Notice of Public Workshop on a Potential Rulemaking for Spent Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing Facilities, 45167-45171 [2010-18888]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 147 / Monday, August 2, 2010 / Notices
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Tamara D. Powell, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, telephone: (301) 492–
3211 or e-mail Tamara.Powell@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is issuing for public
comment a draft guide in the agency’s
‘‘Regulatory Guide’’ series. This series
was developed to describe and make
available to the public such information
as methods that are acceptable to the
NRC staff for implementing specific
parts of the NRC’s regulations,
techniques that the staff uses in
evaluating specific problems or
postulated accidents, and data that the
staff needs in its review of applications
for permits and licenses.
The draft regulatory guide (DG),
entitled, ‘‘Nuclear Criticality Safety
Standards for Fuels and Material
Facilities,’’ is temporarily identified by
its task number, DG–3030, which
should be referenced in all related
correspondence. DG–3030 is proposed
Revision 2 of Regulatory Guide 3.71,
dated October 2005.
Draft regulatory guide DG–3030
provides applicants, licensees and
certificate holders with updated
guidance concerning criticality safety
standards that the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) has
endorsed for use with nuclear fuels and
material facilities. As such, DG–3030
describes methods that the NRC staff
considers acceptable for complying with
the NRC’s regulations in Title 10, of the
Code of Federal Regulations, parts 70,
‘‘Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear
Material,’’ and 76, ‘‘Certification of
Gaseous Diffusion Plants’’ (10 CFR parts
70 and 76).
Pursuant to 10 CFR 70.20, a specific
license is required to acquire, deliver,
receive, possess, use, transfer, import, or
export special nuclear material, and
applications for such licenses must,
pursuant to 10 CFR 70.22(a)(8), include
proposed procedures to avoid nuclear
criticality accidents. Similarly, 10 CFR
part 76 certificate holders are required
by 10 CFR 76.87(c) to include in their
technical safety requirements
procedures and/or equipment that
address criticality prevention.
The NRC staff has developed DG–
3030 to provide guidance on complying
with these portions of the NRC’s
regulations. DG–3030 describes
procedures for preventing nuclear
criticality accidents in operations that
involve handling, processing, storing,
and/or transporting special nuclear
material at fuel and material facilities.
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DG–3030 endorses specific nuclear
criticality safety standards developed by
the American Nuclear Society’s
Standards Subcommittee 8 (ANS–8),
‘‘Operations with Fissionable Materials
Outside Reactors.’’ DG–3030 is not
intended for use by nuclear reactor
licensees.
II. Further Information
The NRC staff is soliciting comments
on DG–3030. Comments may be
accompanied by relevant information or
supporting data and should mention
DG–3030 in the subject line. Comments
submitted in writing or in electronic
form will be made available to the
public in their entirety through the
NRC’s Agencywide Documents Access
and Management System (ADAMS).
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. You may submit
comments by any of the following
methods:
1. Mail comments to: Rules,
Announcements, and Directives Branch,
Mail Stop: TWB–05–B01M, Office of
Administration, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001.
2. Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for documents filed under Docket ID
[NRC–2010–0265]. Address questions
about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher,
301–492–3668; e-mail
Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
3. Fax comments to: Rules,
Announcements, and Directives Branch,
Office of Administration, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission at (301) 492–
3446.
Comments would be most helpful if
received by September 29, 2010.
Comments received after that date will
be considered if it is practical to do so,
but the NRC is able to ensure
consideration only for comments
received on or before this date.
Although a time limit is given,
comments and suggestions in
connection with items for inclusion in
guides currently being developed or
improvements in all published guides
are encouraged at any time.
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Requests for technical information
about DG–3030 may be directed to the
NRC contact, Tamara D. Powell at
(301) 492–3211 or e-mail Tamara.
Powell@nrc.gov.
Electronic copies of DG–3030 are
available through the NRC’s public Web
site under Draft Regulatory Guides in
the ‘‘Regulatory Guides’’ collection of
the NRC’s Electronic Reading Room at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doccollections/. Electronic copies are also
available in ADAMS (https://www.nrc.
gov/reading-rm/adams.html), under
Accession No. ML100950065. The
regulatory analysis may be found in
ADAMS under Accession No.
ML101440446.
In addition, regulatory guides are
available for inspection at the NRC’s
Public Document Room (PDR) located at
11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland. The PDR’s mailing address is
USNRC PDR, Washington, DC 20555–
0001. The PDR can also be reached by
telephone at (301) 415–4737 or (800)
397–4205, by fax at (301) 415–3548, and
by e-mail to pdr.resource@nrc.gov.
Regulatory guides are not
copyrighted, and Commission approval
is not required to reproduce them.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 22nd
day of July 2010.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Harriet Karagiannis,
Acting Chief, Regulatory Guide Development
Branch, Division of Engineering, Office of
Nuclear Regulatory Research.
[FR Doc. 2010–18883 Filed 7–30–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2010–0267]
Notice of Public Workshop on a
Potential Rulemaking for Spent
Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing Facilities
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC).
ACTION: Notice of Public Workshop.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) plans to conduct
two public workshops to solicit public
input on major issues associated with
the development of a regulatory basis
document that, if necessary, will form
the basis of a potential rulemaking for
spent nuclear fuel reprocessing
facilities. The public workshops are
intended to solicit the views of
representatives of interests that may be
affected by a potential rulemaking for
reprocessing facilities. Members of the
public are invited to provide written
SUMMARY:
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comments on the issues presented in
this notice and to attend the workshops
to provide feedback on the issues
associated with the development of a
regulatory basis for a potential
rulemaking. The public workshops will
be held in Rockville, Maryland on
September 7–8, 2010 and in
Albuquerque, New Mexico, during the
week of October 4, 2010.
DATES: Members of the public may
provide feedback at the transcribed
public workshops or may submit
written comments on the issues
discussed. The comment period closes
on November 5, 2010. NRC plans to
consider these stakeholder views in the
development of a regulatory basis for a
potential rulemaking on reprocessing.
Written comments may be sent to the
address listed in the ADDRESSES section.
Questions about participation in the
round table discussion at the public
workshops should be directed to the
facilitator at the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section. Members of the
public planning to attend the workshops
are invited to RSVP at least ten (10) days
prior to each workshop. Replies should
be directed to the points of contact
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section. The public workshops
will be held in Rockville, Maryland on
September 7–8, 2010, from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. and in Albuquerque, New Mexico,
on the week of October 4, 2010, from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. The September 7–8, 2010
workshop will be held at the Hilton
Washington DC/Rockville Hotel &
Executive Meeting Center, located at
1750 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland. The exact dates and location
for the October 2010 workshop in
Albuquerque, NM will be noticed no
fewer than ten (10) days prior to the
workshop on the NRC’s electronic
public workshop schedule at https://
www.nrc.gov/publicinvolve/publicmeetings/index.cfm. In addition, the
final agenda for both public workshops
will also be noticed at the above
referenced website address. Please refer
to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section for additional information on
the issues proposed for discussion at the
public workshops.
ADDRESSES: Submit written comments
to the Cindy Bladey, Chief, Rules,
Announcements, and Directives Branch,
Division of Administrative Services,
Office of Administration, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Mail Stop TWB
5B01M, Washington, DC 20555–0001,
and cite the publication date and page
number of this Federal Register notice,
or by fax at 301–492–3446. Comments
may also be submitted electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov and search
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for documents filed under Docket ID
NRC–2010–0267. Address questions
about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher
301–492–3668; e-mail
Carol.Gallagher@nrc.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.
Questions regarding participation in
the roundtable discussions should be
submitted to the facilitator, Francis
Cameron, by telephone at 240–205–
2091, or by e-mail at
fxcameo@gmail.com.
Jose
Cuadrado, Office of Nuclear Material
Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, telephone 301–492–
3287; e-mail Jose.Cuadrado@nrc.gov, or
Jeannette Arce, Office of Nuclear
Material Safety and Safeguards, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555–0001, telephone
301–492–3411; e-mail
Jeannette.Arce@nrc.gov.
The public may examine and have
copied for a fee, publicly available
documents at the Public Document
Room, One White Flint North, 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland.
Publicly available documents created or
received at NRC after November 1, 1999,
are available electronically at the NRC’s
Electronic Reading Room at https://
www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html.
From this site, the public can gain entry
into the NRC’s Agency-wide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS), which provides text and
image files of NRC’s public documents.
If you do not have access to ADAMS,
contact the Public Document Room at
1–800–397–4209, 301–415–4737, or by
e-mail to pdr.resource@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
1.0 Background
The NRC has the authority under the
Atomic Energy Act to license
commercial spent fuel reprocessing
facilities. Currently, 10 CFR Part 50,
‘‘Domestic Licensing of Production and
Utilization Facilities,’’ provides the
licensing framework for production and
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utilization facilities. Although a
reprocessing facility is one type of
production facility, its industrial
processes are more akin to fuel cycle
processes. This framework was
established in the 1970’s to license the
first US reprocessing facilities. The
policy decision by the Carter
Administration to cease reprocessing
initiatives was based, in part, on the
proliferation risks posed by the early
reprocessing technology. This policy
ultimately halted NRC licensing
activities for commercial reprocessing
facilities. While that policy was
reversed during the Reagan
Administration, there was no longer any
commercial interest in reprocessing and
thus no need to update the existing
reprocessing regulatory framework in
Part 50.
Although commercial reprocessing
interest waned, the Department of
Energy (DOE) continued to pursue
reprocessing technology development
through the National Laboratories. DOE
has sought to decrease proliferation risk
and spent fuel high level waste through
developing more sophisticated
reprocessing technology.
During the Bush Administration, the
Global Nuclear Energy Partnership
(GNEP) rekindled the interest in
commercial reprocessing. GNEP sought
to expand the use of civilian nuclear
power globally and close the nuclear
fuel cycle through reprocessing spent
fuel and deploying fast reactors to burn
long-lived actinides. In response to
these initiatives, the Commission, in
Staff Requirements Memorandum (SRM)
to SECY–07–0081, ‘‘Regulatory Options
for Licensing Facilities Associated with
the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership,’’
dated June 27, 2007 (ADAMS
ML071800084), directed the staff to
complete an analysis of 10 CFR Chapter
I to identify regulatory gaps for licensing
an advanced reprocessing facility and
recycling reactor.
In mid-2008, two nuclear industry
companies informed the agency of their
intent to seek a license for a
reprocessing facility in the U.S. An
additional company expressed its
support for updating the regulatory
framework for reprocessing, but stopped
short of stating its intent to seek a
license for such a facility. At the time,
NRC staff also noted that progress on
some Global Nuclear Energy Partnership
(GNEP) initiatives had waned and it
appeared appropriate to shift the focus
of the staff’s efforts from specific GNEPfacility regulations to a more broadly
applicable framework for commercial
reprocessing facilities.
In SECY–08–0134, titled, ‘‘Regulatory
Structure for Spent Fuel Reprocessing,’’
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dated September 12, 2008 (ADAMS
ML082110363), the staff discussed the
shift in its approach to developing the
regulatory framework development for
commercial reprocessing facilities. The
staff noted that it would defer additional
work on regulatory framework
development efforts for advanced
recycling reactors and focus on the
framework revisions necessary to
license a potential application for
commercial reprocessing. As a result of
this shift, the staff indicated that an
additional review of the initial gap
analysis was warranted.
NRC staff performed a regulatory gap
analysis and summarized it in SECY–
09–0082, ‘‘Update on Reprocessing
Regulatory Framework—Summary of
Gap Analysis,’’ dated May 28, 2009
(ADAMS ML091520243). The staff’s gap
analysis identified 14 ‘‘high’’ priority
gaps that must be resolved to establish
an effective and efficient regulatory
framework. The regulatory gaps broadly
cover four main areas: (1) Reprocessing
waste-related issues, (2) physical
protection and material control and
accounting, (3) risk, and (4) licensing
issues. The NRC staff’s regulatory gap
analysis considered several documents
in its analysis, including: NUREG–1909,
a white paper authored by the Advisory
Committee on Nuclear Waste and
Materials (ACNW&M) titled
‘‘Background, Status and Issues Related
to the Regulation of Advanced Spent
Nuclear Fuel Recycle Facilities,’’ issued
June 2008; correspondence from the
Union of Concerned Scientists titled,
‘‘Revising the Rules for Materials
Protection, Control and Accounting;’’
and an NEI white paper titled,
‘‘Regulatory Framework for an NRC
Licensed Recycling Facility.’’
Building on the gap analysis, efforts
are currently underway to develop a
regulatory (technical) basis to pursue
rulemaking that would enable the
effective licensing and regulation of
reprocessing facilities. The status of the
regulatory basis development and
estimated schedule for completing the
reprocessing regulatory development are
summarized in a May 14, 2010,
memorandum to the Commission
(ADAMS ML101110444).
In advance of NRC staff’s
development of the regulatory basis
document for reprocessing facility
licensing, and, if necessary, a possible
rulemaking, the NRC will conduct
public workshops inviting
representatives of interested
stakeholders in a ‘‘roundtable’’ format.
At these workshops, NRC plans to
discuss with stakeholders the issues to
be considered in the development of the
regulatory basis document for
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reprocessing facility licensing, which, in
turn, will serve as the basis for possible
rulemaking. NRC plans to consider
these stakeholder views in the
development of the regulatory basis
document. In order to have a
manageable discussion, the number of
participants around the table will be
limited. The NRC, through the
workshop facilitator, will attempt to
ensure broad participation by the
spectrum of interests affected by the
rulemaking, including citizen and
environmental groups, nuclear industry
interests, state, and local governments,
and experts from academia and other
federal agencies. Other members of the
public are welcome to attend. Those not
seated at the tables, including
individual members of the public, will
have the opportunity to provide
feedback on each of the issues slated for
discussion by the roundtable
participants. Questions about
participation in the roundtable
discussion may be directed to the
facilitator.
Section 2.0 describes issues
associated with the regulatory gaps in
SECY–09–0082 and will broadly cover
four main areas: (1) Reprocessing wasterelated issues, (2) physical protection
and material control and accounting,
3) risk, and (4) licensing issues.
2.0
Issues for Discussion
During the public workshops, the
NRC plans to solicit stakeholder
comments and feedback during four
separate discussion sessions. During
each session, the NRC plans to discuss
one of the four major categories of
regulatory gaps for reprocessing
facilities, as discussed in SECY–09–
0082 (ADAMS ML091520243). The NRC
will use a roundtable discussion format
for all four discussion sessions. The four
main categories of regulatory gaps are:
(1) Reprocessing waste related gaps, (2)
physical protection and material control
and accounting gaps, (3) risk gaps, and
(4) licensing gaps. Below is a brief
discussion of the individual gaps in
each category.
I. Reprocessing Waste Related Gaps
a. Gap 2—Independent Storage of HighLevel Waste
No independent waste storage options
are available under 10 CFR Part 72,
‘‘Licensing Requirements for the
Independent Storage of Spent Nuclear
Fuel, High-Level Radioactive Waste, and
Reactor-Related Greater Than Class C
Waste,’’ to accommodate interim,
commercial independent storage of
solidified high-level waste (HLW) from
reprocessing facilities. NRC staff is
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developing a technical basis to establish
the regulatory framework necessary for
both the onsite storage and commercial
independent storage of solidified HLW.
Without this basis, there are no viable
regulatory options for interim storage of
solidified HLW from reprocessing
facilities.
b. Gap 3—Waste Incidental to
Reprocessing
The NRC lacks regulations defining
certain waste streams resulting from
spent fuel reprocessing as waste
incidental to reprocessing, or incidental
waste, rather than HLW. If the NRC does
not develop an incidental waste rule,
then an applicant for a reprocessing
facility would face regulatory
uncertainty with regard to
differentiating HLW from incidental
wastes produced at its facility.
c. Gap 16—Waste Classification
The waste classification tables in 10
CFR 61.55 include many radionuclides
that would be associated with
reprocessing waste streams. However, a
few waste streams that contain
radionuclides (e.g., krypton-85
separated from gaseous effluent, noble
metals and some lanthanides) were not
considered in the development of 10
CFR 61.55, and are not listed in either
Table 1 or Table 2. If the gap is not
addressed, some wastes associated with
reprocessing facilities could be
classified as Class A, but they may not
be suitable for near-surface disposal at
some sites.
d. Gap 15—Waste Confidence
The waste confidence decision
published in the Federal Register on
August 31, 1984 (49 FR 34658)
discusses waste from reprocessing
facilities in the first and third finding.
The generic waste confidence rule in 10
CFR 51.23, ‘‘Temporary Storage of Spent
Fuel after Cessation of Reactor
Operation—Generic Determination of
No Significant Environmental Impact,’’
applies only to waste from reactor
facilities. Therefore, in their
environmental report, applicants for
reprocessing facility licenses will need
to address long-term storage of their
waste. If the regulatory basis supports
expansion of the waste confidence rule
to include HLW, and if the rule is
amended, then consideration of the
environmental impacts of interim HLW
storage will be considered generically.
If, on the other hand, the waste
confidence rule is not amended to
include HLW generated from spent fuel
reprocessing facilities, then the
environmental impacts of interim HLW
storage will need to be analyzed on a
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site-specific basis (by the applicant in
its environmental report and then by the
staff in its National Environmental
Policy Act environmental analysis).
II. Physical Protection and Material
Control and Accounting Gaps
a. Gap 4—Exclusion of Irradiated Fuel
Reprocessing Facilities in 10 CFR 74.51
The regulation in 10 CFR 74.51,
‘‘Nuclear Material Control and
Accounting for Strategic Special
Nuclear Material,’’ currently excludes
irradiated fuel reprocessing facilities
from Category I material control and
accounting (MC&A) requirements.
Category I reprocessing facilities would
not have the same MC&A requirements
as other Category I facilities if the
exclusion is not removed, yet
comparable requirements may be
needed to protect against theft and
diversion of separated special nuclear
material and other materials.
Accordingly, it is necessary to remove
this exclusion to ensure the security of
material in any proposed Category I
reprocessing facility.
b. Gap 8—Risk-Informing 10 CFR Part
73 and 10 CFR Part 74
The current type and quantity-based
categorization scheme in the existing
regulations may pose an undue
regulatory burden in operating a
reprocessing facility. Current
requirements for facility processes and
reprocessed fuel assemblies may result
in excessive security and safeguards
measures for relatively unattractive
materials. Risk-informing 10 CFR Part
73, ‘‘Physical Protection of Plants and
Materials,’’ and 10 CFR Part 74,
‘‘Material Control and Accounting of
Special Nuclear Material,’’ is needed to
prevent unintended consequences
associated with a type and quantitybased material categorization scheme for
potential materials resulting from a
reprocessing operation.
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c. Gap 17—Diversion Path Analysis
Requirements
There are no existing regulations for
a diversion path analysis requirement
under 10 CFR Part 74. Establishing
diversion path analysis requirements
would make 10 CFR Part 74 more riskinformed and would provide an
effective detection and response
program to mitigate potential safeguards
vulnerabilities and system weaknesses.
Under this requirement, affected
reprocessing facilities would develop a
more risk-informed safeguards program
that considers a wide range of
malevolent activities that might involve
overt or covert adversaries. A burden
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would be imposed upon such facilities
to conduct a diversion path analysis and
address any identified vulnerability.
d. Gap 18—Approaches Toward
Material Accounting Management
NRC staff is considering different
changes and improvements to material
inventory requirements for reprocessing
facilities. Currently, 10 CFR 74.59(f)
gives predefined quantity limits and
timeliness requirements for Category I
facilities, which must perform physical
inventories every 6 months. Predefined
limits on inventory difference
determinations and the restriction on
inventory periods could pose a
regulatory challenge for reprocessing
facilities, due to their large throughputs
and inventories. Modern technology
that has been developed or is being
developed will help reprocessing
facilities to meet the existing timeliness
and quantity goals. Improved
technology, such as near real time
accounting, has been used at certain
overseas reprocessing plants. This and
other technologies can provide a more
frequent inventory analysis without a
facility shut-down, and will facilitate
meeting the current timeliness and
quantity goals. Additionally,
incorporating a material holdup
management program requirement into
10 CFR Part 74 to minimize the impact
of material holdup could facilitate more
accurate inventory accounting.
e. Gap 20—Advanced Fuel Cycles and
Transuranic Special Nuclear Material
(SNM) Classification
Certain fissile elements such as
americium (Am), neptunium (Np), and
others, which are constituents of spent
nuclear fuel, are currently not regulated
or treated as other fissile or SNM
material. Some advanced fuel cycle
separation methods have the ability to
separate these actinides, resulting in
separated and pure fissile products.
However, existing regulations do not
address security risks for these types of
fissile material. Although such
advanced fuel cycle separation methods
are not industrially mature and are still
being researched, if advanced fuel
cycles that separate these fissile
elements receive commercial interest,
the Commission may consider revisiting
its policy of excluding these elements as
SNM.
III. Risk Gaps
a. Gap 5—Risk Considerations for a
Production Facility Licensed Under 10
CFR Part 70
Reprocessing facilities handle larger
amounts of radioactive material than
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other fuel cycle facilities. These higher
amounts increase the relative risk of
these facilities. The NRC revised 10 CFR
Part 70 in 2000 based on a limited
number of lower risk fuel cycle
facilities, and the revision did not
consider higher risk reprocessing
facilities. These higher risks are not
adequately addressed in the
methodology established in 10 CFR Part
70. Therefore, if left unchanged, the
requirements for reprocessing facilities
licensed under 10 CFR Part 70 will be
the same as those for the lower risk fuel
cycle facilities. The NRC is considering
various qualitative and quantitative
approaches for establishing new risk
assessment requirements for
reprocessing facilities.
b. Gap 9—Baseline Design Criteria
(BDC)/General Design Criteria (GDC)
The existing baseline design criteria
(BDC) in 10 CFR Part 70 do not
comprehensively address hazards posed
by the operation of a reprocessing
facility. Although Appendix A, ‘‘General
Design Criteria for Nuclear Power
Plants,’’ to 10 CFR Part 50 provides
general design criteria (GDC) for nuclear
power plants, none of these GDC are
specific to reprocessing facilities. The
regulations in 10 CFR Part 70 have a few
BDC directed more toward lower risk
fuel cycle facilities. The NRC will
consider multiple sources in
establishing appropriate BDC or GDC for
reprocessing facilities. The NRC will use
the terms BDC and GDC interchangeably
during its discussions.
c. Gap 11—Technical Specifications
The provisions of 10 CFR Part 50
require technical specifications for
reprocessing facilities. Such
requirements may not be compatible
with 10 CFR Part 70. For incorporation
into 10 CFR Part 70, revisions will be
needed to clarify the division between
items relied on for safety (IROFS),
which are derived from an integrated
safety analysis (ISA), and technical
specifications. Additionally, changes to
technical specifications would require a
license amendment, whereas similar
changes under 10 CFR Part 70 licensed
facilities could proceed under the
facility change process in 10 CFR 70.72,
‘‘Facility Changes and Change Process,’’
if the changes meet these requirements.
d. Gap 7—Licensed Operators and
Criteria for Testing and Licensing
Operators
Section 107 of the Atomic Energy Act
of 1954, as amended, (AEA) requires
production facilities to have licensed
operators. However, the current criteria
in 10 CFR Part 55, ‘‘Operators’
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Licenses,’’ are not applicable, in whole,
to operators of reprocessing facilities.
The NRC needs to develop criteria in 10
CFR Part 55, ‘‘Operators’ Licenses,’’ or in
a reprocessing-specific regulation in a
revised 10 CFR Part 70 or new Part 7X,
for testing and licensing operators of
reprocessing facilities.
e. Gap 19—Effluent Controls and
Monitoring
The requirements of 10 CFR Part 70
do not sufficiently address effluent
controls and monitoring for
reprocessing facilities [e.g.,
implementation of EPA regulations in
40 CFR Part 190, as required by 10 CFR
20.1301(e)]. Additional requirements for
effluent controls and monitoring may be
needed for reprocessing facilities
because of the amounts of radioactive
material that are handled in them and
greater potential for emissions.
Although the regulations in 10 CFR
50.34a, ‘‘Design Objectives for
Equipment To Control Releases of
Radioactive Material in Effluents—
Nuclear Power Plants,’’ and 10 CFR
50.36a, ‘‘Technical Specifications on
Effluents from Nuclear Power Reactors,’’
specify requirements for utilization
facilities, these would require
modification to address reprocessing
and recycling facilities.
IV. Licensing Gaps
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
a. Gap 1—Regulatory Framework
Options, Part 50 or Part 70
Currently, licensing a reprocessing
facility under 10 CFR Part 50 would
pose a significant hindrance to effective
and efficient licensing. The regulations
in 10 CFR Part 70, as currently written,
do not provide a regulatory framework
to license a reprocessing facility.
Therefore, the staff is evaluating options
for either revising Part 50 or Part 70, or
develop regulations in a new Part 5X, or
Part 7X.
b. Gap 6—Definition for Reprocessing
Related Terms
There are currently no definitions of
the terms ‘‘reprocessing,’’ ‘‘recycling,’’
and ‘‘vitrification.’’ Existing regulations
in 10 CFR Parts 20, 50, 51, 60, 63, 70
and 72 use the term ‘‘reprocessing’’
without a definition. Accordingly, such
definitions will need to be developed to
describe both reprocessing and
reprocessing facilities for 10 CFR
Chapter I.
c. Gap 10—One-Step Licensing and
Inspection, Testing and Acceptance
Criteria (ITAAC) Requirements
Currently, regulations for one-step
licensing of reprocessing facilities do
not exist. One-step licensing
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:04 Jul 30, 2010
Jkt 220001
necessitates requirements to verify that
the constructed facility conforms to the
approved, licensed design. For reactors,
10 CFR Part 52 identifies these
requirements as ITAAC. The regulations
in 10 CFR Part 52 do not apply to
reprocessing or other production
facilities, nor do the requirements for
the approval of applications set forth in
10 CFR 70.23, ‘‘Requirements for the
Approval of Applications,’’ address
reprocessing facilities. Clarity is needed
in 10 CFR Part 70 to provide reasonable
assurance that a reprocessing facility,
undergoing a one-step licensing process,
will have been constructed and will
operate in conformity with the license,
the AEA, and the Commission’s rules
and regulations.
d. Gap 12—Financial Protection
Requirements and Indemnity
Agreements (10 CFR Part 140)
A reprocessing facility cannot be
licensed without financial protection
and indemnity agreements. Price
Anderson protection and indemnity fees
and amounts for reprocessing facilities
are currently not included in 10 CFR
Part 140, ‘‘Financial Protection
Requirements and Indemnity
Agreements.’’ Additionally, several
appendices to 10 CFR Part 140 do not
include forms for reprocessing facilities.
e. Gap 13—Schedule of Fees (10 CFR
Part 170)
The scope of 10 CFR Part 170, ‘‘Fees
for Facilities, Materials, Import and
Export Licenses, and Other Regulatory
Services under the Atomic Energy Act
of 1954, as Amended,’’ does not include
a production facility licensed outside 10
CFR Part 50.
f. Gap 14—Annual Fees (10 CFR Part
171)
The regulations in 10 CFR Part 171,
‘‘Annual Fees for Reactor Licenses and
Fuel Cycle Licenses and Materials
Licenses, Including Holders of
Certificates of Compliance,
Registrations, and Quality Assurance
Program Approvals and Government
Agencies Licensed by the NRC,’’ do not
include annual fees for reprocessing
facility licenses. The scope of the
regulation, described in 10 CFR 171.3,
does not specifically include
reprocessing or production facilities.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 23rd day
of July 2010.
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
45171
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Marissa G. Bailey,
Deputy Director, Special Projects and
Technical Support Directorate, Division of
Fuel Cycle Safety and Safeguards, Office of
Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards.
[FR Doc. 2010–18888 Filed 7–30–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2010–0072]
Notice of Issuance of Regulatory Guide
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Issuance and
Availability of Regulatory Guide 3.13,
Revision 1, ‘‘Design, Construction, and
Inspection of Embankment Retention
Systems at Fuel Cycle Facilities.’’
AGENCY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Orr, Regulatory Guide
Development Branch, Division of
Engineering, Office of Nuclear
Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, telephone (301) 251–
7495 or e-mail Mark.Orr@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is issuing a revision
to an existing guide in the agency’s
‘‘Regulatory Guide’’ series. This series
was developed to describe and make
available to the public information such
as methods that are acceptable to the
NRC staff for implementing specific
parts of the agency’s regulations,
techniques that the staff uses in
evaluating specific problems or
postulated accidents, and data that the
staff needs in its review of applications
for permits and licenses.
Revision 1 of Regulatory Guide 3.13,
‘‘Design, Construction, and Inspection of
Embankment Retention Systems at Fuel
Cycle Facilities,’’ was issued with a
temporary identification as Draft
Regulatory Guide, DG–3040. This guide
describes some engineering practices
and methods generally considered by
the NRC to be satisfactory for the design,
construction, and inspection of
embankment retention systems used for
retaining solid and liquid effluent from
nuclear fuel cycle facility operations
other than mining and milling. These
practices and methods are the result of
NRC review and action on a number of
specific cases, and they reflect the latest
general engineering approaches that are
acceptable to the NRC staff. If future
information results in alternative
E:\FR\FM\02AUN1.SGM
02AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 147 (Monday, August 2, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 45167-45171]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-18888]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[NRC-2010-0267]
Notice of Public Workshop on a Potential Rulemaking for Spent
Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing Facilities
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).
ACTION: Notice of Public Workshop.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) plans to conduct
two public workshops to solicit public input on major issues associated
with the development of a regulatory basis document that, if necessary,
will form the basis of a potential rulemaking for spent nuclear fuel
reprocessing facilities. The public workshops are intended to solicit
the views of representatives of interests that may be affected by a
potential rulemaking for reprocessing facilities. Members of the public
are invited to provide written
[[Page 45168]]
comments on the issues presented in this notice and to attend the
workshops to provide feedback on the issues associated with the
development of a regulatory basis for a potential rulemaking. The
public workshops will be held in Rockville, Maryland on September 7-8,
2010 and in Albuquerque, New Mexico, during the week of October 4,
2010.
DATES: Members of the public may provide feedback at the transcribed
public workshops or may submit written comments on the issues
discussed. The comment period closes on November 5, 2010. NRC plans to
consider these stakeholder views in the development of a regulatory
basis for a potential rulemaking on reprocessing. Written comments may
be sent to the address listed in the ADDRESSES section. Questions about
participation in the round table discussion at the public workshops
should be directed to the facilitator at the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section. Members of the public planning to attend the
workshops are invited to RSVP at least ten (10) days prior to each
workshop. Replies should be directed to the points of contact listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. The public workshops will
be held in Rockville, Maryland on September 7-8, 2010, from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. and in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on the week of October 4, 2010,
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The September 7-8, 2010 workshop will be held at
the Hilton Washington DC/Rockville Hotel & Executive Meeting Center,
located at 1750 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland. The exact dates
and location for the October 2010 workshop in Albuquerque, NM will be
noticed no fewer than ten (10) days prior to the workshop on the NRC's
electronic public workshop schedule at https://www.nrc.gov/publicinvolve/public-meetings/index.cfm. In addition, the final agenda
for both public workshops will also be noticed at the above referenced
website address. Please refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
for additional information on the issues proposed for discussion at the
public workshops.
ADDRESSES: Submit written comments to the Cindy Bladey, Chief, Rules,
Announcements, and Directives Branch, Division of Administrative
Services, Office of Administration, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Mail Stop TWB 5B01M, Washington, DC 20555-0001, and cite the
publication date and page number of this Federal Register notice, or by
fax at 301-492-3446. Comments may also be submitted electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov and search for documents filed under Docket
ID NRC-2010-0267. Address questions about NRC dockets to Carol
Gallagher 301-492-3668; e-mail Carol.Gallagher@nrc.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.
Questions regarding participation in the roundtable discussions
should be submitted to the facilitator, Francis Cameron, by telephone
at 240-205-2091, or by e-mail at fxcameo@gmail.com.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jose Cuadrado, Office of Nuclear
Material Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555-0001, telephone 301-492-3287; e-mail
Jose.Cuadrado@nrc.gov, or Jeannette Arce, Office of Nuclear Material
Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555-0001, telephone 301-492-3411; e-mail Jeannette.Arce@nrc.gov.
The public may examine and have copied for a fee, publicly
available documents at the Public Document Room, One White Flint North,
11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland. Publicly available documents
created or received at NRC after November 1, 1999, are available
electronically at the NRC's Electronic Reading Room at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. From this site, the public can gain
entry into the NRC's Agency-wide Documents Access and Management System
(ADAMS), which provides text and image files of NRC's public documents.
If you do not have access to ADAMS, contact the Public Document Room at
1-800-397-4209, 301-415-4737, or by e-mail to pdr.resource@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1.0 Background
The NRC has the authority under the Atomic Energy Act to license
commercial spent fuel reprocessing facilities. Currently, 10 CFR Part
50, ``Domestic Licensing of Production and Utilization Facilities,''
provides the licensing framework for production and utilization
facilities. Although a reprocessing facility is one type of production
facility, its industrial processes are more akin to fuel cycle
processes. This framework was established in the 1970's to license the
first US reprocessing facilities. The policy decision by the Carter
Administration to cease reprocessing initiatives was based, in part, on
the proliferation risks posed by the early reprocessing technology.
This policy ultimately halted NRC licensing activities for commercial
reprocessing facilities. While that policy was reversed during the
Reagan Administration, there was no longer any commercial interest in
reprocessing and thus no need to update the existing reprocessing
regulatory framework in Part 50.
Although commercial reprocessing interest waned, the Department of
Energy (DOE) continued to pursue reprocessing technology development
through the National Laboratories. DOE has sought to decrease
proliferation risk and spent fuel high level waste through developing
more sophisticated reprocessing technology.
During the Bush Administration, the Global Nuclear Energy
Partnership (GNEP) rekindled the interest in commercial reprocessing.
GNEP sought to expand the use of civilian nuclear power globally and
close the nuclear fuel cycle through reprocessing spent fuel and
deploying fast reactors to burn long-lived actinides. In response to
these initiatives, the Commission, in Staff Requirements Memorandum
(SRM) to SECY-07-0081, ``Regulatory Options for Licensing Facilities
Associated with the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership,'' dated June 27,
2007 (ADAMS ML071800084), directed the staff to complete an analysis of
10 CFR Chapter I to identify regulatory gaps for licensing an advanced
reprocessing facility and recycling reactor.
In mid-2008, two nuclear industry companies informed the agency of
their intent to seek a license for a reprocessing facility in the U.S.
An additional company expressed its support for updating the regulatory
framework for reprocessing, but stopped short of stating its intent to
seek a license for such a facility. At the time, NRC staff also noted
that progress on some Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP)
initiatives had waned and it appeared appropriate to shift the focus of
the staff's efforts from specific GNEP-facility regulations to a more
broadly applicable framework for commercial reprocessing facilities.
In SECY-08-0134, titled, ``Regulatory Structure for Spent Fuel
Reprocessing,''
[[Page 45169]]
dated September 12, 2008 (ADAMS ML082110363), the staff discussed the
shift in its approach to developing the regulatory framework
development for commercial reprocessing facilities. The staff noted
that it would defer additional work on regulatory framework development
efforts for advanced recycling reactors and focus on the framework
revisions necessary to license a potential application for commercial
reprocessing. As a result of this shift, the staff indicated that an
additional review of the initial gap analysis was warranted.
NRC staff performed a regulatory gap analysis and summarized it in
SECY-09-0082, ``Update on Reprocessing Regulatory Framework--Summary of
Gap Analysis,'' dated May 28, 2009 (ADAMS ML091520243). The staff's gap
analysis identified 14 ``high'' priority gaps that must be resolved to
establish an effective and efficient regulatory framework. The
regulatory gaps broadly cover four main areas: (1) Reprocessing waste-
related issues, (2) physical protection and material control and
accounting, (3) risk, and (4) licensing issues. The NRC staff's
regulatory gap analysis considered several documents in its analysis,
including: NUREG-1909, a white paper authored by the Advisory Committee
on Nuclear Waste and Materials (ACNW&M) titled ``Background, Status and
Issues Related to the Regulation of Advanced Spent Nuclear Fuel Recycle
Facilities,'' issued June 2008; correspondence from the Union of
Concerned Scientists titled, ``Revising the Rules for Materials
Protection, Control and Accounting;'' and an NEI white paper titled,
``Regulatory Framework for an NRC Licensed Recycling Facility.''
Building on the gap analysis, efforts are currently underway to
develop a regulatory (technical) basis to pursue rulemaking that would
enable the effective licensing and regulation of reprocessing
facilities. The status of the regulatory basis development and
estimated schedule for completing the reprocessing regulatory
development are summarized in a May 14, 2010, memorandum to the
Commission (ADAMS ML101110444).
In advance of NRC staff's development of the regulatory basis
document for reprocessing facility licensing, and, if necessary, a
possible rulemaking, the NRC will conduct public workshops inviting
representatives of interested stakeholders in a ``roundtable'' format.
At these workshops, NRC plans to discuss with stakeholders the issues
to be considered in the development of the regulatory basis document
for reprocessing facility licensing, which, in turn, will serve as the
basis for possible rulemaking. NRC plans to consider these stakeholder
views in the development of the regulatory basis document. In order to
have a manageable discussion, the number of participants around the
table will be limited. The NRC, through the workshop facilitator, will
attempt to ensure broad participation by the spectrum of interests
affected by the rulemaking, including citizen and environmental groups,
nuclear industry interests, state, and local governments, and experts
from academia and other federal agencies. Other members of the public
are welcome to attend. Those not seated at the tables, including
individual members of the public, will have the opportunity to provide
feedback on each of the issues slated for discussion by the roundtable
participants. Questions about participation in the roundtable
discussion may be directed to the facilitator.
Section 2.0 describes issues associated with the regulatory gaps in
SECY-09-0082 and will broadly cover four main areas: (1) Reprocessing
waste-related issues, (2) physical protection and material control and
accounting, 3) risk, and (4) licensing issues.
2.0 Issues for Discussion
During the public workshops, the NRC plans to solicit stakeholder
comments and feedback during four separate discussion sessions. During
each session, the NRC plans to discuss one of the four major categories
of regulatory gaps for reprocessing facilities, as discussed in SECY-
09-0082 (ADAMS ML091520243). The NRC will use a roundtable discussion
format for all four discussion sessions. The four main categories of
regulatory gaps are: (1) Reprocessing waste related gaps, (2) physical
protection and material control and accounting gaps, (3) risk gaps, and
(4) licensing gaps. Below is a brief discussion of the individual gaps
in each category.
I. Reprocessing Waste Related Gaps
a. Gap 2--Independent Storage of High-Level Waste
No independent waste storage options are available under 10 CFR
Part 72, ``Licensing Requirements for the Independent Storage of Spent
Nuclear Fuel, High-Level Radioactive Waste, and Reactor-Related Greater
Than Class C Waste,'' to accommodate interim, commercial independent
storage of solidified high-level waste (HLW) from reprocessing
facilities. NRC staff is developing a technical basis to establish the
regulatory framework necessary for both the onsite storage and
commercial independent storage of solidified HLW. Without this basis,
there are no viable regulatory options for interim storage of
solidified HLW from reprocessing facilities.
b. Gap 3--Waste Incidental to Reprocessing
The NRC lacks regulations defining certain waste streams resulting
from spent fuel reprocessing as waste incidental to reprocessing, or
incidental waste, rather than HLW. If the NRC does not develop an
incidental waste rule, then an applicant for a reprocessing facility
would face regulatory uncertainty with regard to differentiating HLW
from incidental wastes produced at its facility.
c. Gap 16--Waste Classification
The waste classification tables in 10 CFR 61.55 include many
radionuclides that would be associated with reprocessing waste streams.
However, a few waste streams that contain radionuclides (e.g., krypton-
85 separated from gaseous effluent, noble metals and some lanthanides)
were not considered in the development of 10 CFR 61.55, and are not
listed in either Table 1 or Table 2. If the gap is not addressed, some
wastes associated with reprocessing facilities could be classified as
Class A, but they may not be suitable for near-surface disposal at some
sites.
d. Gap 15--Waste Confidence
The waste confidence decision published in the Federal Register on
August 31, 1984 (49 FR 34658) discusses waste from reprocessing
facilities in the first and third finding. The generic waste confidence
rule in 10 CFR 51.23, ``Temporary Storage of Spent Fuel after Cessation
of Reactor Operation--Generic Determination of No Significant
Environmental Impact,'' applies only to waste from reactor facilities.
Therefore, in their environmental report, applicants for reprocessing
facility licenses will need to address long-term storage of their
waste. If the regulatory basis supports expansion of the waste
confidence rule to include HLW, and if the rule is amended, then
consideration of the environmental impacts of interim HLW storage will
be considered generically. If, on the other hand, the waste confidence
rule is not amended to include HLW generated from spent fuel
reprocessing facilities, then the environmental impacts of interim HLW
storage will need to be analyzed on a
[[Page 45170]]
site-specific basis (by the applicant in its environmental report and
then by the staff in its National Environmental Policy Act
environmental analysis).
II. Physical Protection and Material Control and Accounting Gaps
a. Gap 4--Exclusion of Irradiated Fuel Reprocessing Facilities in 10
CFR 74.51
The regulation in 10 CFR 74.51, ``Nuclear Material Control and
Accounting for Strategic Special Nuclear Material,'' currently excludes
irradiated fuel reprocessing facilities from Category I material
control and accounting (MC&A) requirements. Category I reprocessing
facilities would not have the same MC&A requirements as other Category
I facilities if the exclusion is not removed, yet comparable
requirements may be needed to protect against theft and diversion of
separated special nuclear material and other materials. Accordingly, it
is necessary to remove this exclusion to ensure the security of
material in any proposed Category I reprocessing facility.
b. Gap 8--Risk-Informing 10 CFR Part 73 and 10 CFR Part 74
The current type and quantity-based categorization scheme in the
existing regulations may pose an undue regulatory burden in operating a
reprocessing facility. Current requirements for facility processes and
reprocessed fuel assemblies may result in excessive security and
safeguards measures for relatively unattractive materials. Risk-
informing 10 CFR Part 73, ``Physical Protection of Plants and
Materials,'' and 10 CFR Part 74, ``Material Control and Accounting of
Special Nuclear Material,'' is needed to prevent unintended
consequences associated with a type and quantity-based material
categorization scheme for potential materials resulting from a
reprocessing operation.
c. Gap 17--Diversion Path Analysis Requirements
There are no existing regulations for a diversion path analysis
requirement under 10 CFR Part 74. Establishing diversion path analysis
requirements would make 10 CFR Part 74 more risk-informed and would
provide an effective detection and response program to mitigate
potential safeguards vulnerabilities and system weaknesses. Under this
requirement, affected reprocessing facilities would develop a more
risk-informed safeguards program that considers a wide range of
malevolent activities that might involve overt or covert adversaries. A
burden would be imposed upon such facilities to conduct a diversion
path analysis and address any identified vulnerability.
d. Gap 18--Approaches Toward Material Accounting Management
NRC staff is considering different changes and improvements to
material inventory requirements for reprocessing facilities. Currently,
10 CFR 74.59(f) gives predefined quantity limits and timeliness
requirements for Category I facilities, which must perform physical
inventories every 6 months. Predefined limits on inventory difference
determinations and the restriction on inventory periods could pose a
regulatory challenge for reprocessing facilities, due to their large
throughputs and inventories. Modern technology that has been developed
or is being developed will help reprocessing facilities to meet the
existing timeliness and quantity goals. Improved technology, such as
near real time accounting, has been used at certain overseas
reprocessing plants. This and other technologies can provide a more
frequent inventory analysis without a facility shut-down, and will
facilitate meeting the current timeliness and quantity goals.
Additionally, incorporating a material holdup management program
requirement into 10 CFR Part 74 to minimize the impact of material
holdup could facilitate more accurate inventory accounting.
e. Gap 20--Advanced Fuel Cycles and Transuranic Special Nuclear
Material (SNM) Classification
Certain fissile elements such as americium (Am), neptunium (Np),
and others, which are constituents of spent nuclear fuel, are currently
not regulated or treated as other fissile or SNM material. Some
advanced fuel cycle separation methods have the ability to separate
these actinides, resulting in separated and pure fissile products.
However, existing regulations do not address security risks for these
types of fissile material. Although such advanced fuel cycle separation
methods are not industrially mature and are still being researched, if
advanced fuel cycles that separate these fissile elements receive
commercial interest, the Commission may consider revisiting its policy
of excluding these elements as SNM.
III. Risk Gaps
a. Gap 5--Risk Considerations for a Production Facility Licensed Under
10 CFR Part 70
Reprocessing facilities handle larger amounts of radioactive
material than other fuel cycle facilities. These higher amounts
increase the relative risk of these facilities. The NRC revised 10 CFR
Part 70 in 2000 based on a limited number of lower risk fuel cycle
facilities, and the revision did not consider higher risk reprocessing
facilities. These higher risks are not adequately addressed in the
methodology established in 10 CFR Part 70. Therefore, if left
unchanged, the requirements for reprocessing facilities licensed under
10 CFR Part 70 will be the same as those for the lower risk fuel cycle
facilities. The NRC is considering various qualitative and quantitative
approaches for establishing new risk assessment requirements for
reprocessing facilities.
b. Gap 9--Baseline Design Criteria (BDC)/General Design Criteria (GDC)
The existing baseline design criteria (BDC) in 10 CFR Part 70 do
not comprehensively address hazards posed by the operation of a
reprocessing facility. Although Appendix A, ``General Design Criteria
for Nuclear Power Plants,'' to 10 CFR Part 50 provides general design
criteria (GDC) for nuclear power plants, none of these GDC are specific
to reprocessing facilities. The regulations in 10 CFR Part 70 have a
few BDC directed more toward lower risk fuel cycle facilities. The NRC
will consider multiple sources in establishing appropriate BDC or GDC
for reprocessing facilities. The NRC will use the terms BDC and GDC
interchangeably during its discussions.
c. Gap 11--Technical Specifications
The provisions of 10 CFR Part 50 require technical specifications
for reprocessing facilities. Such requirements may not be compatible
with 10 CFR Part 70. For incorporation into 10 CFR Part 70, revisions
will be needed to clarify the division between items relied on for
safety (IROFS), which are derived from an integrated safety analysis
(ISA), and technical specifications. Additionally, changes to technical
specifications would require a license amendment, whereas similar
changes under 10 CFR Part 70 licensed facilities could proceed under
the facility change process in 10 CFR 70.72, ``Facility Changes and
Change Process,'' if the changes meet these requirements.
d. Gap 7--Licensed Operators and Criteria for Testing and Licensing
Operators
Section 107 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, (AEA)
requires production facilities to have licensed operators. However, the
current criteria in 10 CFR Part 55, ``Operators'
[[Page 45171]]
Licenses,'' are not applicable, in whole, to operators of reprocessing
facilities. The NRC needs to develop criteria in 10 CFR Part 55,
``Operators' Licenses,'' or in a reprocessing-specific regulation in a
revised 10 CFR Part 70 or new Part 7X, for testing and licensing
operators of reprocessing facilities.
e. Gap 19--Effluent Controls and Monitoring
The requirements of 10 CFR Part 70 do not sufficiently address
effluent controls and monitoring for reprocessing facilities [e.g.,
implementation of EPA regulations in 40 CFR Part 190, as required by 10
CFR 20.1301(e)]. Additional requirements for effluent controls and
monitoring may be needed for reprocessing facilities because of the
amounts of radioactive material that are handled in them and greater
potential for emissions. Although the regulations in 10 CFR 50.34a,
``Design Objectives for Equipment To Control Releases of Radioactive
Material in Effluents--Nuclear Power Plants,'' and 10 CFR 50.36a,
``Technical Specifications on Effluents from Nuclear Power Reactors,''
specify requirements for utilization facilities, these would require
modification to address reprocessing and recycling facilities.
IV. Licensing Gaps
a. Gap 1--Regulatory Framework Options, Part 50 or Part 70
Currently, licensing a reprocessing facility under 10 CFR Part 50
would pose a significant hindrance to effective and efficient
licensing. The regulations in 10 CFR Part 70, as currently written, do
not provide a regulatory framework to license a reprocessing facility.
Therefore, the staff is evaluating options for either revising Part 50
or Part 70, or develop regulations in a new Part 5X, or Part 7X.
b. Gap 6--Definition for Reprocessing Related Terms
There are currently no definitions of the terms ``reprocessing,''
``recycling,'' and ``vitrification.'' Existing regulations in 10 CFR
Parts 20, 50, 51, 60, 63, 70 and 72 use the term ``reprocessing''
without a definition. Accordingly, such definitions will need to be
developed to describe both reprocessing and reprocessing facilities for
10 CFR Chapter I.
c. Gap 10--One-Step Licensing and Inspection, Testing and Acceptance
Criteria (ITAAC) Requirements
Currently, regulations for one-step licensing of reprocessing
facilities do not exist. One-step licensing necessitates requirements
to verify that the constructed facility conforms to the approved,
licensed design. For reactors, 10 CFR Part 52 identifies these
requirements as ITAAC. The regulations in 10 CFR Part 52 do not apply
to reprocessing or other production facilities, nor do the requirements
for the approval of applications set forth in 10 CFR 70.23,
``Requirements for the Approval of Applications,'' address reprocessing
facilities. Clarity is needed in 10 CFR Part 70 to provide reasonable
assurance that a reprocessing facility, undergoing a one-step licensing
process, will have been constructed and will operate in conformity with
the license, the AEA, and the Commission's rules and regulations.
d. Gap 12--Financial Protection Requirements and Indemnity Agreements
(10 CFR Part 140)
A reprocessing facility cannot be licensed without financial
protection and indemnity agreements. Price Anderson protection and
indemnity fees and amounts for reprocessing facilities are currently
not included in 10 CFR Part 140, ``Financial Protection Requirements
and Indemnity Agreements.'' Additionally, several appendices to 10 CFR
Part 140 do not include forms for reprocessing facilities.
e. Gap 13--Schedule of Fees (10 CFR Part 170)
The scope of 10 CFR Part 170, ``Fees for Facilities, Materials,
Import and Export Licenses, and Other Regulatory Services under the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as Amended,'' does not include a production
facility licensed outside 10 CFR Part 50.
f. Gap 14--Annual Fees (10 CFR Part 171)
The regulations in 10 CFR Part 171, ``Annual Fees for Reactor
Licenses and Fuel Cycle Licenses and Materials Licenses, Including
Holders of Certificates of Compliance, Registrations, and Quality
Assurance Program Approvals and Government Agencies Licensed by the
NRC,'' do not include annual fees for reprocessing facility licenses.
The scope of the regulation, described in 10 CFR 171.3, does not
specifically include reprocessing or production facilities.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 23rd day of July 2010.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Marissa G. Bailey,
Deputy Director, Special Projects and Technical Support Directorate,
Division of Fuel Cycle Safety and Safeguards, Office of Nuclear
Material Safety and Safeguards.
[FR Doc. 2010-18888 Filed 7-30-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P