Notice of Public Meeting and Request for Comments on the Potential Revision of the Branch Technical Position on Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation, 4739-4741 [2011-1611]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 17 / Wednesday, January 26, 2011 / Notices
issues and facts, and formulate
proposed positions and actions, as
appropriate, for deliberation by the Full
Committee.
Members of the public desiring to
provide oral statements and/or written
comments should notify the Designated
Federal Official (DFO), Michael Benson
(Telephone 301–415–6396 or E-mail:
Michael.Benson@nrc.gov) five days
prior to the meeting, if possible, so that
appropriate arrangements can be made.
Thirty-five hard copies of each
presentation or handout should be
provided to the DFO thirty minutes
before the meeting. In addition, one
electronic copy of each presentation
should be e-mailed to the DFO one day
before the meeting. If an electronic copy
cannot be provided within this
timeframe, presenters should provide
the DFO with a CD containing each
presentation at least thirty minutes
before the meeting. Electronic
recordings will be permitted only
during those portions of the meeting
that are open to the public. Detailed
procedures for the conduct of and
participation in ACRS meetings were
published in the Federal Register on
October 21, 2010, (75 FR 65038–65039).
Detailed meeting agendas and meeting
transcripts are available on the NRC
Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/readingrm/doc-collections/acrs. Information
regarding topics to be discussed,
changes to the agenda, whether the
meeting has been canceled or
rescheduled, and the time allotted to
present oral statements can be obtained
from the Web site cited above or by
contacting the identified DFO.
Moreover, in view of the possibility that
the schedule for ACRS meetings may be
adjusted by the Chairman as necessary
to facilitate the conduct of the meeting,
persons planning to attend should check
with these references if such
rescheduling would result in a major
inconvenience.
Dated: January 20, 2011.
Cayetano Santos,
Chief, Reactor Safety Branch A, Advisory
Committee on Reactor Safeguards.
[FR Doc. 2011–1609 Filed 1–25–11; 8:45 am]
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Advisory Committee on Reactor
Safeguards (ACRS); Meeting of the
ACRS Subcommittee on U.S.
Evolutionary Power Reactor (U.S.
EPR); Notice of Meeting
The ACRS Subcommittee on U.S. EPR
will hold a meeting on February 7–8,
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2011, Room T–2B1, 11545 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland.
The entire meeting will be open to
public attendance, except for portions of
the meeting on February 8, 2011 which
may be closed to protect proprietary
information pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
552b(4).
The agenda for the subject meeting
shall be as follows:
Monday, February 7, 2011—8:30 a.m.
until 5 p.m. and Tuesday, February 8,
2011—8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m.
The Subcommittee will review topical
reports which support Chapter 6 and
Chapter 15 of the U.S. EPR Safety
Evaluation Report (SER) with Open
Items. The Subcommittee will hear
presentations by and hold discussions
with representatives of AREVA Inc., the
NRC staff and other interested persons
regarding this matter. The
Subcommittee will gather information,
analyze relevant issues and facts, and
formulate proposed positions and
actions, as appropriate, for deliberation
by the Full Committee.
Members of the public desiring to
provide oral statements and/or written
comments should notify the Designated
Federal Official (DFO), Derek Widmayer
(Telephone 301–415–7366 or E-mail:
Derek.Widmayer@nrc.gov) five days
prior to the meeting, if possible, so that
appropriate arrangements can be made.
Thirty-five hard copies of each
presentation or handout should be
provided to the DFO thirty minutes
before the meeting. In addition, one
electronic copy of each presentation
should be e-mailed to the DFO one day
before the meeting. If an electronic copy
cannot be provided within this
timeframe, presenters should provide
the DFO with a CD containing each
presentation at least thirty minutes
before the meeting. Electronic
recordings will be permitted only
during those portions of the meeting
that are open to the public. Detailed
procedures for the conduct of and
participation in ACRS meetings were
published in the Federal Register on
October 21, 2010, (75 FR 65038–65039).
Detailed meeting agendas and meeting
transcripts are available on the NRC
Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/readingrm/doc-collections/acrs. Information
regarding topics to be discussed,
changes to the agenda, whether the
meeting has been canceled or
rescheduled, and the time allotted to
present oral statements can be obtained
from the Web site cited above or by
contacting the identified DFO.
Moreover, in view of the possibility that
the schedule for ACRS meetings may be
adjusted by the Chairman as necessary
to facilitate the conduct of the meeting,
PO 00000
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4739
persons planning to attend should check
with these references if such
rescheduling would result in a major
inconvenience.
Dated: January 20, 2011.
Antonio Dias,
Chief, Reactor Safety Branch B, Advisory
Committee on Reactor Safeguards.
[FR Doc. 2011–1610 Filed 1–25–11; 8:45 am]
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[NRC–2011–0022]
Notice of Public Meeting and Request
for Comments on the Potential
Revision of the Branch Technical
Position on Concentration Averaging
and Encapsulation
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Public Meeting and
Request for Comments on Issues Related
to the Revision of the Branch Technical
Position on Concentration Averaging
and Encapsulation.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) plans to conduct a
public meeting on February 24, 2011, in
Rockville, Maryland, to solicit input on
issues associated with revising the
Branch Technical Position (BTP) on
Concentration Averaging and
Encapsulation (CA BTP). Revising the
BTP was ranked as a high priority in
NRC’s strategic assessment of its lowlevel radioactive waste regulatory
program (SECY–07–0180). Since then,
NRC has focused on blending of lowlevel radioactive waste (LLRW), one of
eight major areas in the CA BTP. In
SECY–10–0043, the staff provided the
Commission with an analysis of issues
related to LLRW blending. In the Staff
Requirements Memorandum (SRM) for
SECY–10–0043, the Commission
directed the staff to revise the blending
position in the CA BTP to be riskinformed and performance-based. With
this decision, the staff is in a position
to update the entire CA BTP, not only
addressing blending, but also the
remainder of the CA BTP topics that
address mathematical averaging of
radioactivity concentrations. The staff is
holding a public meeting to obtain
comments from stakeholders on how the
CA BTP could be revised to be more
aligned with the NRC’s position of riskinformed performance-based
regulations.
DATES: Members of the public may
provide feedback at the transcribed
public meeting or may submit written
SUMMARY:
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4740
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 17 / Wednesday, January 26, 2011 / Notices
comments on the issues discussed in
this notice. Comments on the issues and
questions presented in this notice and
discussed at the meeting should be
postmarked no later than April 15, 2011.
Comments received after this date will
be considered if it is practical to do so.
NRC plans to consider these stakeholder
views in the development of a revised
draft CA BTP. The staff expects to issue
a draft for public comment later this
year.
Written comments may be sent to the
address listed in the ADDRESSES section.
Questions about participation in the
public workshops should be directed to
the facilitator at the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section. Replies should be
directed to the points of contact listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
The public meeting will be held on
February 24, 2011, from 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. at the Legacy Hotel, 1775
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland
20852.
The agenda for the public meeting
will be noticed no fewer than ten (10)
days prior to the meeting on the NRC’s
electronic public workshop schedule at
https://www.nrc.gov/public-involve/
public-meetings/index.cfm. Please refer
to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this notice for questions that
will be discussed at the meeting. The
supplemental information below also
contains a copy of a preliminary draft of
a revised CA BTP. The official CA BTP
is available in the Agencywide
Documents Access and Management
System (ADAMS) under ML033630732.
Please refer to this version as NRC’s
official CA BTP document.
As a first step in revising the CA BTP,
the staff has prepared a preliminary
draft for review by stakeholders. This
draft is meant to serve as a starting point
for NRC’s efforts to revise the document.
This version does not revise the basic
positions in the CA BTP to make them
more risk-informed. Rather, it clarifies
language, defines terms, and is
reorganized so that stakeholders can
more efficiently review the document
(ADAMS ML103430088).
In 2009, the Electric Power Research
Institute (EPRI) sent a report to the NRC
entitled, ‘‘Proposed Modification to the
NRC Branch Technical Position on
Concentration Averaging and
Encapsulation.’’ The EPRI report
provided comments on the CA BTP. The
staff has no position at this time on the
EPRI report, and will consider it along
with all other comments received from
stakeholders in developing a revised
draft of the CA BTP. The revisions
suggested in this report are likely to be
discussed in the upcoming workshop.
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You may submit comments
by any one of the following methods.
Please include Docket ID NRC–2011–
0022 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,
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–2011–0022. Address questions
about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher,
telephone: 301–492–3668, e-mail: Carol.
Gallagher@nrc.gov.
Mail comments to: Cindy Bladey,
Chief, Rules, Announcements and
Directives Branch (RADB), 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 RADB 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, Room O1–
F21, One White Flint North, 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland
20852–2738.
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 EPRI report is
available electronically under ADAMS
Accession Number ML090230211 and
ML090230195.
ADDRESSES:
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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–2011–0022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Maurice Heath, Office of Federal and
State Materials and Environmental
Management Programs, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001; telephone: 301–415–
3137; e-mail: Maurice.Heath@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
To provide protection of individuals
from inadvertent intrusion into a waste
disposal facility (a requirement in 10
CFR 61.42), radioactive waste proposed
for near-surface disposal must be
classified, based on its hazard to the
intruder, to ensure its suitability for
such disposal. ‘‘Licensing Requirements
for Land Disposal of Radioactive Waste,’’
10 CFR Part 61, establishes a waste
classification system based on the
concentration of specific radionuclides
contained in the waste. The regulation
also states, in 10 CFR 61.55(a)(8), that
‘‘The concentration of a radionuclide [in
waste] may be averaged over the volume
of the waste, or weight of the waste if
the units [on the values tabulated in the
concentration tables] are expressed as
nanocuries per gram’’.
The NRC initially developed a
technical position on radioactive waste
classification in May 1983 (ADAMS
ML033630755). That technical position
paper described overall procedures
acceptable to NRC staff that could be
used by licensees to determine the
presence and concentrations of the
radionuclides listed in 10 CFR 61.55,
and thereby classify waste for nearsurface disposal.
In 1995 the NRC staff published the
CA BTP. The 1995 version expanded
and further defined Section C.3 of the
1983 BTP dealing with concentration
averaging. In 2007 the NRC staff
performed a Strategic Assessment of the
NRC Low-Level Waste Regulatory
Program. The staff informed the
Commission, in SECY–07–0180, that it
would update the CA BTP and that it
was a high priority task. The staff stated
the CA BTP would be revised to use
risk-informed approaches.
In 2010 the NRC staff responded to
the Commission’s request to provide
options for the NRC’s policy on the
blending of low-level waste (SECY–10–
0043). LLRW blending is one of eight
topic areas in the CA BTP. The
Commission, in the SRM for SECY–10–
0043, adopted the staff’s
recommendation to revise the blending
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position contained in the CA BTP. The
Commission agreed with the staff’s
approach to revise the blending
guidance to be risk-informed and
performance-based, which supports the
agency’s regulatory goals. With this
direction from the Commission, the staff
is initiating revisions to the entire CA
BTP to include the Commission’s new
position on blending, as well as to
consider risk-informed, performancebased approaches for the remainder of
the CA BTP.
II. Questions Related to Branch
Technical Position
This section identifies questions
associated with revising the CA BTP.
These questions are not meant to be a
complete or final list, but are intended
to initiate discussion. These questions
will help to focus the discussion at the
public meeting. All public feedback will
be considered in developing a draft for
later public review and comment.
1. NUREG–1854, ‘‘NRC Staff Guidance
for Activities Related to U.S.
Department of Energy Waste
Determinations—Draft Final Report for
Interim Use,’’ issued August 2007,’’
contains extensive guidance for sitespecific evaluations of intruder
protection. The approach in the NUREG
was endorsed by NRC’s Advisory
Committee on Nuclear Waste and
Materials, which also recommended
that the staff evaluate a broader
application of the new concentration
averaging methodology to wastes other
than ‘‘waste incidental to reprocessing.’’
How could approaches in that guidance
be used in revising the CA BTP?
2. Part 61 limits the disposal of Cs-137
to 4,600 Ci/m3, yet the CA BTP
guidance for disposal of discrete Cs-137
sources recommends a limit of 30 Ci in
0.2 m3 (150 Ci/m3). Given the large
disparity between the CA BTP guidance
and Part 61, and given the need to
dispose of large Cs-137 sources, should
NRC consider revising the 30 Ci in 0.2
m3 recommendation found in the CA
BTP?
3. The rulemaking for unique waste
streams (see SECY–08–0147 and the
SRM–SECY–08–0147) will protect the
inadvertent human intruder by
requiring a site- and waste-specific
assessment. The current CA BTP defines
acceptable practices for applying the
61.55 tables, to insure that inadvertent
human intruder is protected (as
intended in the draft and final
Environmental Impact Statement for
Part 61). Given the NRC’s move towards
site- and waste-specific analyses to
demonstrate protection of the intruder—
is the CA BTP necessary, or could it be
eliminated?
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4. The volume over which waste
concentrations are averaged has a
significant effect on waste classification.
The current CA BTP addresses
averaging over a waste package. Others
have suggested that averaging occur
over the volume of waste that an
inadvertent intruder would be exposed
to, or the volume of a disposal trench.
What are the pros and cons of these
approaches?
5. For blending homogeneous waste
types, the NRC will be requiring a siteand waste-specific intruder analysis, so
as to be risk-informed and performancebased. In requiring a site- and wastespecific analysis for homogeneous waste
types, the NRC is moving away from the
CA BTP’s ‘‘factor of 10 rule’’ for
individual contributors to a mixture of
homogeneous waste types. Should NRC
also move away from the ‘‘factor of 10
rule’’ for non-primary gamma emitters
and away from the ‘‘factor of 1.5 rule’’
for primary gamma emitters?
6. What limits on the types of LLW
that can be blended should be specified
in the CA BTP? Specifically, should
blending of cartridge filters and sealed
sources to form homogeneous mixtures
be addressed in the CA BTP?
7. In the Commission’s October 13,
2010, decision on LLRW blending, it
stated that ‘‘* * * [Greater than Class C]
GTCC waste is a Federal responsibility
and * * * should not be made into a
State responsibility, even if the waste
has been blended into a lower
classification.’’ What unique guidance
will GTCC waste require in the BTP,
given this direction? For example, when
should waste be classified? (Waste is
currently not required to be classified
until it is shipped for disposal).
8. How should NRC consider
heterogeneity in waste concentrations in
the site-specific intruder analysis? Does
there need to be guidance on how to
interpret intruder analysis results with
respect to waste heterogeneity?
9. 10 CFR 61.55(a)(8), allows for
averaging of waste concentrations in
determining the classification of waste.
Such averaging should continue to
protect an inadvertent intruder in a
waste disposal facility, one of the four
performance objectives in 10 CFR Part
61.
• How do other programs for
managing and disposing of waste treat
protection of an inadvertent intruder?
• Do they allow for averaging, and if
so, what are the constraints?
• Could or should NRC harmonize its
approach with these other programs? If
so, would changes need to be made to
NRC regulations, or could they be made
in guidance?
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4741
Dated at Rockville, Maryland this 20th day
of January 2011.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Gregory F. Suber,
Acting 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. 2011–1611 Filed 1–25–11; 8:45 am]
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[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 17 (Wednesday, January 26, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 4739-4741]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-1611]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[NRC-2011-0022]
Notice of Public Meeting and Request for Comments on the
Potential Revision of the Branch Technical Position on Concentration
Averaging and Encapsulation
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Notice of Public Meeting and Request for Comments on Issues
Related to the Revision of the Branch Technical Position on
Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) plans to conduct
a public meeting on February 24, 2011, in Rockville, Maryland, to
solicit input on issues associated with revising the Branch Technical
Position (BTP) on Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation (CA BTP).
Revising the BTP was ranked as a high priority in NRC's strategic
assessment of its low-level radioactive waste regulatory program (SECY-
07-0180). Since then, NRC has focused on blending of low-level
radioactive waste (LLRW), one of eight major areas in the CA BTP. In
SECY-10-0043, the staff provided the Commission with an analysis of
issues related to LLRW blending. In the Staff Requirements Memorandum
(SRM) for SECY-10-0043, the Commission directed the staff to revise the
blending position in the CA BTP to be risk-informed and performance-
based. With this decision, the staff is in a position to update the
entire CA BTP, not only addressing blending, but also the remainder of
the CA BTP topics that address mathematical averaging of radioactivity
concentrations. The staff is holding a public meeting to obtain
comments from stakeholders on how the CA BTP could be revised to be
more aligned with the NRC's position of risk-informed performance-based
regulations.
DATES: Members of the public may provide feedback at the transcribed
public meeting or may submit written
[[Page 4740]]
comments on the issues discussed in this notice. Comments on the issues
and questions presented in this notice and discussed at the meeting
should be postmarked no later than April 15, 2011. Comments received
after this date will be considered if it is practical to do so. NRC
plans to consider these stakeholder views in the development of a
revised draft CA BTP. The staff expects to issue a draft for public
comment later this year.
Written comments may be sent to the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section. Questions about participation in the public workshops should
be directed to the facilitator at the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section. Replies should be directed to the points of contact listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
The public meeting will be held on February 24, 2011, from 8:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Legacy Hotel, 1775 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland 20852.
The agenda for the public meeting will be noticed no fewer than ten
(10) days prior to the meeting on the NRC's electronic public workshop
schedule at https://www.nrc.gov/public-involve/public-meetings/index.cfm. Please refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this notice for questions that will be discussed at the meeting. The
supplemental information below also contains a copy of a preliminary
draft of a revised CA BTP. The official CA BTP is available in the
Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) under
ML033630732. Please refer to this version as NRC's official CA BTP
document.
As a first step in revising the CA BTP, the staff has prepared a
preliminary draft for review by stakeholders. This draft is meant to
serve as a starting point for NRC's efforts to revise the document.
This version does not revise the basic positions in the CA BTP to make
them more risk-informed. Rather, it clarifies language, defines terms,
and is reorganized so that stakeholders can more efficiently review the
document (ADAMS ML103430088).
In 2009, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) sent a report
to the NRC entitled, ``Proposed Modification to the NRC Branch
Technical Position on Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation.'' The
EPRI report provided comments on the CA BTP. The staff has no position
at this time on the EPRI report, and will consider it along with all
other comments received from stakeholders in developing a revised draft
of the CA BTP. The revisions suggested in this report are likely to be
discussed in the upcoming workshop.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any one of the following methods.
Please include Docket ID NRC-2011-0022 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,
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-2011-0022. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher, telephone: 301-492-
3668, e-mail: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
Mail comments to: Cindy Bladey, Chief, Rules, Announcements and
Directives Branch (RADB), 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 RADB 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, Room
O1-F21, One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland 20852-2738.
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 EPRI report is available electronically under
ADAMS Accession Number ML090230211 and ML090230195.
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-2011-0022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Maurice Heath, Office of Federal and
State Materials and Environmental Management Programs, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001; telephone: 301-415-
3137; e-mail: Maurice.Heath@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
To provide protection of individuals from inadvertent intrusion
into a waste disposal facility (a requirement in 10 CFR 61.42),
radioactive waste proposed for near-surface disposal must be
classified, based on its hazard to the intruder, to ensure its
suitability for such disposal. ``Licensing Requirements for Land
Disposal of Radioactive Waste,'' 10 CFR Part 61, establishes a waste
classification system based on the concentration of specific
radionuclides contained in the waste. The regulation also states, in 10
CFR 61.55(a)(8), that ``The concentration of a radionuclide [in waste]
may be averaged over the volume of the waste, or weight of the waste if
the units [on the values tabulated in the concentration tables] are
expressed as nanocuries per gram''.
The NRC initially developed a technical position on radioactive
waste classification in May 1983 (ADAMS ML033630755). That technical
position paper described overall procedures acceptable to NRC staff
that could be used by licensees to determine the presence and
concentrations of the radionuclides listed in 10 CFR 61.55, and thereby
classify waste for near-surface disposal.
In 1995 the NRC staff published the CA BTP. The 1995 version
expanded and further defined Section C.3 of the 1983 BTP dealing with
concentration averaging. In 2007 the NRC staff performed a Strategic
Assessment of the NRC Low-Level Waste Regulatory Program. The staff
informed the Commission, in SECY-07-0180, that it would update the CA
BTP and that it was a high priority task. The staff stated the CA BTP
would be revised to use risk-informed approaches.
In 2010 the NRC staff responded to the Commission's request to
provide options for the NRC's policy on the blending of low-level waste
(SECY-10-0043). LLRW blending is one of eight topic areas in the CA
BTP. The Commission, in the SRM for SECY-10-0043, adopted the staff's
recommendation to revise the blending
[[Page 4741]]
position contained in the CA BTP. The Commission agreed with the
staff's approach to revise the blending guidance to be risk-informed
and performance-based, which supports the agency's regulatory goals.
With this direction from the Commission, the staff is initiating
revisions to the entire CA BTP to include the Commission's new position
on blending, as well as to consider risk-informed, performance-based
approaches for the remainder of the CA BTP.
II. Questions Related to Branch Technical Position
This section identifies questions associated with revising the CA
BTP. These questions are not meant to be a complete or final list, but
are intended to initiate discussion. These questions will help to focus
the discussion at the public meeting. All public feedback will be
considered in developing a draft for later public review and comment.
1. NUREG-1854, ``NRC Staff Guidance for Activities Related to U.S.
Department of Energy Waste Determinations--Draft Final Report for
Interim Use,'' issued August 2007,'' contains extensive guidance for
site-specific evaluations of intruder protection. The approach in the
NUREG was endorsed by NRC's Advisory Committee on Nuclear Waste and
Materials, which also recommended that the staff evaluate a broader
application of the new concentration averaging methodology to wastes
other than ``waste incidental to reprocessing.'' How could approaches
in that guidance be used in revising the CA BTP?
2. Part 61 limits the disposal of Cs-137 to 4,600 Ci/m\3\, yet the
CA BTP guidance for disposal of discrete Cs-137 sources recommends a
limit of 30 Ci in 0.2 m\3\ (150 Ci/m\3\). Given the large disparity
between the CA BTP guidance and Part 61, and given the need to dispose
of large Cs-137 sources, should NRC consider revising the 30 Ci in 0.2
m\3\ recommendation found in the CA BTP?
3. The rulemaking for unique waste streams (see SECY-08-0147 and
the SRM-SECY-08-0147) will protect the inadvertent human intruder by
requiring a site- and waste-specific assessment. The current CA BTP
defines acceptable practices for applying the 61.55 tables, to insure
that inadvertent human intruder is protected (as intended in the draft
and final Environmental Impact Statement for Part 61). Given the NRC's
move towards site- and waste-specific analyses to demonstrate
protection of the intruder--is the CA BTP necessary, or could it be
eliminated?
4. The volume over which waste concentrations are averaged has a
significant effect on waste classification. The current CA BTP
addresses averaging over a waste package. Others have suggested that
averaging occur over the volume of waste that an inadvertent intruder
would be exposed to, or the volume of a disposal trench. What are the
pros and cons of these approaches?
5. For blending homogeneous waste types, the NRC will be requiring
a site- and waste-specific intruder analysis, so as to be risk-informed
and performance-based. In requiring a site- and waste-specific analysis
for homogeneous waste types, the NRC is moving away from the CA BTP's
``factor of 10 rule'' for individual contributors to a mixture of
homogeneous waste types. Should NRC also move away from the ``factor of
10 rule'' for non-primary gamma emitters and away from the ``factor of
1.5 rule'' for primary gamma emitters?
6. What limits on the types of LLW that can be blended should be
specified in the CA BTP? Specifically, should blending of cartridge
filters and sealed sources to form homogeneous mixtures be addressed in
the CA BTP?
7. In the Commission's October 13, 2010, decision on LLRW blending,
it stated that ``* * * [Greater than Class C] GTCC waste is a Federal
responsibility and * * * should not be made into a State
responsibility, even if the waste has been blended into a lower
classification.'' What unique guidance will GTCC waste require in the
BTP, given this direction? For example, when should waste be
classified? (Waste is currently not required to be classified until it
is shipped for disposal).
8. How should NRC consider heterogeneity in waste concentrations in
the site-specific intruder analysis? Does there need to be guidance on
how to interpret intruder analysis results with respect to waste
heterogeneity?
9. 10 CFR 61.55(a)(8), allows for averaging of waste concentrations
in determining the classification of waste. Such averaging should
continue to protect an inadvertent intruder in a waste disposal
facility, one of the four performance objectives in 10 CFR Part 61.
How do other programs for managing and disposing of waste
treat protection of an inadvertent intruder?
Do they allow for averaging, and if so, what are the
constraints?
Could or should NRC harmonize its approach with these
other programs? If so, would changes need to be made to NRC
regulations, or could they be made in guidance?
Dated at Rockville, Maryland this 20th day of January 2011.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Gregory F. Suber,
Acting 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. 2011-1611 Filed 1-25-11; 8:45 am]
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