Omaha Public Power District, Fort Calhoun Station, Unit 1; Exemption, 63671-63672 [2011-26466]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 198 / Thursday, October 13, 2011 / Notices
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. 50–285; NRC–2010–0087]
Omaha Public Power District, Fort
Calhoun Station, Unit 1; Exemption
1.0
Background
Omaha Public Power District (OPPD
or the licensee) is the holder of Facility
Operating License No. DPR–40 which
authorizes operation of the Fort Calhoun
Station, Unit 1 (FCS). The license
provides, among other things, that the
facility is subject to all rules,
regulations, and orders of the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC
or the Commission) now or hereafter in
effect.
The facility consists of one
pressurized-water reactor located in
Washington County, Nebraska.
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
2.0
Request/Action
Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (10 CFR) Part 73, ‘‘Physical
protection of plants and materials,’’
Section 73.55, ‘‘Requirements for
physical protection of licensed activities
in nuclear power reactors against
radiological sabotage,’’ published on
March 27, 2009, effective May 26, 2009,
with a full implementation date of
March 31, 2010, requires licensees to
protect, with high assurance, against
radiological sabotage by designing and
implementing comprehensive site
security programs. The amendments to
10 CFR 73.55 published in the Federal
Register on March 27, 2009 (74 FR
13926), establish and update generically
applicable security requirements similar
to those previously imposed by
Commission orders issued after the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001,
and implemented by licensees. In
addition, the amendments to 10 CFR
73.55 include additional requirements
to further enhance site security based
upon insights gained from
implementation of the post September
11, 2001, security orders. It is from three
of these new requirements that OPPD
originally sought an exemption from the
March 31, 2010, implementation date.
All other physical security requirements
established by this recent rulemaking
have been implemented by the licensee.
By letter dated December 31, 2009, as
supplemented by letter dated January
21, 2010, the licensee requested an
exemption in accordance with 10 CFR
73.5, ‘‘Specific exemptions.’’ Portions of
the licensee’s letters dated December 31,
2009, and January 21, 2010, contain
sensitive unclassified non-safeguards
information (SUNSI) (security-related)
and, accordingly, those portions are
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:50 Oct 12, 2011
Jkt 226001
being withheld from public disclosure.
Publicly available versions of the
licensee’s letters dated December 31,
2009, and January 21, 2010 are available
in the Agencywide Documents
Management and Access System
(ADAMS) at Accession Nos.
ML100050032 and ML100810124,
respectively. By letter dated March 23,
2010 (ADAMS Accession No.
ML100630447), the NRC granted a
previous exemption to OPPD for
specific items subject to the revised rule
in 10 CFR 73.55, allowing the
implementation to be deferred until
October 5, 2011.
Subsequent to issuance of the
scheduler exemption and prior to
completion of the planned physical
protection program upgrades, FCS
experienced sustained flooding
conditions beginning in the spring and
continuing through the summer of 2011.
These abnormal flooding conditions
required the cessation of all work
needed to complete the planned
physical protection program upgrades at
FCS and necessitated the diversion of
all available resources to perform
essential emergency operations and
other compensatory measures. These
actions are deemed necessary to provide
high assurance that activities involving
special nuclear material are not inimical
to the common defense and security and
do not constitute an unreasonable risk
to the public health and safety.
By letter dated September 2, 2011, the
licensee submitted a request for a
schedular exemption to the compliance
date identified in 10 CFR 73.55(a)(1) to
implement two of the original three
requirements stated in 10 CFR part 73
for FCS. Portions of the September 2,
2011, letter contain SUNSI (securityrelated) and, accordingly, those portions
are withheld from public disclosure. A
redacted version of the licensee’s letter
dated September 2, 2011, is available in
ADAMS Accession No. ML11250A059.
In its letter dated September 2, 2011, the
licensee stated that FCS will complete
one of the projects by October 5, 2011,
and the new requested compliance date
for the remaining two requirements is
November 5, 2013.
By e-mail dated September 28, 2011,
the NRC staff requested additional
information from the licensee. The NRC
request contained SUNSI (securityrelated) and, accordingly, is withheld
from public disclosure. By letter dated
September 30, 2011, the licensee
responded to the NRC request for
additional information. Portions of the
licensee’s letter dated September 30,
2011, contain SUNSI (security-related)
and, accordingly, those portions are
withheld from public disclosure. A
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
63671
redacted version of the licensee’s letter
dated September 30, 2011, is available
in ADAMS Accession No.
ML112760629. In its letter dated
September 30, 2011, FCS stated that
interim security measures can be, and
will be taken to achieve compliance
with one of the remaining two
requirements that were addressed in its
letter dated September 2, 2011, leaving
only one requirement for which
compliance cannot be met. Therefore,
the licensee requested a schedular
exemption for one requirement until
November 5, 2013. Granting this
exemption for extending the
implementation date for the one
remaining item would allow the
licensee to complete the modifications
for a more conservative approach for
achieving full compliance.
3.0 Discussion of Part 73 Schedule
Exemptions From the October 5, 2011,
Full Implementation Date
Pursuant to 10 CFR 73.55(a)(1), ‘‘By
March 31, 2010, each nuclear power
reactor licensee, licensed under 10 CFR
part 50, shall implement the
requirements of this section through its
Commission-approved Physical Security
Plan, Training and Qualification Plan,
Safeguards Contingency Plan, and Cyber
Security Plan referred to collectively
hereafter as ‘security plans.’ ’’ Pursuant
to 10 CFR 73.55(b)(1), ‘‘the licensee
shall establish and maintain a physical
protection program, to include a
security organization, which will have
as its objective to provide high
assurance that activities involving
special nuclear material are not inimical
to the common defense and security and
do not constitute an unreasonable risk
to the public health and safety.’’
Pursuant to 10 CFR 73.5, the
Commission may, upon application by
any interested person or upon its own
initiative, grant exemptions from the
requirements of 10 CFR part 73 when
the exemptions are authorized by law
and will not endanger life or property or
the common defense and security, and
are otherwise in the public interest.
NRC approval of this exemption, as
noted above, would allow an extension
from October 5, 2011, until November 5,
2013, of the implementation date for
one specific requirement of the new
rule. As stated above, 10 CFR 73.5
allows the NRC to grant exemptions
from the requirements of 10 CFR part
73. The NRC staff has determined that
granting of the licensee’s proposed
exemption will not result in a violation
of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as
amended, or the Commission’s
regulations. Therefore, the exemption is
authorized by law.
E:\FR\FM\13OCN1.SGM
13OCN1
63672
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 198 / Thursday, October 13, 2011 / Notices
sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
In the draft final rule sent to the
Commission, the NRC staff proposed
that the requirements of the new
regulation be met within 180 days. The
Commission directed a change from 180
days to approximately 1 year for
licensees to fully implement the new
requirements. This change was
incorporated into the final rule. From
this, it is clear that the Commission
wanted to provide a reasonable
timeframe for licensees to reach full
compliance.
As noted in the final rule, the
Commission also anticipated that
licensees would have to conduct sitespecific analyses to determine what
changes were necessary to implement
the rule’s requirements, and that
changes could be accomplished through
a variety of licensing mechanisms,
including exemptions. Since issuance of
the final rule, the Commission has
rejected a request to generically extend
the rule’s compliance date for all
operating nuclear power plants, but
noted that the Commission’s regulations
provide mechanisms for individual
licensees, with good cause, to apply for
relief from the compliance date as
documented in the letter from R. W.
Borchardt (NRC) to M. S. Fertel (Nuclear
Energy Institute) dated June 4, 2009.
The licensee’s request for an exemption
is, therefore, consistent with the
approach set forth by the Commission
and discussed in the NRC letter dated
June 4, 2009.
FCS Schedule Exemption Request
The licensee provided detailed
information in the enclosure/attachment
to its letters dated September 2 and 30,
2011, requesting an exemption. The
licensee is requesting additional time to
implement one specific requirement of
the new rule due to sustained abnormal
flooding conditions throughout the
spring and summer of 2011. The
flooding conditions required the
cessation of all work needed to
complete the planned enhancements to
FCS’s physical protection program and
necessitated diversion of all available
resources to perform essential
emergency operations and other
compensatory measures. The length of
the extension is due to flood damage
and the amount of engineering and
design, material procurement, and
construction and installation activities
involved, while allowing for inclement
weather. The licensee’s submittals
describe a comprehensive plan to
upgrade the security capabilities of the
FCS site and provide a timeline for
achieving full compliance with the new
regulation. The enclosure/attachment to
the licensee’s letters contain SUNSI
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:50 Oct 12, 2011
Jkt 226001
(security-related) regarding the site
security plan, details of the specific
requirement of the regulation that the
site cannot be in compliance with by the
October 5, 2011 deadline, and a timeline
with critical path activities that will
bring the licensee into full compliance
by November 5, 2013. The timeline
provides milestone dates for
engineering, planning and procurement,
implementation, startup and testing,
engineering closeout, and project
closeout. Redacted versions of the
licensee’s letters dated September 2 and
30, 2011, including the enclosure/
attachment, are publicly available at
ADAMS Accession Nos. ML11250A059
and ML112760629, respectively.
Notwithstanding the schedular
exemptions for this limited requirement,
the licensee will continue to be in
compliance with all other applicable
physical security requirements as
described in 10 CFR 73.55 and reflected
in its current NRC-approved physical
security program. By November 5, 2013,
FCS will be in full compliance with all
the regulatory requirements of 10 CFR
73.55, as issued on March 27, 2009.
4.0 Conclusion for Part 73 Schedule
Exemption Request
The NRC staff has reviewed the
licensee’s submittals and concludes that
the licensee has provided adequate
justification for its request for an
extension of the compliance date with
regard to one specified requirement of
10 CFR 73.55 until November 5, 2013.
Accordingly, the Commission has
determined that pursuant to 10 CFR
73.5, ‘‘Specific exemptions,’’ exemption
from the October 5, 2011, compliance
date is authorized by law and will not
endanger life or property or the common
defense and security, and is otherwise
in the public interest. Therefore, the
Commission hereby grants the requested
exemption.
The NRC staff has determined that the
long-term benefits that will be realized
when the FCS security modifications are
complete justifies exceeding the full
compliance date with regard to the
specified requirements of 10 CFR 73.55.
Therefore, the NRC concludes that the
licensee’s actions are in the best interest
of protecting the public health and
safety through the security changes that
will result from granting this exemption.
As per the licensee’s request and the
NRC’s regulatory authority to grant an
exemption from the October 5, 2011,
deadline for the one item specified in
the enclosure/attachment to FCS’s
letters dated September 2 and 30, 2011,
the licensee is required to be in full
compliance with 10 CFR 73.55 by
November 5, 2013. In achieving
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
compliance, the licensee is reminded
that it is responsible for determining the
appropriate licensing mechanism (i.e.,
10 CFR 50.54(p) or 10 CFR 50.90) for
incorporation of all necessary changes
to its security plans.
Pursuant to 10 CFR 51.32, ‘‘Finding of
no significant impact,’’ the Commission
has previously determined that the
granting of this exemption will not have
a significant effect on the quality of the
human environment (January 3, 2011;
76 FR 187).
This exemption is effective upon
issuance.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 5th day
of October 2011.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Michele G. Evans,
Director, Division of Operating Reactor
Licensing, Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation.
[FR Doc. 2011–26466 Filed 10–12–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. 70–7022; NRC–2011–0236]
Notice of Acceptance of Application
for Special Nuclear Materials License
From Passport Systems, Inc.,
Opportunity To Request a Hearing, and
Order Imposing Procedures for Access
to Sensitive Unclassified NonSafeguards Information for Contention
Preparation
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of license application,
opportunity to request a hearing, and
Order Imposing Procedures for Access
to Sensitive Unclassified NonSafeguards Information for Contention
Preparation.
AGENCY:
Requests for a hearing or Leave
to Intervene must be filed by December
12, 2011. Any potential party as defined
in Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (10 CFR) 2.4 who believes
access to Sensitive Unclassified NonSafeguards Information (SUNSI)
information is necessary to respond to
this notice must request document
access by October 24, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You can access publicly
available documents related to this
document 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, O1–F21,
One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\13OCN1.SGM
13OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 198 (Thursday, October 13, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 63671-63672]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-26466]
[[Page 63671]]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket No. 50-285; NRC-2010-0087]
Omaha Public Power District, Fort Calhoun Station, Unit 1;
Exemption
1.0 Background
Omaha Public Power District (OPPD or the licensee) is the holder of
Facility Operating License No. DPR-40 which authorizes operation of the
Fort Calhoun Station, Unit 1 (FCS). The license provides, among other
things, that the facility is subject to all rules, regulations, and
orders of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC or the
Commission) now or hereafter in effect.
The facility consists of one pressurized-water reactor located in
Washington County, Nebraska.
2.0 Request/Action
Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) Part 73,
``Physical protection of plants and materials,'' Section 73.55,
``Requirements for physical protection of licensed activities in
nuclear power reactors against radiological sabotage,'' published on
March 27, 2009, effective May 26, 2009, with a full implementation date
of March 31, 2010, requires licensees to protect, with high assurance,
against radiological sabotage by designing and implementing
comprehensive site security programs. The amendments to 10 CFR 73.55
published in the Federal Register on March 27, 2009 (74 FR 13926),
establish and update generically applicable security requirements
similar to those previously imposed by Commission orders issued after
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and implemented by
licensees. In addition, the amendments to 10 CFR 73.55 include
additional requirements to further enhance site security based upon
insights gained from implementation of the post September 11, 2001,
security orders. It is from three of these new requirements that OPPD
originally sought an exemption from the March 31, 2010, implementation
date. All other physical security requirements established by this
recent rulemaking have been implemented by the licensee.
By letter dated December 31, 2009, as supplemented by letter dated
January 21, 2010, the licensee requested an exemption in accordance
with 10 CFR 73.5, ``Specific exemptions.'' Portions of the licensee's
letters dated December 31, 2009, and January 21, 2010, contain
sensitive unclassified non-safeguards information (SUNSI) (security-
related) and, accordingly, those portions are being withheld from
public disclosure. Publicly available versions of the licensee's
letters dated December 31, 2009, and January 21, 2010 are available in
the Agencywide Documents Management and Access System (ADAMS) at
Accession Nos. ML100050032 and ML100810124, respectively. By letter
dated March 23, 2010 (ADAMS Accession No. ML100630447), the NRC granted
a previous exemption to OPPD for specific items subject to the revised
rule in 10 CFR 73.55, allowing the implementation to be deferred until
October 5, 2011.
Subsequent to issuance of the scheduler exemption and prior to
completion of the planned physical protection program upgrades, FCS
experienced sustained flooding conditions beginning in the spring and
continuing through the summer of 2011. These abnormal flooding
conditions required the cessation of all work needed to complete the
planned physical protection program upgrades at FCS and necessitated
the diversion of all available resources to perform essential emergency
operations and other compensatory measures. These actions are deemed
necessary to provide high assurance that activities involving special
nuclear material are not inimical to the common defense and security
and do not constitute an unreasonable risk to the public health and
safety.
By letter dated September 2, 2011, the licensee submitted a request
for a schedular exemption to the compliance date identified in 10 CFR
73.55(a)(1) to implement two of the original three requirements stated
in 10 CFR part 73 for FCS. Portions of the September 2, 2011, letter
contain SUNSI (security-related) and, accordingly, those portions are
withheld from public disclosure. A redacted version of the licensee's
letter dated September 2, 2011, is available in ADAMS Accession No.
ML11250A059. In its letter dated September 2, 2011, the licensee stated
that FCS will complete one of the projects by October 5, 2011, and the
new requested compliance date for the remaining two requirements is
November 5, 2013.
By e-mail dated September 28, 2011, the NRC staff requested
additional information from the licensee. The NRC request contained
SUNSI (security-related) and, accordingly, is withheld from public
disclosure. By letter dated September 30, 2011, the licensee responded
to the NRC request for additional information. Portions of the
licensee's letter dated September 30, 2011, contain SUNSI (security-
related) and, accordingly, those portions are withheld from public
disclosure. A redacted version of the licensee's letter dated September
30, 2011, is available in ADAMS Accession No. ML112760629. In its
letter dated September 30, 2011, FCS stated that interim security
measures can be, and will be taken to achieve compliance with one of
the remaining two requirements that were addressed in its letter dated
September 2, 2011, leaving only one requirement for which compliance
cannot be met. Therefore, the licensee requested a schedular exemption
for one requirement until November 5, 2013. Granting this exemption for
extending the implementation date for the one remaining item would
allow the licensee to complete the modifications for a more
conservative approach for achieving full compliance.
3.0 Discussion of Part 73 Schedule Exemptions From the October 5, 2011,
Full Implementation Date
Pursuant to 10 CFR 73.55(a)(1), ``By March 31, 2010, each nuclear
power reactor licensee, licensed under 10 CFR part 50, shall implement
the requirements of this section through its Commission-approved
Physical Security Plan, Training and Qualification Plan, Safeguards
Contingency Plan, and Cyber Security Plan referred to collectively
hereafter as `security plans.' '' Pursuant to 10 CFR 73.55(b)(1), ``the
licensee shall establish and maintain a physical protection program, to
include a security organization, which will have as its objective to
provide high assurance that activities involving special nuclear
material are not inimical to the common defense and security and do not
constitute an unreasonable risk to the public health and safety.''
Pursuant to 10 CFR 73.5, the Commission may, upon application by any
interested person or upon its own initiative, grant exemptions from the
requirements of 10 CFR part 73 when the exemptions are authorized by
law and will not endanger life or property or the common defense and
security, and are otherwise in the public interest.
NRC approval of this exemption, as noted above, would allow an
extension from October 5, 2011, until November 5, 2013, of the
implementation date for one specific requirement of the new rule. As
stated above, 10 CFR 73.5 allows the NRC to grant exemptions from the
requirements of 10 CFR part 73. The NRC staff has determined that
granting of the licensee's proposed exemption will not result in a
violation of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, or the
Commission's regulations. Therefore, the exemption is authorized by
law.
[[Page 63672]]
In the draft final rule sent to the Commission, the NRC staff
proposed that the requirements of the new regulation be met within 180
days. The Commission directed a change from 180 days to approximately 1
year for licensees to fully implement the new requirements. This change
was incorporated into the final rule. From this, it is clear that the
Commission wanted to provide a reasonable timeframe for licensees to
reach full compliance.
As noted in the final rule, the Commission also anticipated that
licensees would have to conduct site-specific analyses to determine
what changes were necessary to implement the rule's requirements, and
that changes could be accomplished through a variety of licensing
mechanisms, including exemptions. Since issuance of the final rule, the
Commission has rejected a request to generically extend the rule's
compliance date for all operating nuclear power plants, but noted that
the Commission's regulations provide mechanisms for individual
licensees, with good cause, to apply for relief from the compliance
date as documented in the letter from R. W. Borchardt (NRC) to M. S.
Fertel (Nuclear Energy Institute) dated June 4, 2009. The licensee's
request for an exemption is, therefore, consistent with the approach
set forth by the Commission and discussed in the NRC letter dated June
4, 2009.
FCS Schedule Exemption Request
The licensee provided detailed information in the enclosure/
attachment to its letters dated September 2 and 30, 2011, requesting an
exemption. The licensee is requesting additional time to implement one
specific requirement of the new rule due to sustained abnormal flooding
conditions throughout the spring and summer of 2011. The flooding
conditions required the cessation of all work needed to complete the
planned enhancements to FCS's physical protection program and
necessitated diversion of all available resources to perform essential
emergency operations and other compensatory measures. The length of the
extension is due to flood damage and the amount of engineering and
design, material procurement, and construction and installation
activities involved, while allowing for inclement weather. The
licensee's submittals describe a comprehensive plan to upgrade the
security capabilities of the FCS site and provide a timeline for
achieving full compliance with the new regulation. The enclosure/
attachment to the licensee's letters contain SUNSI (security-related)
regarding the site security plan, details of the specific requirement
of the regulation that the site cannot be in compliance with by the
October 5, 2011 deadline, and a timeline with critical path activities
that will bring the licensee into full compliance by November 5, 2013.
The timeline provides milestone dates for engineering, planning and
procurement, implementation, startup and testing, engineering closeout,
and project closeout. Redacted versions of the licensee's letters dated
September 2 and 30, 2011, including the enclosure/attachment, are
publicly available at ADAMS Accession Nos. ML11250A059 and ML112760629,
respectively.
Notwithstanding the schedular exemptions for this limited
requirement, the licensee will continue to be in compliance with all
other applicable physical security requirements as described in 10 CFR
73.55 and reflected in its current NRC-approved physical security
program. By November 5, 2013, FCS will be in full compliance with all
the regulatory requirements of 10 CFR 73.55, as issued on March 27,
2009.
4.0 Conclusion for Part 73 Schedule Exemption Request
The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's submittals and concludes
that the licensee has provided adequate justification for its request
for an extension of the compliance date with regard to one specified
requirement of 10 CFR 73.55 until November 5, 2013.
Accordingly, the Commission has determined that pursuant to 10 CFR
73.5, ``Specific exemptions,'' exemption from the October 5, 2011,
compliance date is authorized by law and will not endanger life or
property or the common defense and security, and is otherwise in the
public interest. Therefore, the Commission hereby grants the requested
exemption.
The NRC staff has determined that the long-term benefits that will
be realized when the FCS security modifications are complete justifies
exceeding the full compliance date with regard to the specified
requirements of 10 CFR 73.55. Therefore, the NRC concludes that the
licensee's actions are in the best interest of protecting the public
health and safety through the security changes that will result from
granting this exemption.
As per the licensee's request and the NRC's regulatory authority to
grant an exemption from the October 5, 2011, deadline for the one item
specified in the enclosure/attachment to FCS's letters dated September
2 and 30, 2011, the licensee is required to be in full compliance with
10 CFR 73.55 by November 5, 2013. In achieving compliance, the licensee
is reminded that it is responsible for determining the appropriate
licensing mechanism (i.e., 10 CFR 50.54(p) or 10 CFR 50.90) for
incorporation of all necessary changes to its security plans.
Pursuant to 10 CFR 51.32, ``Finding of no significant impact,'' the
Commission has previously determined that the granting of this
exemption will not have a significant effect on the quality of the
human environment (January 3, 2011; 76 FR 187).
This exemption is effective upon issuance.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 5th day of October 2011.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Michele G. Evans,
Director, Division of Operating Reactor Licensing, Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation.
[FR Doc. 2011-26466 Filed 10-12-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P