiation
exposures. The analysis concluded that
the updated potential impacts from
overland transportation of SNF would
be small with no latent cancer fatalities
projected for transport crews or
members of the public.
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 14 / Friday, January 23, 2009 / Notices
The analysis also addressed the
potential for severe accidents at a
seaport and during overland transport to
Savannah River. The accident analysis
was updated from that performed in the
FRR SNF EIS to reflect changes in
populations along representative
transportation routes and the
Department’s currently recommended
dose-to-risk conversion factor for
estimating risks from radiation
exposures. The risks were determined to
be low with no latent cancer fatalities
expected among transport crews or
members of the public. The potential for
intentional destructive acts was also
addressed and the impacts from such
possible acts were determined to be
comparable to those previously
analyzed in the FRR SNF EIS.
Receipt and storage of Gap Material
SNF at the Savannah River Site are not
expected to cause impacts at the site
that would differ from or exceed those
identified in the FRR SNF EIS. Gap
Material SNF is expected to ultimately
be disposed of in a geologic repository.
Disposition of Gap Material SNF is not
expected to result in any changes to the
envelope of impacts addressed in the
FRR SNF EIS, the Savannah River Site
Spent Fuel Management Final
Environmental Impact Statement (DOE/
EIS–0279, March 2000), and the
Environmental Impact Statement for a
Geologic Repository for the Disposal of
Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level
Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain
(DOE/EIS–0250, February 2002) and its
supplemental EISs (DOE/EIS–0250–S1,
DOE/EIS–0250–S2, and DOE/EIS–0369,
June 2008). Acceptance of Gap Material
SNF will occur under the condition that
Gap Material SNF complies with the
acceptance criteria of the SRS facility
receiving the Gap Material SNF and that
sufficient storage capacity exists at the
facility, pending disposition of the
material.
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Decision
DOE has decided to amend the FRR
SNF EIS Record of Decision to accept up
to 1 MTHM (1.1 tons) of foreign research
reactor SNF containing either non-U.S.origin HEU or SNF containing U.S.origin HEU that was not previously
addressed in the FRR SNF EIS.2 DOE
would only accept the material if it
poses a threat to national security, is
susceptible for use in an improvised
2 This decision also includes acceptance of nonU.S.-origin HEU in unirradiated (fresh) fuel that
will be transported to the Y–12 National Security
Complex in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Management of
such HEU is addressed in the Site-wide
Environmental Impact Statement for the Y–12
National Security Complex (DOE/EIS–0309, 2001)
and associated ROD (67 FR 11296; March 13, 2002).
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18:32 Jan 22, 2009
Jkt 217001
nuclear device, presents a high risk of
terrorist threat, and has no other
reasonable pathway to assure security
from theft or diversion.
Further, acceptance of this material
would be undertaken consistent with
existing conditions of the FRR SNF
Acceptance Program. The FRR SNF
Acceptance Program provides for fuel
acceptance through May 12, 2019. DOE
will continue limitations on shipment
cask curie activity and will ensure that
the upper limit estimate for the source
term assumed in the FRR SNF EIS
accident analysis will not be exceeded.
DOE will extend the mitigation action
plan announced in the May 1996 ROD
and currently in place for FRR SNF to
Gap Material SNF to ensure that
individual ship crew member doses are
maintained as low as reasonably
achievable and less than 100 millirem in
a year. Acceptance of Gap Material SNF
will occur in accordance with processes
implemented to ensure compliance with
DOE and international requirements.
Shipments of Gap Material SNF will
occur under the condition that Gap
Material SNF complies with the
acceptance criteria of the SRS facility
receiving the Gap Material SNF and that
sufficient storage capacity exists at the
facility, pending disposition of the
material.
Conclusion
DOE’s decision furthers the
nonproliferation objectives of the
United States. The decision provides for
the management and disposition of
certain material not previously
addressed in the FRR SNF EIS that
poses a threat to national security, is
susceptible to use in an improvised
nuclear device, presents a high risk of
terrorist threat, and has no other
reasonable pathway to assure security
from theft or diversion.
The decision set forth in this Revised
ROD complies with the requirements of
NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and its
implementing regulations at 40 CFR
Parts 1500–1508 and 10 CFR Part 1021.
Potential impacts resulting from
implementing this action will remain
within the range of the potential
environmental impacts analyzed in the
FRR SNF EIS. This action does not
constitute either a substantial change or
significant new circumstance relevant to
environmental concerns. There are no
significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental
concerns related to this action or its
impacts within the meaning of 40 CFR
1502.9(c) and 10 CFR 1021.314.
Therefore, neither a supplement to the
FRR SNF EIS nor a new EIS is needed.
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4175
Issued in Washington, DC, on this 13th day
of January, 2009.
Thomas P. D’Agostino,
Administrator, National Nuclear Security
Administration.
[FR Doc. E9–1279 Filed 1–22–09; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 14 (Friday, January 23, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 4173-4175]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-1279]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Revised Record of Decision for the Environmental Impact Statement
on a Proposed Nuclear Weapons Nonproliferation Policy Concerning
Foreign Research Reactor Spent Nuclear Fuel
AGENCY: National Nuclear Security Administration, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Revised Record of Decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) is further revising the Record
of Decision (61 FR 25092; May 17, 1996) on the Environmental Impact
Statement on a Proposed Nuclear Weapons Nonproliferation Policy
Concerning Foreign Research Reactor Spent Nuclear Fuel (FRR SNF EIS)
(DOE/EIS-0218, February 1996) to allow the United States to transport
up to 1 metric ton heavy metal (MTHM) (1.1 tons) of spent nuclear fuel
(Gap Material SNF) from foreign research reactor (FRR) locations to the
United States and safely store this Gap Material at a DOE site pending
disposition. Gap Material consists primarily \1\ of a limited quantity
of (1) SNF containing non-U.S.-origin highly enriched uranium (HEU) and
(2) SNF containing U.S.-origin HEU that was not previously addressed in
the FRR SNF EIS. DOE prepared a Supplement Analysis of the FRR SNF EIS
in accordance with DOE's National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
Implementing Procedures (10 CFR Part 1021). This analysis addressed the
potential health and environmental impacts of accepting Gap Material
SNF and concluded that the recovery and transport of this material to
the United States would constitute neither substantial changes to the
proposed action nor significant new circumstances relevant to
environmental concerns bearing on the proposed action evaluated in the
FRR SNF EIS. Acceptance of Gap Material SNF would not cause the total
quantity of SNF projected to be received under DOE's FRR SNF Acceptance
Program to exceed the estimates analyzed in the FRR SNF EIS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The GAP Material addressed in this Revised Record of
Decision also includes certain non-U.S.-origin unirradiated fuel
(fresh fuel) containing HEU.
ADDRESSES: The Supplement Analysis will be available on DOE's NEPA Web
[[Page 4174]]
site at https://www.gc.energy.doe.gov/NEPA and in DOE Public Reading
Rooms as follows: U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue,
SW., Room G-051, Washington, DC 20585, (202) 586-5955. The public
reading room is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The
University of South Carolina--Aiken Library, 471 University Parkway,
Aiken, South Carolina 29801, (803) 641-3320. The library is open from 8
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information on DOE's
Foreign Research Reactor Spent Nuclear Fuel Acceptance Program or this
Revised Record of Decision, contact: Mr. Andrew Bieniawski, Assistant
Deputy Administrator for Defense Nonproliferation, Office of Global
Threat Reduction (NA-21), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20585, Attn: 955 L'Enfant, 202-586-9215.
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, (202) 586-4600, or leave a message at (800) 472-2756.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
DOE, with the Department of State as a cooperating agency, issued
the FRR SNF EIS (DOE/EIS-0218) in February 1996. The FRR SNF EIS
considered the potential environmental impacts of a proposed policy to
accept and manage in the United States SNF and target material from
foreign research reactors (FRRs). DOE issued a Record of Decision (ROD)
which was published in the Federal Register on May 17, 1996 (61 FR
25092) announcing its decision to implement the proposed policy as
identified in the Preferred Alternative contained in the FRR SNF EIS,
subject to additional stipulations specified in Section VII of the ROD.
This FRR SNF Acceptance Policy provides for acceptance of 19.2 tons of
SNF containing HEU enriched in the United States from research reactors
located in 41 countries. In a separate Federal Register Notice (61 FR
26507; May 28, 1996), DOE announced the fee policy for accepting FRR
SNF.
Five previous revisions to the original ROD have been issued: On
July 25, 1996 (61 FR 38720), and August 25, 2008 (73 FR 5004), the ROD
was revised to provide the FRR SNF Acceptance Program with greater
flexibility about the location where it takes title to FRR SNF. On July
19, 2000 (65 FR 44767), the ROD was revised to reflect DOE's decision
to increase the number of transportation casks allowable per shipment.
On December 1, 2004 (69 FR 69901), the ROD was revised to extend the
expiration date for irradiation for a limited amount of FRR SNF (not to
exceed the 19.2 tons originally eligible and to include a small number
of SNF elements from the Replacement Research Reactor in Australia). In
addition, on April 13, 1999 (64 FR 18006), DOE announced a
clarification to the fee policy in the event of a change in the
economic status of the country from which the SNF would be removed.
Purpose and Need for Action
Reducing the threat posed by the proliferation of nuclear weapons
is a foremost goal of the United States. To continue to meet DOE's
objective of reducing, and eventually eliminating, HEU from civil
commerce worldwide, DOE needs to extend its FRR SNF Acceptance Policy
to certain SNF, called Gap Material SNF, which is not currently covered
under the policy. This Gap Material SNF consists of up to 1 MTHM (1.1
tons) FRR SNF containing HEU that is either non-U.S. origin or is of
U.S. origin but was not addressed previously in the FRR SNF EIS. This
Gap Material SNF will come from research reactors and not commercial
power plants.
Proposed Action
DOE proposes to bring this Gap Material SNF to the United States
for management if the material poses a threat to national security, is
susceptible for use in an improvised nuclear device, presents a high
risk of terrorist threat, and has no other reasonable pathway to assure
security from theft or diversion. DOE proposes to revise the FRR SNF
Acceptance Program Record of Decision to include transport of Gap
Material SNF from FRR locations to the United States if the material
meets the above criteria and safely store Gap Material SNF at the DOE
Savannah River Site in South Carolina pending disposition. Gap Material
SNF consists of up to 1 MTHM (1.1 tons) of SNF containing either non-
U.S.-origin HEU or U.S.-origin HEU that was not previously addressed in
the FRR SNF EIS. The total amount of potentially eligible SNF under the
FRR SNF Acceptance Program would remain unchanged from the 19.2 tons of
SNF analyzed in the FRR SNF EIS and cited in the May 17, 1996 (61 FR
25092) ROD announcing the FRR SNF Acceptance Policy.
NEPA Review
DOE prepared its Supplement Analysis (SA) for U.S. Disposition of
Gap Material--Spent Nuclear Fuel (DOE/EIS-0218-SA-4) in accordance with
DOE's NEPA Implementing Procedures (10 CFR Part 1021) to determine
whether a supplement to the FRR SNF EIS or a new EIS is required. The
SA evaluated the potential environmental impacts of the transport by
ship of Gap Material SNF to a United States seaport, the unloading of
ships at the seaport and the transfer of the Gap Material SNF to
transport vehicles, the overland transport (by truck or rail) of Gap
Material SNF to the Savannah River Site, and the acceptance and storage
of the Gap Material SNF, pending disposition. The SA also evaluated
overland transport of Gap Material SNF from Canada to the Savannah
River Site. Including Gap Material SNF, the total quantity of SNF to be
received under the FRR SNF Acceptance Program is expected to be smaller
than the quantity analyzed in the FRR SNF EIS because some countries
with material analyzed under the FRR SNF EIS elected not to participate
in the FRR SNF Acceptance Program.
Collective doses projected to be received by ship crew members and
seaport workers for implementing the FRR SNF Acceptance Program
(including Gap Material SNF) are expected to be smaller than the doses
projected in the FRR SNF EIS. Experience with receipt of FRR SNF has
indicated that the external radiation levels at the surfaces of
transport casks containing FRR SNF have been significantly smaller than
those levels assumed for the FRR SNF EIS. Nonetheless, DOE plans to
extend the mitigation action plan announced in the May 1996 ROD and
currently in place for FRR SNF to Gap Material SNF to ensure that
individual ship crew member doses are maintained as low as reasonably
achievable and less than 100 millirem in a year.
With respect to routine overland transport of FRR SNF to the
Savannah River Site, the analysis was updated from that in the FRR SNF
EIS to reflect projected population increases along representative
transportation routes and the Department's currently recommended dose-
to-risk conversion factor for estimating risks from radiation
exposures. The analysis concluded that the updated potential impacts
from overland transportation of SNF would be small with no latent
cancer fatalities projected for transport crews or members of the
public.
[[Page 4175]]
The analysis also addressed the potential for severe accidents at a
seaport and during overland transport to Savannah River. The accident
analysis was updated from that performed in the FRR SNF EIS to reflect
changes in populations along representative transportation routes and
the Department's currently recommended dose-to-risk conversion factor
for estimating risks from radiation exposures. The risks were
determined to be low with no latent cancer fatalities expected among
transport crews or members of the public. The potential for intentional
destructive acts was also addressed and the impacts from such possible
acts were determined to be comparable to those previously analyzed in
the FRR SNF EIS.
Receipt and storage of Gap Material SNF at the Savannah River Site
are not expected to cause impacts at the site that would differ from or
exceed those identified in the FRR SNF EIS. Gap Material SNF is
expected to ultimately be disposed of in a geologic repository.
Disposition of Gap Material SNF is not expected to result in any
changes to the envelope of impacts addressed in the FRR SNF EIS, the
Savannah River Site Spent Fuel Management Final Environmental Impact
Statement (DOE/EIS-0279, March 2000), and the Environmental Impact
Statement for a Geologic Repository for the Disposal of Spent Nuclear
Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain (DOE/EIS-0250,
February 2002) and its supplemental EISs (DOE/EIS-0250-S1, DOE/EIS-
0250-S2, and DOE/EIS-0369, June 2008). Acceptance of Gap Material SNF
will occur under the condition that Gap Material SNF complies with the
acceptance criteria of the SRS facility receiving the Gap Material SNF
and that sufficient storage capacity exists at the facility, pending
disposition of the material.
Decision
DOE has decided to amend the FRR SNF EIS Record of Decision to
accept up to 1 MTHM (1.1 tons) of foreign research reactor SNF
containing either non-U.S.-origin HEU or SNF containing U.S.-origin HEU
that was not previously addressed in the FRR SNF EIS.\2\ DOE would only
accept the material if it poses a threat to national security, is
susceptible for use in an improvised nuclear device, presents a high
risk of terrorist threat, and has no other reasonable pathway to assure
security from theft or diversion.
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\2\ This decision also includes acceptance of non-U.S.-origin
HEU in unirradiated (fresh) fuel that will be transported to the Y-
12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Management of
such HEU is addressed in the Site-wide Environmental Impact
Statement for the Y-12 National Security Complex (DOE/EIS-0309,
2001) and associated ROD (67 FR 11296; March 13, 2002).
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Further, acceptance of this material would be undertaken consistent
with existing conditions of the FRR SNF Acceptance Program. The FRR SNF
Acceptance Program provides for fuel acceptance through May 12, 2019.
DOE will continue limitations on shipment cask curie activity and will
ensure that the upper limit estimate for the source term assumed in the
FRR SNF EIS accident analysis will not be exceeded. DOE will extend the
mitigation action plan announced in the May 1996 ROD and currently in
place for FRR SNF to Gap Material SNF to ensure that individual ship
crew member doses are maintained as low as reasonably achievable and
less than 100 millirem in a year. Acceptance of Gap Material SNF will
occur in accordance with processes implemented to ensure compliance
with DOE and international requirements. Shipments of Gap Material SNF
will occur under the condition that Gap Material SNF complies with the
acceptance criteria of the SRS facility receiving the Gap Material SNF
and that sufficient storage capacity exists at the facility, pending
disposition of the material.
Conclusion
DOE's decision furthers the nonproliferation objectives of the
United States. The decision provides for the management and disposition
of certain material not previously addressed in the FRR SNF EIS that
poses a threat to national security, is susceptible to use in an
improvised nuclear device, presents a high risk of terrorist threat,
and has no other reasonable pathway to assure security from theft or
diversion.
The decision set forth in this Revised ROD complies with the
requirements of NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and its implementing
regulations at 40 CFR Parts 1500-1508 and 10 CFR Part 1021. Potential
impacts resulting from implementing this action will remain within the
range of the potential environmental impacts analyzed in the FRR SNF
EIS. This action does not constitute either a substantial change or
significant new circumstance relevant to environmental concerns. There
are no significant new circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns related to this action or its impacts within the
meaning of 40 CFR 1502.9(c) and 10 CFR 1021.314. Therefore, neither a
supplement to the FRR SNF EIS nor a new EIS is needed.
Issued in Washington, DC, on this 13th day of January, 2009.
Thomas P. D'Agostino,
Administrator, National Nuclear Security Administration.
[FR Doc. E9-1279 Filed 1-22-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P