Notice of Availability of Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Nichols Ranch In-Situ Recovery (ISR) Project in Campbell and Johnson Counties, WY; Supplement to the Generic Environmental Impact Statement for In-Situ Leach Uranium Milling Facilities, 65808-65810 [E9-29550]
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65808
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 237 / Friday, December 11, 2009 / Notices
uranium is concentrated into the
product known as ‘‘yellowcake,’’ which
is then shipped to a uranium conversion
facility for further processing in the
overall uranium fuel cycle.
In this draft SEIS, the NRC staff
assessed the potential environmental
impacts from the construction,
operation, aquifer restoration, and
decommissioning of the proposed
Moore Ranch ISR Project. In so doing,
the NRC staff evaluated site-specific
data and information from the Moore
Ranch ISR Project to determine if the
Moore Ranch site characteristics and
Uranium One’s proposed activities were
consistent with that evaluated in the
GEIS. NRC staff then determined which
relevant sections of the GEIS and impact
conclusions could be incorporated by
reference. The NRC staff also
determined if either additional data or
analysis was needed to determine the
potential environmental impacts on a
specific environmental resource area.
The NRC staff documented its
conclusions and determinations in the
draft SEIS.
In addition to the action proposed by
Uranium One, the NRC staff also
addressed the no-action alternative in
the draft SEIS. Under this alternative,
NRC would deny Uranium One’s
request to construct and operate an ISR
facility at the Moore Ranch ISR Project.
The no-action alternative serves as a
baseline to compare the potential
environmental impacts.
The NRC staff also considered other
alternatives but eliminated them from
detailed analysis. Conventional mining/
milling and conventional mining/heap
leach processing are two potential
methods of uranium recovery at the
Moore Ranch ISR Project. However,
given the recognized more substantial
environmental impacts of conventional
mining (whether by open pit or
underground techniques) and
conventional milling or heap leach
processing, these alternatives were not
further considered. The NRC staff also
evaluated alternative lixiviants (acidand ammonia-based), alternative waste
disposal methods, and an alternative
site location within the proposed area.
For reasons discussed in the draft SEIS,
these alternatives also were eliminated
from further consideration.
This draft SEIS is being issued for
public comment. The public comment
period on the draft SEIS begins with
publication of this notice and continues
until February 1, 2010. Written
comments should be submitted as
described in the ADDRESSES section of
this notice. The NRC will consider
comments received or postmarked after
that date to the extent practical.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:33 Dec 10, 2009
Jkt 220001
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 4th day
of December 2009.
For the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
Patrice M. Bubar,
Deputy Director, Environmental Protection
and Performance Assessment Directorate,
Division of Waste Management, and
Environmental Protection, Office of Federal
and State Materials, and Environmental
Management Programs.
[FR Doc. E9–29553 Filed 12–10–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2008–0339]
Notice of Availability of Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Nichols Ranch In-Situ Recovery
(ISR) Project in Campbell and Johnson
Counties, WY; Supplement to the
Generic Environmental Impact
Statement for In-Situ Leach Uranium
Milling Facilities
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is issuing for public
comment a Draft Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for the
Nichols Ranch In-Situ Recovery (ISR)
Project. By letter dated November 30,
2007, Uranerz Energy Corporation
(Uranerz), submitted an application to
the NRC for a new source material
license for the Nichols Ranch ISR
Project, which Uranerz proposes to be
located in the Powder River Basin in
Campbell and Johnson Counties,
Wyoming. Uranerz is proposing to
recover uranium from the Nichols
Ranch ISR Project site using the in-situ
leach (also know as the in-situ recovery
(ISR)) process.
The Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as
amended by the Uranium Mill Tailings
Radiation Control Act of 1978,
authorizes the NRC to issue licenses for
the possession and use of source
material and byproduct material. These
statutes require that NRC license
facilities, including ISR operations, in
accordance with NRC regulatory
requirements to protect public health
and safety from radiological hazards.
Under the NRC’s environmental
protection regulations in the Code of
Federal Regulations, Title 10, Part 51
(10 CFR part 51), that implement the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (NEPA), preparation of an
environmental impact statement (EIS) or
PO 00000
Frm 00077
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
supplement to an EIS (SEIS) is required
for issuance of a license to possess and
use source material for uranium milling
(see 10 CFR 51.20(b)(8)).
In June 2009, the NRC staff issued
NUREG–1910, ‘‘Generic Environmental
Impact Statement for In-Situ Leach
Uranium Milling Facilities’’ (herein
referred to as the GEIS). In the GEIS,
NRC assessed the potential
environmental impacts from the
construction, operation, aquifer
restoration, and decommissioning of an
ISR facility located in four specific
geographic regions of the western
United States. The proposed Nichols
Ranch ISR Project is located within the
Wyoming East Uranium Milling Region
identified in the GEIS. The Nichols
Ranch ISR Project Draft SEIS both
supplements and incorporates by
reference relevant portions of the GEIS
and uses site specific information from
the applicant’s license application and
other independent sources to fulfill the
requirements in 10 CFR 51.20(b)(8).
DATES: The public comment period on
the Draft SEIS begins with publication
of this notice and continues until
February 01, 2010. Written comments
should be submitted as described in the
ADDRESSES section of this notice. The
NRC will consider comments received
or postmarked after that date to the
extent practical.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any one of the following methods.
Please include Docket ID NRC–2008–
0339 in the subject line of your
comments. Comments submitted in
writing or in electronic form will be
posted on the NRC Web site and on the
Federal rulemaking Web site https://
www.regulations.gov. Because your
comments will not be edited to remove
any identifying or contact information,
the NRC cautions you against including
any information in your submission that
you do not want to be publicly
disclosed.
The NRC requests that any party
soliciting or aggregating comments
received from other persons for
submission to the NRC inform those
persons that the NRC will not edit their
comments to remove any identifying or
contact information, and therefore, they
should not include any information in
their comments that they do not want
publicly disclosed.
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for documents filed under Docket ID
NRC–2008–0339. Comments may be
submitted electronically through this
Web site. Address questions about NRC
dockets to Carol Gallagher at 301–492–
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3668, or e-mail at
Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
Mail comments to: Michael T. Lesar,
Chief, Rulemaking and Directives
Branch (RDB), Division of
Administrative Services, Office of
Administration, Mail Stop: TWB–05–
B01M, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, or by fax to RDB at (301) 492–
3446. You may also send comments
electronically to
NicholsRanchISRSEIS@nrc.gov.
Publicly available documents related
to this notice can be accessed using the
following methods:
NRC’s Public Document Room (PDR):
The public may examine and have
copied, for a fee, publicly available
documents at the NRC’s PDR, Public
File Area O1 F21, One White Flint
North, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland.
NRC’s Agencywide Documents Access
and Management System (ADAMS):
Publicly available documents created or
received at the NRC are available
electronically at the NRC’s Electronic
Reading Room at https://www.nrc.gov/
reading-rm/adams.html. From this page,
the public can gain entry into ADAMS,
which provides text and image files of
NRC’s public documents. If you do not
have access to ADAMS or if there are
problems in accessing the documents
located in ADAMS, contact the NRC’s
PDR reference staff at 1–800–397–4209,
301–415–4737, or by e-mail to
Pdr.Resource@nrc.gov. The
‘‘Environmental Impact Statement for
the Nichols Ranch ISR Project in
Campbell and Johnson Counties,
Wyoming—Supplement to the Generic
Environmental Impact Statement for InSitu Leach Uranium Milling Facilities’’
is available electronically under
ADAMS Accession Number
ML093340536.
The Draft SEIS for the Nichols Ranch
ISR Project also may be accessed on the
internet at https://www.nrc.gov/readingrm/doc-collections/nuregs/staff/ by
selecting ‘‘NUREG–1910.’’ The Draft
SEIS will be Supplement 2 to NUREG–
1910. Additionally, a copy of the Draft
SEIS will be available at the following
public libraries:
Campbell County Public Library, 2101
South 4J Road, Gillette, Wyoming
82718, 307–687–0009.
Johnson County Library, 171 North
Adams Avenue, Buffalo, Wyoming
82834, 307–684–5546.
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Public
comments and supporting materials
related to this notice can be found at
https://www.regulations.gov by searching
on Docket ID: NRC–2008–0339.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:33 Dec 10, 2009
Jkt 220001
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information on environmental review
process related to the Draft SEIS for the
Nichols Ranch ISR Project, please
contact Irene Yu, Project Manager,
Environmental Review Branch, Division
of Waste Management and
Environmental Protection (DWMEP),
Mail Stop T–8F5, the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC, 20555–0001, by phone at 1 (800)
368–5642, extension 1951. For general
or technical information associated with
the safety and licensing of uranium
milling facilities, please contact Stephen
Cohen, Team Lead, Uranium Recovery
Licensing Branch, DWMEP, Mail Stop
T–8F5, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, by phone at 1 (800) 368–5642,
extension 7182.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Atomic Energy Act, as amended by the
Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation
Control Act of 1978, authorizes NRC to
issue licenses for the possession and use
of source material and byproduct
material. These statutes require that
NRC license facilities, including ISR
operations, in accordance with NRC
regulatory requirements to protect
public health and safety from
radiological hazards. In-situ uranium
recovery facilities must meet NRC
regulatory requirements in order to
obtain this license to operate. Under the
NRC’s environmental protection
regulations in 10 CFR part 51.21(b)(8),
which implements NEPA, issuance of a
license to possess and use source
material for uranium milling requires an
EIS or a supplement to an EIS.
To help fulfill this requirement, the
NRC staff and its contractor, the Center
for Nuclear Waste Regulatory Analyses,
in cooperation with the Wyoming
Department of Environmental Quality
(Land Quality Division), issued the GEIS
in June 2009. The GEIS was prepared to
assess the potential environmental
impacts associated with the
construction, operation, aquifer
restoration, and decommissioning of an
ISR facility in four specific geographic
areas of the western United States. The
proposed Nichols Ranch ISR Project is
located in one such region, the
Wyoming East Uranium Milling Region.
The GEIS evaluated the range of
potential impacts in the four geographic
regions and evaluated whether the
potential impact would be essentially
the same for all ISR facilities or whether
site-specific information and analysis
would be required to determine the
potential impacts. As such, the GEIS
provides a starting point for the NRC’s
NEPA analyses for site-specific license
PO 00000
Frm 00078
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
65809
applications for new ISR facilities, as
well as for applications to renew or
amend existing ISR licenses.
By letter dated November 30, 2007,
Uranerz submitted an application to the
NRC for a new source material license
for the Nichols Ranch ISR Project,
which Uranerz proposes to be located in
Campbell and Johnson Counties,
Wyoming, approximately 46 miles
south-southwest of Gillette, Wyoming
and approximately 61 miles northnortheast of Casper, Wyoming. Planned
facilities associated with the proposed
Nichols Ranch ISR Project include a
central processing plant, satellite
facility, accompanying well fields with
injection, production, and monitoring
wells, header houses, pipelines, and
access roads. The total land surface
ownership of the proposed Nichols
Ranch ISR Project is approximately
3,371 acres, of which 3,091 acres are
privately owned and 280 acres are U.S.
Government-owned and administered
by the U.S. Department of Interior,
Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
The proposed Nichols Ranch ISR Project
would be divided into two
noncontiguous units, the Nichols Ranch
Unit and the Hank Unit. Because a
portion of the proposed Nichols Ranch
ISR Project site is administered by the
BLM, the NRC coordinated its
environmental review with the BLM to
promote efficiencies in each agency’s
environmental review. This
coordination was undertaken in tandem
with developing a memorandum of
understanding (MOU) with the BLM
that establishes a cooperating agency
status between the agencies. The MOU
was finalized on November 30, 2009,
and NRC plans to use it in the review
of applications that are in their early
stages in order to effectively integrate
BLM as a cooperating agency into the
review of future applications.
ISR facilities recover uranium from
low grade ores that may not be
economically recoverable by other
methods. In the ISR process, a leaching
agent (called a lixiviant), such as oxygen
and sodium bicarbonate, is added to
native groundwater for injection
through wells into the subsurface ore
body to dissolve the uranium. Before
ISR operations can begin, the portion of
the aquifer designated for uranium
recovery must be exempted by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
from being an underground source of
drinking water in accordance with the
Safe Drinking Water Act (as
implemented by EPA at 40 CFR 146.4).
The injected solution, now containing
the dissolved uranium, is pumped back
(i.e. recovered) to the surface and sent
to a processing plant, where ion
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exchange is used to separate the
uranium from the solution. The ISR
process also frees other metals and
minerals from the host aquifer. As a
result, operators of ISR facilities are
required to restore the groundwater
affected by operations and to
decommission the facility when
operations have ceased. In the
processing plant, the recovered uranium
is concentrated into the product known
as ‘‘yellowcake,’’ which is then shipped
to a uranium conversion facility for
further processing in the overall
uranium fuel cycle.
In this Draft SEIS, the NRC staff has
assessed the potential environmental
impacts from the construction,
operation, aquifer restoration, and
decommissioning of the proposed
Nichols Ranch ISR Project. In doing so,
the NRC staff evaluated site-specific
data and information from the Nichols
Ranch ISR Project to determine if
Uranerz’s proposed activities and the
site characteristics were consistent with
those evaluated in the GEIS. NRC then
determined which relevant sections of
the Draft GEIS and impact conclusions
in the Draft GEIS could be incorporated
by reference. The NRC staff also
determined if additional data or analysis
was needed to determine the
environmental impacts for a specific
environmental resource area. The NRC
staff documented its assessments and
conclusions in the Draft SEIS.
In addition to the action proposed by
Uranerz, the NRC staff addressed two
alternatives in the Draft SEIS: A NoAction alternative and a Modified
Action alternative. Under the No-Action
alternative, NRC would deny Uranerz’s
request to construct and operate an ISR
facility at the Nichols Ranch ISR Project.
The No-Action alternative serves as a
baseline for comparison of the potential
environmental impacts. Under the
Modified Action alternative, the NRC
would only issue Uranerz a license for
ISR uranium milling and processing at
the Nichols Ranch Unit and not the
Hank Unit. By doing so, this alternative
would only consist of extracting
uranium from well fields developed in
the Nichols Ranch Unit and processing
at a central processing plant located at
the Nichols Ranch Unit.
The NRC staff also considered other
alternatives but eliminated them from
detailed analysis. Conventional mining/
milling and conventional mining/heap
leach processing are two potential
methods of uranium recovery at the
Nichols Ranch ISR Project. However,
given the recognized more substantial
environmental impacts of conventional
mining (whether by open pit or
underground techniques) and
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:33 Dec 10, 2009
Jkt 220001
conventional milling or heap leach
processing, these alternatives were not
further considered. The NRC staff also
evaluated alternative lixiviants (acidand ammonia-based), and alternative
waste disposal methods. For reasons
discussed in the Draft SEIS, these
alternatives also were eliminated from
further consideration.
This Draft SEIS is being issued for
public comment. The public comment
period on the Draft SEIS begins with
publication of this notice and continues
until February 1, 2010. Written
comments should be submitted as
described in the ADDRESSES section of
this notice. The NRC will consider
comments received or postmarked after
that date to the extent practical.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 4th day
of December 2009.
For the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
Patrice M. Bubar,
Deputy Director, Environmental Protection
and Performance Assessment Directorate,
Division of Waste Management and
Environmental Protection, Office of Federal
and State Materials and Environmental
Management Programs.
[FR Doc. E9–29550 Filed 12–10–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2009–0550]
NUREG–1921, EPRI/NRC–RES Fire
Human Reliability Analysis Guidelines,
Draft Report for Comment
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Announcement of issuance for
public comment, availability.
SUMMARY: The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission has issued for public
comment a document entitled:
‘‘NUREG–1921 (EPRI 1019196), EPRI/
NRC–RES Fire Human Reliability
Analysis Guidelines, Draft Report for
Comment.’’
DATES: Please submit comments by
February 15, 2010. Comments received
after this date will be considered if it is
practical to do so, but the NRC staff is
able to ensure consideration only for
comments received on or before this
date.
You may submit comments
by any one of the following methods.
Please include Docket ID NRC–2009–
0550 in the subject line of your
comments. Comments submitted in
writing or in electronic form will be
posted on the NRC Web site and on the
ADDRESSES:
PO 00000
Frm 00079
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Federal rulemaking Web site
Regulations.gov. Because your
comments will not be edited to remove
any identifying or contact information,
the NRC cautions you against including
any information in your submission that
you do not want to be publicly
disclosed.
The NRC requests that any party
soliciting or aggregating comments
received from other persons for
submission to the NRC inform those
persons that the NRC will not edit their
comments to remove any identifying or
contact information, and therefore, they
should not include any information in
their comments that they do not want
publicly disclosed.
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for documents filed under Docket ID
NRC–2009–0550. Address questions
about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher
301–492–3668; e-mail
Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
Mail comments to: Michael T. Lesar,
Chief, Rulemaking and Directives
Branch (RDB), Division of
Administrative Services, Office of
Administration, Mail Stop: TWB–05–
B01M, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, or by fax to RDB at (301) 492–
3446.
You can access publicly available
documents related to this notice using
the following methods:
NRC’s Public Document Room (PDR):
The public may examine and have
copied for a fee publicly available
documents at the NRC’s PDR, Public
File Area O1 F21, One White Flint
North, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland.
NRC’s Agencywide Documents Access
and Management System (ADAMS):
Publicly available documents created or
received at the NRC are available
electronically at the NRC’s Electronic
Reading Room at https://www.nrc.gov/
reading-rm/adams.html. From this page,
the public can gain entry into ADAMS,
which provides text and image files of
NRC’s public documents. If you do not
have access to ADAMS or if there are
problems in accessing the documents
located in ADAMS, contact the NRC’s
PDR reference staff at 1–800–397–4209,
301–415–4737, or by e-mail to
pdr.resource@nrc.gov. NUREG–1921
‘‘EPRI/NRC–RES Fire Human Reliability
Analysis Guidelines’’ is available
electronically under ADAMS Accession
Number ML093340307.
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Public
comments and supporting materials
related to this notice can be found at
https://www.regulations.gov by searching
on Docket ID: NRC–2009–0550.
E:\FR\FM\11DEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 237 (Friday, December 11, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 65808-65810]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-29550]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[NRC-2008-0339]
Notice of Availability of Draft Environmental Impact Statement
for the Nichols Ranch In-Situ Recovery (ISR) Project in Campbell and
Johnson Counties, WY; Supplement to the Generic Environmental Impact
Statement for In-Situ Leach Uranium Milling Facilities
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is issuing for public comment a Draft Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for the Nichols Ranch In-Situ Recovery
(ISR) Project. By letter dated November 30, 2007, Uranerz Energy
Corporation (Uranerz), submitted an application to the NRC for a new
source material license for the Nichols Ranch ISR Project, which
Uranerz proposes to be located in the Powder River Basin in Campbell
and Johnson Counties, Wyoming. Uranerz is proposing to recover uranium
from the Nichols Ranch ISR Project site using the in-situ leach (also
know as the in-situ recovery (ISR)) process.
The Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended by the Uranium Mill
Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978, authorizes the NRC to issue
licenses for the possession and use of source material and byproduct
material. These statutes require that NRC license facilities, including
ISR operations, in accordance with NRC regulatory requirements to
protect public health and safety from radiological hazards. Under the
NRC's environmental protection regulations in the Code of Federal
Regulations, Title 10, Part 51 (10 CFR part 51), that implement the
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), preparation of an
environmental impact statement (EIS) or supplement to an EIS (SEIS) is
required for issuance of a license to possess and use source material
for uranium milling (see 10 CFR 51.20(b)(8)).
In June 2009, the NRC staff issued NUREG-1910, ``Generic
Environmental Impact Statement for In-Situ Leach Uranium Milling
Facilities'' (herein referred to as the GEIS). In the GEIS, NRC
assessed the potential environmental impacts from the construction,
operation, aquifer restoration, and decommissioning of an ISR facility
located in four specific geographic regions of the western United
States. The proposed Nichols Ranch ISR Project is located within the
Wyoming East Uranium Milling Region identified in the GEIS. The Nichols
Ranch ISR Project Draft SEIS both supplements and incorporates by
reference relevant portions of the GEIS and uses site specific
information from the applicant's license application and other
independent sources to fulfill the requirements in 10 CFR 51.20(b)(8).
DATES: The public comment period on the Draft SEIS begins with
publication of this notice and continues until February 01, 2010.
Written comments should be submitted as described in the ADDRESSES
section of this notice. The NRC will consider comments received or
postmarked after that date to the extent practical.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any one of the following methods.
Please include Docket ID NRC-2008-0339 in the subject line of your
comments. Comments submitted in writing or in electronic form will be
posted on the NRC Web site and on the Federal rulemaking Web site
https://www.regulations.gov. Because your comments will not be edited to
remove any identifying or contact information, the NRC cautions you
against including any information in your submission that you do not
want to be publicly disclosed.
The NRC requests that any party soliciting or aggregating comments
received from other persons for submission to the NRC inform those
persons that the NRC will not edit their comments to remove any
identifying or contact information, and therefore, they should not
include any information in their comments that they do not want
publicly disclosed.
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and
search for documents filed under Docket ID NRC-2008-0339. Comments may
be submitted electronically through this Web site. Address questions
about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher at 301-492-
[[Page 65809]]
3668, or e-mail at Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
Mail comments to: Michael T. Lesar, Chief, Rulemaking and
Directives Branch (RDB), Division of Administrative Services, Office of
Administration, Mail Stop: TWB-05-B01M, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, or by fax to RDB at (301) 492-
3446. You may also send comments electronically to
NicholsRanchISRSEIS@nrc.gov.
Publicly available documents related to this notice can be accessed
using the following methods:
NRC's Public Document Room (PDR): The public may examine and have
copied, for a fee, publicly available documents at the NRC's PDR,
Public File Area O1 F21, One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike,
Rockville, Maryland.
NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS):
Publicly available documents created or received at the NRC are
available electronically at the NRC's Electronic Reading Room at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. From this page, the public can gain
entry into ADAMS, which provides text and image files of NRC's public
documents. If you do not have access to ADAMS or if there are problems
in accessing the documents located in ADAMS, contact the NRC's PDR
reference staff at 1-800-397-4209, 301-415-4737, or by e-mail to
Pdr.Resource@nrc.gov. The ``Environmental Impact Statement for the
Nichols Ranch ISR Project in Campbell and Johnson Counties, Wyoming--
Supplement to the Generic Environmental Impact Statement for In-Situ
Leach Uranium Milling Facilities'' is available electronically under
ADAMS Accession Number ML093340536.
The Draft SEIS for the Nichols Ranch ISR Project also may be
accessed on the internet at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/nuregs/staff/ by selecting ``NUREG-1910.'' The Draft SEIS
will be Supplement 2 to NUREG-1910. Additionally, a copy of the Draft
SEIS will be available at the following public libraries:
Campbell County Public Library, 2101 South 4J Road, Gillette, Wyoming
82718, 307-687-0009.
Johnson County Library, 171 North Adams Avenue, Buffalo, Wyoming 82834,
307-684-5546.
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Public comments and supporting
materials related to this notice can be found at https://www.regulations.gov by searching on Docket ID: NRC-2008-0339.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information on environmental
review process related to the Draft SEIS for the Nichols Ranch ISR
Project, please contact Irene Yu, Project Manager, Environmental Review
Branch, Division of Waste Management and Environmental Protection
(DWMEP), Mail Stop T-8F5, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC, 20555-0001, by phone at 1 (800) 368-5642, extension
1951. For general or technical information associated with the safety
and licensing of uranium milling facilities, please contact Stephen
Cohen, Team Lead, Uranium Recovery Licensing Branch, DWMEP, Mail Stop
T-8F5, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-
0001, by phone at 1 (800) 368-5642, extension 7182.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Atomic Energy Act, as amended by the
Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978, authorizes NRC to
issue licenses for the possession and use of source material and
byproduct material. These statutes require that NRC license facilities,
including ISR operations, in accordance with NRC regulatory
requirements to protect public health and safety from radiological
hazards. In-situ uranium recovery facilities must meet NRC regulatory
requirements in order to obtain this license to operate. Under the
NRC's environmental protection regulations in 10 CFR part 51.21(b)(8),
which implements NEPA, issuance of a license to possess and use source
material for uranium milling requires an EIS or a supplement to an EIS.
To help fulfill this requirement, the NRC staff and its contractor,
the Center for Nuclear Waste Regulatory Analyses, in cooperation with
the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality (Land Quality
Division), issued the GEIS in June 2009. The GEIS was prepared to
assess the potential environmental impacts associated with the
construction, operation, aquifer restoration, and decommissioning of an
ISR facility in four specific geographic areas of the western United
States. The proposed Nichols Ranch ISR Project is located in one such
region, the Wyoming East Uranium Milling Region. The GEIS evaluated the
range of potential impacts in the four geographic regions and evaluated
whether the potential impact would be essentially the same for all ISR
facilities or whether site-specific information and analysis would be
required to determine the potential impacts. As such, the GEIS provides
a starting point for the NRC's NEPA analyses for site-specific license
applications for new ISR facilities, as well as for applications to
renew or amend existing ISR licenses.
By letter dated November 30, 2007, Uranerz submitted an application
to the NRC for a new source material license for the Nichols Ranch ISR
Project, which Uranerz proposes to be located in Campbell and Johnson
Counties, Wyoming, approximately 46 miles south-southwest of Gillette,
Wyoming and approximately 61 miles north-northeast of Casper, Wyoming.
Planned facilities associated with the proposed Nichols Ranch ISR
Project include a central processing plant, satellite facility,
accompanying well fields with injection, production, and monitoring
wells, header houses, pipelines, and access roads. The total land
surface ownership of the proposed Nichols Ranch ISR Project is
approximately 3,371 acres, of which 3,091 acres are privately owned and
280 acres are U.S. Government-owned and administered by the U.S.
Department of Interior, Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The proposed
Nichols Ranch ISR Project would be divided into two noncontiguous
units, the Nichols Ranch Unit and the Hank Unit. Because a portion of
the proposed Nichols Ranch ISR Project site is administered by the BLM,
the NRC coordinated its environmental review with the BLM to promote
efficiencies in each agency's environmental review. This coordination
was undertaken in tandem with developing a memorandum of understanding
(MOU) with the BLM that establishes a cooperating agency status between
the agencies. The MOU was finalized on November 30, 2009, and NRC plans
to use it in the review of applications that are in their early stages
in order to effectively integrate BLM as a cooperating agency into the
review of future applications.
ISR facilities recover uranium from low grade ores that may not be
economically recoverable by other methods. In the ISR process, a
leaching agent (called a lixiviant), such as oxygen and sodium
bicarbonate, is added to native groundwater for injection through wells
into the subsurface ore body to dissolve the uranium. Before ISR
operations can begin, the portion of the aquifer designated for uranium
recovery must be exempted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) from being an underground source of drinking water in accordance
with the Safe Drinking Water Act (as implemented by EPA at 40 CFR
146.4). The injected solution, now containing the dissolved uranium, is
pumped back (i.e. recovered) to the surface and sent to a processing
plant, where ion
[[Page 65810]]
exchange is used to separate the uranium from the solution. The ISR
process also frees other metals and minerals from the host aquifer. As
a result, operators of ISR facilities are required to restore the
groundwater affected by operations and to decommission the facility
when operations have ceased. In the processing plant, the recovered
uranium is concentrated into the product known as ``yellowcake,'' which
is then shipped to a uranium conversion facility for further processing
in the overall uranium fuel cycle.
In this Draft SEIS, the NRC staff has assessed the potential
environmental impacts from the construction, operation, aquifer
restoration, and decommissioning of the proposed Nichols Ranch ISR
Project. In doing so, the NRC staff evaluated site-specific data and
information from the Nichols Ranch ISR Project to determine if
Uranerz's proposed activities and the site characteristics were
consistent with those evaluated in the GEIS. NRC then determined which
relevant sections of the Draft GEIS and impact conclusions in the Draft
GEIS could be incorporated by reference. The NRC staff also determined
if additional data or analysis was needed to determine the
environmental impacts for a specific environmental resource area. The
NRC staff documented its assessments and conclusions in the Draft SEIS.
In addition to the action proposed by Uranerz, the NRC staff
addressed two alternatives in the Draft SEIS: A No-Action alternative
and a Modified Action alternative. Under the No-Action alternative, NRC
would deny Uranerz's request to construct and operate an ISR facility
at the Nichols Ranch ISR Project. The No-Action alternative serves as a
baseline for comparison of the potential environmental impacts. Under
the Modified Action alternative, the NRC would only issue Uranerz a
license for ISR uranium milling and processing at the Nichols Ranch
Unit and not the Hank Unit. By doing so, this alternative would only
consist of extracting uranium from well fields developed in the Nichols
Ranch Unit and processing at a central processing plant located at the
Nichols Ranch Unit.
The NRC staff also considered other alternatives but eliminated
them from detailed analysis. Conventional mining/milling and
conventional mining/heap leach processing are two potential methods of
uranium recovery at the Nichols Ranch ISR Project. However, given the
recognized more substantial environmental impacts of conventional
mining (whether by open pit or underground techniques) and conventional
milling or heap leach processing, these alternatives were not further
considered. The NRC staff also evaluated alternative lixiviants (acid-
and ammonia-based), and alternative waste disposal methods. For reasons
discussed in the Draft SEIS, these alternatives also were eliminated
from further consideration.
This Draft SEIS is being issued for public comment. The public
comment period on the Draft SEIS begins with publication of this notice
and continues until February 1, 2010. Written comments should be
submitted as described in the ADDRESSES section of this notice. The NRC
will consider comments received or postmarked after that date to the
extent practical.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 4th day of December 2009.
For the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Patrice M. Bubar,
Deputy Director, Environmental Protection and Performance Assessment
Directorate, Division of Waste Management and Environmental Protection,
Office of Federal and State Materials and Environmental Management
Programs.
[FR Doc. E9-29550 Filed 12-10-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P