Assistance to Foreign Atomic Energy Activities, 9359-9380 [2015-03479]
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9359
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 80, No. 35
Monday, February 23, 2015
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Part 810
RIN 1994–AA02
Assistance to Foreign Atomic Energy
Activities
National Nuclear Security
Administration (NNSA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
DOE is issuing the first
comprehensive updating of regulations
concerning Assistance to Foreign
Atomic Energy Activities since 1986,
reflecting a need to make the regulations
consistent with current global civil
nuclear trade practices and
nonproliferation norms, and to update
the activities and technologies subject to
the Secretary of Energy’s specific
authorization and DOE reporting
requirements. This rule also identifies
destinations with respect to which most
assistance would be generally
authorized and destinations that would
require a specific authorization by the
Secretary of Energy.
DATES: This rule is effective March 25,
2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Richard Goorevich, Senior Policy
Advisor, or Ms. Katie Strangis, Senior
Policy Advisor, Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control
(NPAC), National Nuclear Security
Administration, Department of Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, telephone 202–
586–0589 (Mr. Goorevich) or 202–586–
8623 (Ms. Strangis); Mr. Elliot Oxman,
Office of the General Counsel, GC–53,
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, telephone 202–
586–1755; or Mr. Zachary Stern, Office
of the General Counsel, National
Nuclear Security Administration,
Department of Energy, 1000
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SUMMARY:
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Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, telephone 202–
586–8627.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Description of Changes in the Final Rule
III. Transition Process to Final Rule
A. Current Specific Authorization Requests
B. Current Generally Authorized Activities
C. Previously Unreported Deemed Exports
and Deemed Re-Exports
IV. Discussion of Public Comments and the
Final Rule
A. Process Issues
1. Compliance With Administrative
Procedure Act Rulemaking Requirements
2. Part 810 Process Improvements
B. Classification of Foreign Destinations
1. Mexico
2. Ukraine
3. Croatia and Vietnam
4. Continued Specific Authorization
Destinations (Russia, India and China)
5. Thailand and Norway
C. Activities Requiring Part 810
Authorization
1. Special Nuclear Material Nexus
Requirement
2. Activities Supporting Commercial Power
Reactors
3. Deemed Exports and Deemed Re-Exports
Employee Issues
4. Operational Safety Activities
5. Other
D. Technical Corrections
1. § 810.1
2. § 810.3 Technical Services
3. § 810.3 Technical Assistance vs.
Assistance
4. § 810.6(f)
5. §§ 810.6(c)(2) and 810.11(b)
6. § 810.16 Savings Clause
V. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Order 12866
B. Administrative Procedure Act
C. National Environmental Policy Act
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
H. Executive Order 13132
I. Executive Order 12988
J. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 2001
K. Executive Order 13211
L. Executive Order 13609
M. Congressional Notification
VI. Approval by the Office of the Secretary
PART 810—ASSISTANCE TO FOREIGN
ATOMIC ENERGY ACTIVITIES
I. Background
The Department of Energy’s part 810
regulation (10 CFR part 810)
implements section 57b.(2) of the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (AEA), as
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amended by section 302 of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Act of 1978 (NNPA).
Part 810 controls the export of
unclassified nuclear technology and
assistance. It enables peaceful nuclear
trade by helping to assure that nuclear
technologies exported from the United
States will not be used for non-peaceful
purposes. Part 810 controls the export of
nuclear technology and assistance by
identifying activities that can be
‘‘generally authorized’’ by the Secretary,
thereby requiring no further
authorization under part 810. It also
controls those activities that require
‘‘specific authorization’’ by the
Secretary. Part 810 also delineates the
process for applying for specific
authorization from the Secretary and
identifies the reporting requirements for
activities subject to part 810.
While some revisions to part 810 were
made in 1993 and 2000, part 810 has not
been comprehensively updated since
1986. Since then, the global civil
nuclear market has expanded,
particularly in China, the Middle East,
and Eastern Europe, with vendors from
France, Japan, the Republic of Korea,
Russia, and Canada emerging to serve
customers in these markets. DOE
believes the regulation should be
updated to ensure that the part 810
nuclear export controls remain effective
and efficient as the commercial nuclear
market continues to expand. This means
carefully determining which
destinations and activities can be
generally authorized and which will
require a specific authorization, and
assuring that the determinations are
consistent with U.S. national security,
diplomatic, and trade policy.
On September 7, 2011, DOE issued
the NOPR to propose the updating of
part 810 (76 FR 55278). The NOPR
listed destinations for which most
assistance to foreign atomic energy
activities would be generally
authorized, and activities that would
require a specific authorization by the
Secretary of Energy. Additionally, the
NOPR identified types of technology
transfers subject to the regulation. DOE
received numerous comments on the
NOPR. After careful consideration of all
comments received on the NOPR, on
August 2, 2013 DOE issued a
supplemental notice of proposed
rulemaking (SNOPR) and public
meetings to respond to those comments,
propose new or revised rule changes,
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and afford interested parties a second
opportunity to comment (78 FR 46829).
DOE held its first public meeting on
August 5, 2013. On October 29, 2013
DOE issued a notice of a second public
meeting and extension of the comment
period and on March 25, 2014 reopened the comment period until April
2, 2014. Today, DOE is issuing this final
rule.
As described below and in response
to comments received from the public
on the SNOPR, in the final rule
announced today, DOE makes only a
few changes to the existing rule, what
will be referred to hereinafter as ‘‘the
1986 version of the rule,’’ that are
different than those proposed in the
SNOPR. Details of today’s changes to
the 1986 version of part 810 are
summarized in Section II. Responses to
public comments received on the
SNOPR are discussed in Section IV.
II. Description of Changes in the Final
Rule
In response to the SNOPR, DOE
received written comments from 26
entities as well as oral comments made
at public meetings. All of the comments
and meeting transcripts are available for
review on line at: https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=DOE-HQ-2011-0035,
Docket ID: DOE–HQ–2011–0035. This
final rule responds to the comments
received in response to the SNOPR and
makes changes to the 1986 version of
the rule. Final changes to the current
rule, organized by section, are
summarized below:
1. The change to § 810.1 ‘‘Purpose’’
states the statutory basis and purpose of
the part 810 regulation, eliminating the
need for the 1986 version of § 810.6.
‘‘U.S. persons’’ has been replaced with
‘‘persons.’’
2. The change to paragraph (a) in
§ 810.2 ‘‘Scope’’ states DOE’s
jurisdiction under § 57b.(2) of the
Atomic Energy Act. Paragraph (b) in
§ 810.2 identifies activities governed by
the regulation when those activities,
whether conducted in the United States
or abroad, constitute engaging or
participating, directly or indirectly, in
the development or production of
special nuclear material outside the
United States. Paragraph (c) of § 810.2
identifies exempt activities, some
retained from the 1986 version of the
rule. A person directly or indirectly
engaging or participating in the
development or production of special
nuclear material outside the United
States may be, for example, a U.S.
citizen, a foreign national or a
subsidiary of a U.S. company located
abroad. The activity may take place in
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the United States, in a country listed in
the Appendix or in a country not listed
in the Appendix. Part 810 does not
apply to transfers of nuclear technology
or assistance within the United States
between or among U.S. citizens, citizens
or nationals of foreign countries who are
U.S. lawful permanent residents, or
protected individuals under the
Immigration and Naturalization Act (8
U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)), because such
transfers would not constitute engaging
or participating, directly or indirectly,
in the development or production of
special nuclear material outside the
United States.
3. The following exempt activities are
added:
• Exports authorized by the
Department of State (DOS) or
Department of Commerce (DOC), or the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC);
• Transfer of ‘‘publicly available
information,’’ ‘‘publicly available
technology,’’ and the results of
‘‘fundamental research’’;
• Assistance for certain mining and
milling activities, and certain fusion
reactors because these activities do not
involve the production or use of special
nuclear material;
• Production or extraction of
radiopharmaceutical isotopes when the
process does not involve special nuclear
material; and
• Transfers to lawful permanent
residents of the United States or
protected individuals under the
Immigration and Naturalization Act (8
U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)).
4. In § 810.3 ‘‘Definitions’’ of this final
rule, a number of definitions are added
and revisions are made to existing
definitions to reflect terminological
changes and technological
developments since the part 810
regulation was last updated, and to
provide additional clarity to certain
terms defined and used in the 1986
version of the rule.
The 1986 version of the rule has 23
defined terms. This final rule
substantially revises 5 terms, adds 23
terms, deletes 5 terms, and leaves 13
terms essentially unchanged, for a total
of 36 defined terms in the regulation.
The following terms have been added
to the final rule to update the terms
used in part 810 to make them
consistent with terms used in other U.S.
export control programs and Nuclear
Suppliers Group (NSG) guidelines
(IAEA Information Circular [INFCIRC]
254/Part 1): Assistance, cooperative
enrichment enterprise, development,
enrichment, fissile material,
fundamental research, production,
technical data, technology, and use. The
following terms are added or revised in
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line with changes in the approach of the
final rule to authorized destinations and
authorized activities: Foreign national,
general authorization, operational
safety, production accelerator,
production accelerator-driven
subcritical assembly system, production
subcritical assembly, publicly available
information, publicly available
technology, and specific authorization.
The term ‘‘country’’ has been added to
clarify that Taiwan is covered under this
final rule, consistent with section 4 of
the Taiwan Relations Act (22 U.S.C.
3303). The terms ‘‘Secretary’’ and
‘‘DOE’’ were added to define
administrative terms. The following
terms are retained with no change
except technical edits or format
changes: ‘‘Agreement for cooperation’’,
‘‘Atomic Energy Act’’, ‘‘classified
information’’, ‘‘IAEA’’, ‘‘NNPA’’,
‘‘NPT’’, ‘‘nuclear reactor’’, ‘‘person’’,
‘‘production reactor’’, ‘‘Restricted Data’’,
‘‘sensitive nuclear technology’’, ‘‘source
material’’, ‘‘special nuclear material’’,
and ‘‘United States’’. The following
terms have been deleted as unused:
‘‘accelerator-driven subassembly’’,
‘‘non-nuclear-weapon state’’, ‘‘open
meeting’’, ‘‘public information’’, and
‘‘subcritical assembly’’.
Several changes from the definitions
proposed in the SNOPR are made in the
final rule including: ‘‘technical
assistance’’ is changed to ‘‘assistance,’’
the term ‘‘technical assistance’’ is
replaced with ‘‘assistance’’ in the
definition of ‘‘technology’’, and the term
‘‘technical services’’ is replaced with
‘‘assistance’’ in the definition of
‘‘sensitive nuclear technology’’. These
changes are explained in section IV.D.
in response to public comments on the
SNOPR.
5. Sections 810.4 ‘‘Communications’’
and § 810.5 ‘‘Interpretations’’ update
points of contact information to reflect
the current DOE organizational structure
and office designations for applications,
questions, or requests. Section 810.4(c)
has been added to allow
communication, fast-track requests, and
Ukraine notifications to be emailed. The
final rule adds paragraph (c) to § 810.5
that states DOE may periodically
publish abstracts of general or specific
authorizations, excluding applicants’
proprietary data and other information
protected by law from public disclosure,
that may be of general interest.
6. The 1986 version of § 810.6
‘‘Authorization requirement,’’ which
quotes § 57 b. of the Atomic Energy Act,
is deleted and replaced by § 810.1
‘‘Purpose.’’
7. The 1986 version of § 810.7
‘‘Generally authorized activities’’ is renumbered as § 810.6. It identifies
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activities the Secretary has found to be
not inimical to the interest of the United
States if conducted in a destination
listed in the Appendix to the final rule.
The introductory text eliminates the
specific reference to § 57 b.(2) of the
Atomic Energy Act.
(i) Paragraph (a) generally authorizes
assistance or transfers of technology to
destinations listed in the Appendix to
the final rule. The 1986 version of
§ 810.8(a) uses the opposite
classification approach. It lists
destinations for which a specific
authorization is required.
(ii) The 1986 version of § 810.7(a)
‘‘furnishing public information’’ is
deleted from the list of generally
authorized activities because under the
final rule ‘‘public information’’ is no
longer a defined term. Specifically, in
§ 810.2(c)(2) of the final rule, ‘‘publicly
available information,’’ ‘‘publicly
available technology,’’ and the results of
‘‘fundamental research’’ (all as defined
in § 810.3 of this final rule) are exempt
from the scope of part 810.
(iii) In a new approach to deemed
exports, § 810.6(b) of this final rule
generally authorizes nuclear technology
transfers to citizens or nationals of
specific authorization destinations who
are lawfully employed by or contracted
to work for nuclear industry employers
in the United States, subject to such
individuals meeting NRC unescorted
access requirements and executing a
confidentiality agreement to prevent
unauthorized disclosure of nuclear
technology to which those individuals
are afforded access. Deemed export
reporting requirements with respect to
these individuals are set forth in
§ 810.12(g).
(iv) The existing ‘‘fast track’’ general
authorization in the 1986 version of
§ 810.7(b) for emergency activities at
any safeguarded facility and operational
safety assistance to existing foreign
safeguarded reactors has been retained
in §§ 810.6 (c)(1) and (c)(2) of the final
rule, respectively, but with a revised
definition of ‘‘operational safety.’’
Paragraph (c)(1) includes the phrase ‘‘in
DOE’s assessment,’’ modifying the
emergency clause to make DOE
responsible for deciding potential
‘‘other means.’’ Furnishing operational
safety information or assistance to
existing safeguarded civilian nuclear
reactors outside the United States in
countries with safeguards agreements
with the IAEA or an equivalent
voluntary offer, for example,
performance of probabilistic risk
assessments, is authorized in
§ 810.6(c)(2). In § 810.6(c)(2) the SNOPR
proposed to include an option to
provide information cited in § 810.11(b).
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This proposal has not been adopted in
the final rule.
(v) Furnishing operational safety
information or assistance to existing,
proposed, or new-build nuclear power
plants in the United States is authorized
in § 810.6(c)(3), for example,
participation in safety assessments by
organizations such as the Institute of
Nuclear Power Operations (INPO).
(vi) Section 810.6(d) generally
authorizes exchange programs approved
by the DOS with DOE consultation.
Sections 810.6(e) and (f) authorize
certain cooperative activities with the
IAEA, namely, activities carried out in
the course of implementation of the
‘‘Agreement between the United States
of America and the [IAEA] for the
Application of Safeguards in the United
States’’; and those carried out by fulltime employees of the IAEA, or by
individuals whose employment or work
is sponsored or approved by the DOS or
DOE. The final rule replaces the word
‘‘and’’ with the disjunctive ‘‘or’’ at the
end of subparagraph (f) to clarify that
any of the listed activities are generally
authorized.
(vii) Section 810.6(g) is a new
provision that authorizes transfers of
technology and assistance for the
extraction of Molybdenum-99 from
irradiated nuclear material in certain
circumstances.
8. Section 810.7—renumbered from
the 1986 version of § 810.8—‘‘Activities
requiring specific authorization’’
continues to list activities that require a
specific authorization for all foreign
destinations. The initial phrase ‘‘Unless
generally authorized by § 810.6’’
proposed in the SNOPR has been
removed as unnecessary.
9. Section 810.8 ‘‘Restrictions on
general and specific authorization’’
remains unchanged from § 810.9 in the
1986 version of the rule, except for the
following editorial revisions: Replacing
‘‘these regulations’’ with ‘‘this part’’ in
the introductory phrase; replacing
‘‘Restricted Data and other classified
information’’ with ‘‘classified
information’’ in paragraph (a), and
replacing ‘‘Government agencies’’ with
‘‘U.S. Government agencies’’ in
paragraph (b).
10. Section 810.9 ‘‘Grant of specific
authorization’’ of the final rule, § 810.10
of the 1986 version, identifies the
factors consistent with U.S.
international nonproliferation
commitments that will be considered by
the Secretary in granting a specific
authorization. Paragraph (b) adds as
factors to be considered: Whether the
government of the country concerned is
in good standing with respect to its
nonproliferation commitments
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(subparagraph (b)(3)); and whether,
under subparagraph (b)(8), the transfer
is part of an existing ‘‘cooperative
enrichment enterprise’’ (as defined in
§ 810.3 of this final rule) or the supply
chain of such an enterprise. Section
810.9(c) addresses the export of
‘‘sensitive nuclear technology’’ as the
quoted term is defined in § 810.3 of this
final rule. This section is expanded to
describe additional factors, which
include compliance with the United
States’ NSG commitments, the Secretary
will take into account when considering
a specific authorization request for
transfers of sensitive nuclear
technology. The United States adheres
to the NSG Guidelines for Nuclear
Transfers, and NSG Guidelines for
Transfers of Nuclear-related Dual-Use
Equipment, Materials, Software and
Related Technology (IAEA INFCIRC/
254/Part 2). The current versions of both
sets of Guidelines can be found at
www.nuclearsuppliersgroup.org. In the
final rule a new paragraph (d) is added
to § 810.9 concerning requests to engage
in authorized foreign atomic energy
assistance activities related to the
enrichment of source material and
special nuclear material. Approval of
such requests will be conditioned upon
the receipt of written nonproliferation
assurances from the government of the
destination country concerned. This
process is designed to facilitate U.S.
conformity to the NSG Guidelines.
11. Section 810.10 ‘‘Revocation,
suspension, or modification of
authorization,’’ as renumbered from the
1986 version of § 810.11, makes an
editorial revision, changing ‘‘authorized
assistance’’ in paragraph (c) to
‘‘authorization governed by this part.’’
12. The 1986 version of § 810.12,
renumbered in the final rule as § 810.11
‘‘Information required in an application
for specific authorization,’’ is expanded
to add more detail about the information
required for DOE to process a specific
authorization request, including
applications for ‘‘deemed export’’ and
‘‘deemed re-export’’ authorizations.
Section 810.11(a) of the final rule
requires the submission of the same
information required by the 1986
version of the rule (§ 810.12(a)).
The 1986 version of § 810.12(a)
required that an application for specific
authorization include information
regarding ‘‘the degree of any control or
ownership by any foreign person or
entity’’. Since the term ‘‘foreign person’’
is used only once in the 1986 version of
the regulation (in § 810.12(a)), DOE
proposed in the SNOPR to revise
proposed § 810.11(a) without reference
to ‘‘foreign person’’. To avoid any
possible confusion between usages of
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‘‘person’’ and ‘‘foreign national’’, the
final rule adopts this change and
§ 810.11(a)(1) requests information
concerning an applicant’s foreign
ownership or control by asking about
‘‘the degree of any control or ownership
by any foreign individual, corporation,
partnership, firm, association, trust,
estate, public or private institution or
government agency’’.
The SNOPR proposed in paragraph (b)
to solicit any information the applicant
wishes to provide concerning the factors
listed in proposed §§ 810.9(b) and (c).
However, this proposal has not been
adopted. Instead, specific required
applicant information has been added to
§ 810.11(a)(3) of the final rule.
Therefore, proposed § 810.11(c) of the
SNOPR is renumbered § 810.11(b) in
this final rule. Likewise, proposed
§ 810.11(d) of the SNOPR is numbered
§ 810.11(c) in this final rule.
Section 810.11(b) addresses the
required content for applications filed
by U.S. companies seeking to employ in
the United States citizens or nationals of
specific authorization countries that
could result in the transfer of
technology subject to §§ 810.2 or 810.7
(deemed exports). Submission of the
same information is also required with
respect to any such citizen or national
whom the part 810 applicant seeks to
directly employ abroad in either a
general or specific authorization country
(a deemed re-export) that could result in
the export of assistance or transfer of
technology requiring a specific
authorization. As proposed in the
SNOPR, and adopted in the final rule,
no part 810 authorization is required for
an individual who is lawfully admitted
for permanent residence in the United
States or is a protected individual under
the Immigration and Naturalization Act
(8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)).
As proposed in the SNOPR and
adopted in the final rule, § 810.11(b)
makes explicit DOE’s current practice of
requiring an applicant for a specific
authorization to provide detailed
information concerning the citizenship,
visa status, educational background, and
employment history of each foreign
national to whom the applicant seeks to
grant access to technology subject to the
part 810 regulation. The applicant is
also required to provide a description of
the subject technology, a copy of any
confidentiality agreement between the
U.S. employer and the employee
concerning the protection of the
employer’s proprietary business data
from unauthorized disclosure, and
written nonproliferation assurances by
the individual. Section 810.11(b)(3) has
been revised to eliminate the reference
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to § 810.6(b)(2), and reduce crossreferencing in the document.
Finally, § 810.11(c) identifies the
information required to be submitted by
an applicant seeking a specific
authorization to engage in foreign
atomic energy assistance activities
related to the enrichment of fissile
material.
13. The 1986 version of § 810.13 is
renumbered as § 810.12 in the final rule
and changes reporting obligations. An
addition in § 810.12(d) of the final rule
requires companies to submit reports to
DOE concerning activities requiring
specific authorization, to include
information required by U.S. law
concerning specific civil nuclear
activities in or exports to destinations
for which a specific authorization is
required. Under § 810.12(e)(4) of the
final rule the reference to reporting on
materials and equipment transferred
under a general authorization is retained
to ensure, among other things, that any
technical data that is transferred as part
of dual-use equipment is reported. In
this final rule, paragraph (g) describes
the reporting requirements of U.S.
employers with respect to their deemed
export and deemed re-export
employees.
14. The 1986 version of § 810.14 is
renumbered in the final rule as § 810.13,
‘‘Additional information.’’ The section
is otherwise unchanged.
15. In the final rule, a new § 810.14
has been added to describe specific
reporting requirements with respect to
Ukraine. While the SNOPR contained a
proposal to move Ukraine to the general
authorization list, that proposal was
made prior to the current geopolitical
situation in that country. In light of
those circumstances, DOE is finalizing
its SNOPR proposal with the inclusion
of advance notification requirements
prior to beginning any generally
authorized activity in Ukraine. A
written report within 10 days following
the original transfer of material,
equipment or technology is also
required for all activities in Ukraine
subject to part 810. A more detailed
explanation of the reason for this
addition is in Section IV.B.2.
16. Section 810.15 ‘‘Violations’’
retains the same section number in the
final rule as it has in the 1986 version
of the rule, although it was proposed to
be renumbered in both the NOPR and
the SNOPR. Section 810.15 in the final
rule contains a number of revisions that
bring the wording into alignment with
the applicable statutory language.
17. Section 810.16, ‘‘Effective date
and savings clause’’, which was
proposed to be renumbered in the NOPR
and the SNOPR, retains the same
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section number in the final rule as it has
in the 1986 version of the rule. The only
change to the language, as proposed in
the SNOPR, is an extension of the date
persons must come into compliance
with the rule from 90 to 180 days.
18. In this final rule, Croatia is added
to the Appendix list of generally
authorized destinations because on July
1, 2013, it joined the European Atomic
Energy Community (Euratom) and
therefore the provisions of the peaceful
nuclear cooperation agreement entered
into pursuant to AEA § 123 (‘‘123
Agreement’’) between the United States
and Euratom apply to supply to Croatia
of U.S. nuclear material and equipment.
Vietnam is also added to the Appendix
list of generally authorized destinations
because on October 3, 2014, a 123
Agreement between Vietnam and the
United States entered into force.
Thailand has been deleted from the list
of generally authorized destinations
because its 123 Agreement with the
United States has expired and there has
not been a decision to renew the
Agreement. In this final rule, a reference
has been added to the Appendix list
regarding Ukraine, in order to ensure
applicants are aware of the added
requirements in § 810.14 of the final
rule, as discussed in Section IV.B.2.
19. DOE/NNSA recently changed the
name of the Office of Nonproliferation
and International Security (NA–24) to
the Office of Nonproliferation and Arms
Control (NPAC). The final rule in
§§ 810.4, 810.5, 810.9, and 810.12 reflect
this change.
III. Transition Process to Final Rule
DOE recognizes that, as a result of the
rule announced today, some persons
will have foreign atomic energy
assistance activities in process
concerning destinations whose general
authorization or specific authorization
status has changed. This section
describes actions to provide a seamless
transition to the final rule.
A. Current Specific Authorization
Requests
Any pending specific authorization
request for a destination that is now
generally authorized in the final rule,
namely, Croatia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine,
United Arab Emirates, and Vietnam,
should be withdrawn starting on the
effective date of the rule. Contact DOE
to formally withdraw the request.
Pending requests for specific
authorization to Ukraine are subject to
the 10-day notification requirement set
forth in § 810.14(a) of the final rule.
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B. Current Generally Authorized
Activities
As stated in § 810.16, generally
authorized activities for which the
contracts, purchase orders, or licensing
arrangements were already in effect
before March 25, 2015, but that require
specific authorization under the final
rule, must be the subject of a specific
authorization request by August 24,
2015 but may continue until DOE acts
on the request.
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C. Previously Unreported Deemed
Exports and Deemed Re-Exports
DOE recognizes that many companies
with employees who are citizens or
nationals of countries now subject to
specific authorization requirements
under the final rule announced today
may not have previously reported the
transfer of part 810 covered technology
to such individuals to DOE under the
1986 version of the rule, as required,
and further, that in many cases
technology transfers already have
occurred. A record of part 810controlled generally authorized
technology transfers to these employees
is necessary for DOE to adequately
monitor these transfers. Companies that
have made unreported generally
authorized transfers should provide the
information required by § 810.11 of the
final rule for each transfer to any foreign
national who continues to have access
to part 810-controlled technology by
August 24, 2015.
IV. Discussion of Public Comments and
the Final Rule
On August 2, 2013 DOE published the
SNOPR, inviting public comments on
regulatory proposals DOE formulated in
consideration of comments received on
the NOPR. Thereafter, DOE held two
formal public meetings to give the
public an opportunity to make oral
comments and ask questions about the
proposed regulatory changes in the
SNOPR. In addition, DOE extended the
time period for the public to submit
written comments on the SNOPR. DOE
received comments from 26 industry
members and organizations. The
majority of commenters expressly
supported some of the SNOPR changes
to the NOPR, such as proposals:
1. Limiting the scope of technology
covered by part 810
2. Generally authorizing deemed
exports to certain U.S. nuclear industry
employees
3. Facilitating nuclear safety and other
exchange activities
4. Generally authorizing nuclear
technology exports to Mexico, Chile,
Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and the United
Arab Emirates
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5. Continuing the general
authorization for emergency activities
and operational safety assistance
6. Proposing that
a. Routine storage, processing, and
transportation of spent nuclear fuel
would be outside the scope of part 810,
b. Activities licensed by the DOS and
DOC would be outside the scope of part
810, and
c. The transfer of publicly available
information would be outside the scope
of part 810.
Commenters also supported DOE’s
initiation of a process improvement
program (PIP) to reduce specific
authorization processing time, and
DOE’s plan to create a guide to part 810
and an electronic application and
tracking (e-810) system. Several
organizations and companies offered to
participate in developing the PIP and
drafting a guide.
The Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI),
the primary industry trade association,
provided a comprehensive set of
comments in response to the SNOPR.
The Ad-hoc Utility Group (AHUG),
Exelon, and the Chamber of Commerce
of the United States (USCC) fully
endorsed NEI’s comments. AREVA and
the US India Business Council (USIBC)
supported NEI’s comments. Black and
Veatch endorsed NEI’s comments.
Westinghouse stated that it ‘‘largely
concurred’’ with NEI comments. In this
discussion of the public comments,
unless these commenters provided
different perspectives on the same
matter, NEI will be referenced when
discussing the comments.
Many commenters, including the
American Nuclear Society (ANS),
AREVA, Babcock and Wilcox (B&W),
the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS),
EnergySolutions, Exelon, Fluor, G.C.
Rudy/Integrated Systems Technology
(IST), NEI, the Nuclear Infrastructure
Council (NIC), and Westinghouse, also
made requests for guidance or
clarification on part 810 that would not
require a change from the regulatory text
proposed in the SNOPR. Depending on
the specific nature of these requests,
DOE may address each request as part
of a formal guide, more informally as
part of a Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQ) page on the proposed Web site,
or in response to individual requests
made pursuant to § 810.5—
Interpretations.
This final rule implements the
important goals of part 810:
• Effective nuclear proliferation
threat reduction,
• Effective civil nuclear trade
support, and
• Efficient regulation.
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DOE has reviewed the public
comments received in response to the
SNOPR. The final rule adopts most of
the regulatory revisions proposed in the
SNOPR, and incorporates some further
changes based on careful consideration
of public comments. The public
comments were analyzed and placed
into three categories:
• Process Issues
• Classification of Foreign
Destinations
• Activities Requiring Part 810
Authorization
A. Process Issues
1. Compliance With Administrative
Procedure Act Rulemaking
Requirements
NEI in part claimed the SNOPR
violated the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA) by providing inadequate
explanation of the proposed changes,
particularly the proposed general vs.
specific authorization destination
classifications. NEI included China,
Russia, and India in this discussion,
although these three countries have
been, and remain, destinations requiring
specific authorization. NEI, in 80 pages
of comments on the destination
classification issue, called for DOE to
‘‘withdraw and re-publish the rule with
enough information regarding its
factual, legal and policy rationales to
allow stakeholders to comment
meaningfully.’’ AREVA stated ‘‘DOE has
not put forth a sufficient rationale for
the change in designation of these
countries.’’ AUECO ‘‘join[ed] the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce in calling upon
DOE to withdraw the rule.’’ In response
to these concerns and comments, and
the desire to hear from as many
commenters as possible, DOE re-opened
the comment period to allow for more
public comments.
The SNOPR preamble adequately and
reasonably explained the reasons for
DOE’s proposed reclassification of
foreign destinations, as well as other
proposed changes to the part 810
regulation. It also explained the reasons
why DOE proposed the Secretary could
not generally authorize nuclear
technology transfers to China, Russia,
and India. Adequate notice was
provided for meaningful comments from
the public on the SNOPR as evidenced
by 26 separate letters of comments
submitted to DOE, including lengthy
and detailed comments from NEI and
AREVA. DOE’s new approach in the
final rule to classifying general and
specific authorization destinations is a
reasonable policy decision, made in
compliance with the requirements of the
APA and as authorized by the AEA.
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2. Part 810 Process Improvements
As noted in the SNOPR, many NOPR
commenters were concerned that the
part 810 specific authorization process
is unduly protracted, and that
processing delays put U.S. suppliers at
a competitive disadvantage with
companies in other countries. It
appeared that many concerns with the
NOPR and SNOPR proposals indicated
less dissatisfaction with the merits of
the proposed regulatory changes than
the commenters’ belief that the
proposed rule revisions would continue
or worsen delays in receiving specific
authorizations.
AHUG, ANS, AREVA, B&W, CSIS,
EnergySolutions, Exelon, Fluor, GC
Rudy/IST, NEI, NIC, and Westinghouse
all made suggestions and comments
related to improving the processing of
specific authorization requests. In many
cases these comments reiterated those
received during the NOPR comment
period. As these comments are not
directed to the content of the proposed
rule, they will not be addressed here but
rather in the PIP that is ongoing
currently.
Similarly, commenters’ concerns
about process ‘‘burdens’’ appeared to
drive their comments about the
substance of the proposed regulatory
changes. As noted, DOE proposed and
has underway a PIP separate from the
rulemaking to make the part 810
authorization process more transparent,
orderly, and efficient in order to address
specific authorization time in process.
The part 810 PIP is part of a larger
NNSA plan to be ISO 9001 compliant.
The PIP team will focus on improving
performance as measured by these
critical to quality characteristics:
• Effective nuclear proliferation
threat reduction in a changing world,
• Openness, predictability, and
clarity of regulation, and
• Efficiency: Performing the mission
of preventing proliferation without
wasting time, money, or placing
unnecessary burdens on U.S. companies
competing in global markets.
The PIP team also will:
• Measure process performance by
listening to applicant ‘‘customers’’ and
process implementers. Receiving these
inputs will be key to realistic problem
definition and development of effective
process improvements.
• Analyze causes of delays in DOE
processing time for an application.
• Recommend actions to sustain
improved performance in processing
part 810 applications for specific
authorization.
Anticipated improvements in the
processing time of part 810 applications
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that may come from the PIP include
these recommended actions from
commenters:
• Digitize the 810 authorization
process (e810)—Digitization of the
authorization process will make the
applications easier to complete;
streamline the review process, increase
transparency by enabling applicant
tracking; provide a searchable archive of
past decisions; and facilitate audits
required for ISO compliance. In this
rule, DOE has added explicit email
communication options, including
applications, fast-track requests, and
Ukraine notifications in § 810.4(c).
• Reduce application processing
time—This effort will begin by DOE
analyzing the authorization case
database to determine causes of
processing time variation and undue
delay. The PIP team will conduct
benchmark studies to identify best
practices and methods to improve
efficiency. The team will work with the
DOS to find ways to request and secure
foreign governments’ nonproliferation
assurances more promptly, and make
internal DOE and inter-agency reviews
of part 810 specific authorization
applications more efficient by reducing
unnecessary reviews and approvals.
• Develop a guidance document—
Many SNOPR commenters sought
guidance or clarification on specific
issues and recommended DOE prepare a
guidance document or Web site to
improve transparency. As noted above,
DOE intends to develop a document or
Web site that may include responses to
requests made under § 810.5 (with
proprietary information redacted),
FAQs, and process maps of various part
810 activities. DOE will continue to
adhere to current inter-agency
procedures for processing, reviewing
and approving specific authorizations as
set forth in the ‘‘Amendment to
Procedures Established Pursuant to the
Nuclear Nonproliferation Act of 1978.’’
49 FR 20780 (May 16, 1984).
B. Classification of Foreign Destinations
The general authorization versus
specific authorization proposed country
classifications provoked considerable
comments in response to the NOPR. The
SNOPR explained the rationale for the
proposed changes and proposed to
change some classifications. Many of
the NOPR comments were repeated in
SNOPR comments. AHUG, AREVA,
AUECO, B&W, CSIS, EnergySolutions,
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI),
Exelon, Fluor, National Association of
Manufacturers (NAM), NEI, NIC, USIBC,
U.S. Russia Business Council, and
Westinghouse all expressed concerns
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with the reclassification of countries
that was proposed in the SNOPR.
AHUG cited Chile, Jamaica, Jordan,
Namibia, New Zealand, Nigeria, and the
Philippines as countries that deserved
generally authorized status ‘‘due to their
participation in key international
nuclear nonproliferation regimes,
including the Treaty on the NonProliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT),
the comprehensive safeguards
agreement (CSA) with the IAEA and an
Additional Protocol (AP) thereto, and
the NSG’’. Further, they noted that New
Zealand and the Philippines have been
granted a general license pursuant to 10
CFR 110.26 under NRC’s regulations as
destinations authorized to receive
‘‘minor’’ reactor components.
B&W named Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the
Philippines, and Malaysia, and Fluor
named the Philippines and Singapore as
countries that deserved generally
authorized status, but provided no
specific arguments regarding their
suitability for the non-inimicality
determination mandated by AEA
§ 57b.(2).
EnergySolutions commented ‘‘The
Department has failed to account for the
burden imposed by the proposed rule
and the message it sends to foreign
nations.’’ The company repeated the
claim it made in response to the NOPR
that reversing the approach to country
designations was unwarranted. In its
comments on the SNOPR,
EnergySolutions further commented
‘‘the SNOPR sends a message to
countries that have not been considered
a proliferation risk for over 70 years and
have maintained safe nuclear
operations, that the United States now
views them as a potential liability.
While the Department may view this
new Rulemaking as a way to provide
additional oversight to trade countries,
EnergySolutions fears that it has the
potential to adversely affect foreign
relations with our trading partners.’’
DOE has considered commenters’
recommendations for countries to be
reconsidered for classification as
generally authorized destinations.
Under section 57b.(2) of the AEA, the
Secretary may authorize the transfer of
nuclear technology for the development
or production of special nuclear
material by persons subject to U.S.
jurisdiction upon a determination that
the activity will not be ‘‘inimical’’ to the
interest of the United States.
Classification of activities and foreign
destinations as ‘‘generally authorized’’
or, conversely, the determination that
other activities and destinations
necessitate a specific authorization is a
matter committed to agency discretion.
The Secretary’s decision that a specific
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authorization is or is not required for a
proposed transaction is based on U.S.
nuclear and national security policies.
Consonant with those policies, the
Secretary may determine that
transactions with a country or entity are
either generally authorized or require a
specific authorization. Under the AEA,
DOE is to promote widespread
participation in the development and
utilization of atomic energy for peaceful
purposes. The AEA, however, makes
national security the paramount
concern. Consequently, assistance to,
participation in, or technology transfer
for the development or production of
special nuclear material outside the
United States may be authorized only
upon a determination by the Secretary
that such activities will not be ‘‘inimical
to the interest of the United States’’. A
destination is included on the proposed
generally authorized list based on the
Secretary’s ‘‘not inimical’’
determination required by section
57b.(2) of the AEA. Examples of types
of considerations taken into account
include the existence of a 123
Agreement with the United States, a full
scope safeguards agreement with the
IAEA, satisfactory experience as a civil
nuclear trading partner, and being a
party to nonproliferation treaties and
membership in international
nonproliferation regimes. That
determination can be made only with
the concurrence of the DOS and after
consultation with the NRC, the
Department of Defense (DOD), and the
DOC.
DOE appreciates commenters’
recommendations for countries to be
reconsidered for classification to
generally authorized status. However,
classification of activities by destination
as ‘‘generally authorized’’ is an
administrative tool to avoid unnecessary
reviews of foreign atomic energy
assistance activities in countries that
present little or no proliferation risk,
and are known nuclear trading partners.
General authorizations reflect the
assessment that the Secretary has made
a non-inimicality finding regarding the
provision of assistance and technology
to particular countries on an advance
programmatic basis, without performing
a transaction-specific analysis or
obtaining specific nonproliferation
assurances from the government of the
intended foreign recipient.
The world has changed since the
original part 810 rule was issued. The
creation of new countries and the threat
of proliferative activities in countries
with limited ability to manage or deter
such threats must be considered in the
Secretary’s determination of noninimicality. The Secretary has
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considered that being a party to
nonproliferation treaties (including but
not limited to other regional treaties
such as the Treaty for the Prohibition of
Nuclear Weapons in Latin America
(Treaty of Tlatelolco), African Nuclear
Weapon Free Zone Treaty (Treaty of
Pelindaba), South Pacific Nuclear Free
Zone Treaty (Treaty of Roratonga)),
while an important part of such a
determination is not alone sufficient to
make a finding of non-inimicality. The
NRC’s regulation at 10 CFR 110.26 is
limited to reactor components only for
reactors generating less than 5MW,
which is not an adequate indication of
a country’s ability to manage nuclear
technology and prevent its use in ways
‘‘inimical to the interest of the United
States.’’
No comments were received regarding
the SNOPR proposal to remove
Bangladesh and Peru from the generally
authorized destination list; therefore the
proposed deletion is retained in the
final rule.
The final rule retains the destination
classifications proposed in the SNOPR
unchanged, except for clarification
concerning the availability of general
authorizations for Ukraine (§ 810.14)
and the addition of Croatia and Vietnam
as generally authorized destinations and
the removal of Thailand. DOE will
provide notice of future changes to the
Appendix in the Federal Register.
1. Mexico
EPRI noted that additional IAEA
agreements beyond INFCIRC/203 and
INFCIRC/825 with Mexico may be
developed, and suggested clarifying
language to allow countries concluding
such agreements to be included in the
general authorization destinations
Appendix list to the final rule. DOE has
decided not to incorporate such changes
in the final rule. While DOE is prepared
at present to include Mexico on the
Appendix list, on the basis of its
agreement with the IAEA, DOE has
determined to approach other such
agreements on a case-by-case basis.
2. Ukraine
The Secretary’s decision that a
specific authorization is or is not
required for a particular proposed
export is based on U.S. nuclear and
national security policies. When the
existing regulations were promulgated
in 1986, Ukraine was not a party to any
international nuclear cooperation
agreements. Ukraine has since entered
into a 123 Agreement with the United
States, has engaged in civil nuclear
trade with the United States under the
123 Agreement, and has developed a
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track record as a responsible nuclear
nonproliferation partner.
Moreover, Ukraine is heavily
dependent on nuclear reactors for
generation of electricity. Currently,
there are 15 operating reactors in
Ukraine that generate about 50% of the
electricity used there. While Ukraine is
now a civil nuclear trading partner of
the United States, these reactors rely
almost entirely on services and nuclear
fuel from the Russian Federation to
operate. Recent geopolitical
developments in Ukraine involving the
Russian Federation underlie the U.S.
Government’s determination to help
ensure that Ukraine is able to maintain
a stable civil nuclear energy program
independent of and without support
from the Russian Federation.
However, transfers of nuclear
technology and assistance to areas that
are not under control of the Government
of Ukraine could present a proliferation
risk, and a case-by-case non-inimicality
determination is needed for transfers to
those areas. For this reason, § 810.14 in
the final rule identifies an additional
requirement, for persons about to begin
any generally authorized activity
involving Ukraine, to notify DOE at least
ten days prior to beginning such
activity. Following notification of a
proposed transfer to Ukraine pursuant
to § 810.14, the Secretary may invoke
the authority in § 810.10 (c) if he
determines that transfer is inimical to
the interest of the United States at that
time. Thus, that transfer would not be
considered generally authorized and the
applicant would need to file a request
for specific authorization in accordance
with §§ 810.7 and 11.
3. Croatia and Vietnam
NEI noted that ‘‘Croatia, now a
member-state of the European Union,
should be added to the Appendix.’’ In
addition, as noted in section II,
Vietnam, as of May 26, 2014 signed a
123 Agreement with the United States,
and that agreement entered into force on
October 3, 2014. DOE has added both
Croatia and Vietnam to the list of
generally authorized destinations in the
Appendix to this final rule.
4. Continued Specific Authorization
Destinations (Russia, India and China)
B&W, EnergySolutions, Fluor,
Lightbridge, and NEI all repeated
comments on the NOPR regarding
DOE’s proposal to retain Russia, India,
and China as destinations requiring
specific authorization. Some disagreed
with the SNOPR’s explanatory rationale
in section IV.B.2, but failed to provide
sufficient justification to warrant any
change in the current specific
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authorization status of these three
countries.
After duly considering the comments
and consulting with the DOS, DOC,
DOD, and NRC, the Secretary remains of
the view that it is not appropriate to
change the part 810 specific
authorization status of these three
countries at this time for the same
reasons as articulated in the SNOPR in
section IV.B.2.
5. Thailand and Norway
The Appendix to the final rule has
been changed from the SNOPR to omit
Thailand, whose 123 Agreement with
the United States has expired. As there
has not been a decision regarding
renewal of the Agreement at this time,
under this final rule Thailand will
therefore be a specifically authorized
destination.
The Appendix to the final rule
includes Norway, whose 123 Agreement
with the United States has expired.
However, the United States and Norway
are negotiating a renewal of the 123
Agreement. Thus, the Department has
determined that Norway will remain a
generally authorized destination under
this final rule.
C. Activities Requiring Part 810
Authorization
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1. Special Nuclear Material Nexus
Requirement
As explained in SNOPR section
IV.C.1, the Secretary has broad
discretion to determine which activities
indirectly constitute sufficient
engagement or participation in the
production of special nuclear material
to bring them within the scope of part
810. The decision is based on the nature
of the technology or assistance to be
provided. As such, whether an activity
is generally authorized is a matter of
policy. A number of commenters
(including; NEI, B&W, Westinghouse,
Fluor, ANS, NIC, AREVA, EPRI and
ERIN Engineering and Research Inc.
(ERIN)) stated that the SNOPR resolved
some of their concerns with the
sufficiency of the nexus between some
covered activities or technologies and
the production of special nuclear
material to be subject to part 810 but
maintained that the scope remained too
broad or unclear in some cases. NEI also
supported the proposed exclusion from
part 810 of technologies and assistance
under the jurisdiction of the DOS and
DOC and requested the same treatment
for NRC-approved activities, which was
already explicit in § 810.2(c)(1) as
proposed in the SNOPR and adopted in
the final rule.
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NEI commented that DOE should
limit the scope of part 810 to
technologies that are ‘‘especially
designed for the production or
processing of special nuclear material,’’
such as enrichment, reprocessing, and
production reactors. Adoption of this
proposal would move light water reactor
(LWR) technology outside the scope of
part 810, even though it has been within
the scope since the inception of part
810. Although LWRs are designed
primarily for power production, they do
directly produce plutonium, which is
within the scope of part 810. Therefore,
the final rule retains LWRs in the scope
of part 810.
NEI and NIC further commented that
there should be explicit exemptions or
authorization for the transfer of sales,
marketing or sourcing information, to
provide U.S. business with more
flexibility to operate in the very
competitive international civil nuclear
market because U.S. businesses are at a
disadvantage to foreign competitors that
are not subject to technology controls
similar to part 810 requirements. DOE is
not prepared to exempt the transfer of
part 810-controlled technology based on
the intent of the transfer but will
consider the content of the transfer
when making a determination of part
810’s applicability. That means that if
part 810-controlled technical data is
transferred in a bid, proposal,
solicitation, trade show, or plant tour,
the activity is subject to part 810
controls and requirements but if no such
technical data is transferred, the activity
is not within the scope of part 810 and
therefore not subject to those controls.
NEI and B&W commented that the
SNOPR lacked clear and justified
thresholds for how much recipient
control, modification or U.S. content in
jointly developed technology would be
enough to trigger part 810 coverage of an
activity. NEI recommended that DOE
adopt specific percentage values as de
minimis thresholds based on the total
value of technology to be transferred.
NEI also proposed that only
‘‘enhancements’’ to foreign technology
should be subject to part 810, but other
changes, such as conforming foreign
technology to U.S. codes and standards
(commonly known as Americanization),
should not generally make the transfer
of technology subject to part 810. In a
related comment, TerraPower asserted
that DOE should set a de minimis
threshold of 5% ownership before that
ownership must be disclosed in an
application for specific authorization.
The comments above are largely
restatements of views expressed in
response to the NOPR and were
addressed in the SNOPR preamble
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(Section IV.C.13.). The SNOPR
explained that a mechanistic approach
is not appropriate for part 810 coverage
determinations for authorization of
activities such as cooperative
enrichment enterprises and other
technology transfers by collaborative
enterprises. DOE will continue to make
coverage determinations based on the
specific facts of the proposed activity
including but not limited to technology
to be transferred, the significance of the
technology to the production of special
nuclear material, end user destination,
and end use duration of the activity
such as single transfer or an ongoing
activity, rather than by mechanistic rule
because the facts of each case are unique
and not readily addressed by a de
minimis threshold or characterization.
NEI reiterated its recommendation to
add the term ‘‘control-in-fact’’ to the
definition in § 810.3 and to apply the
concept to the application of the scope
of § 810.2(a)(1) as well as revisions and
clarifications to that provision to
include the term ‘‘control-in-fact.’’ NEI
recommended that DOE explicitly
include in § 810.2(a)(2) the clarification
that foreign ‘‘licensees, contractors, or
subsidiaries under [the] direction,
supervision, responsibility or control’’
of persons described by the proposed
rule in § 810.2(a)(1) are within the scope
of part 810 only if the technology
transferred is of U.S. origin. Further,
NEI recommended that control be
determined by reference to corporate
governance arrangements, instead of the
specific terms and circumstances of the
proposed activity. DOE has considered
this comment again and has determined
to adopt § 810.2(a) and (b) as proposed
without further revision. DOE will
review the specific fact pattern of the
activity that includes the transfer of part
810-controlled technologies, which in
some cases may not match the stated
governance or ‘‘control’’ of the company
but which is specific to the technology
transfer in question.
B&W, TerraPower, NEI, and AHUG
also commented that the definition of
‘‘technology’’ should be revised to use
the conjunctive ‘‘and’’ in place of ‘‘or’’
before ‘‘use’’ in proposed § 810.3,
thereby limiting the scope of part 810 to
activities and technologies directly
associated with the production of
special nuclear material, creating a
minimum threshold for technology and
assistance provided, and mirroring the
wording currently guiding the NSG. The
proposed use of the disjunctive ‘‘or’’ in
the definition of ‘‘technology’’ in
proposed § 810.3 was intentional. Any
of the listed forms of assistance is
sufficient to trigger part 810 coverage. It
is not necessary to specify all of the
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technology forms; therefore the change
has not been made to the definition.
AUECO commented that under the
SNOPR, DOE would subject academic
and scientific communications and
research to new and burdensome
deemed export requirements without
sufficient statutory basis, and that
burden would be further exacerbated by
the general/specific authorization
proposed reclassification of 77
countries. The SNOPR proposal, they
argued, would jeopardize the free flow
of academic collaboration that is
explicitly protected by the AEA,
without DOE identifying a clear or
direct connection to the production of
special nuclear material.
Part 810’s statutory basis is the AEA,
which states its purpose is to ‘‘support
the conducting, assisting and fostering
of research in order to encourage
maximum scientific progress’’ through
the establishment of policies that benefit
not only the development of technology
but also, and paramount, the common
defense and security of the United
States. While part 810 requirements
concerning deemed exports may apply
in an academic setting, DOE
understands that most work performed
by academic institutions qualifies as
fundamental research, which is exempt
from part 810 coverage under
§ 810.2(c)(2) of the final rule. Issuance of
the final rule does not constitute a new
burden for academic institutions and
comports with AEA purposes. It is those
activities that go beyond fundamental
research and are applied research and
development that have always been
within the scope of part 810 controls.
No change has been made in this final
rule in response to this comment.
AUECO and NEI welcomed the
definition of ‘‘fundamental research’’
proposed in the SNOPR but commented
that it fell short of protecting applied
research and development at
universities, which they argued is the
intent of the AEA. The definition
announced today achieves the intent of
the AEA both to encourage fundamental
research and to protect information
whose dissemination is restricted for
national security reasons. NEI also
recommended revising the definition of
‘‘fundamental research’’ to exclude
proprietary ‘‘industrial development’’
and ‘‘product utilization’’ from the
definition. DOE wishes to clarify that
proprietary development or utilization
information is not exempted from
controls in the final rule because
development and use technology is
beyond basic scientific exploration that
is intended to remain outside the scope
of part 810. Applied research crosses the
boundary from theoretical scientific
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inquiry to potential reactor specific
applications of new technologies. This
type of research will not be generally
authorized because it can be applied to
a facility that could be involved in the
production of special nuclear material.
The definition of ‘‘fundamental
research’’ in the final rule remains
unchanged from that proposed in the
SNOPR.
AUECO also commented that the
SNOPR’s proposed definition of
‘‘publicly available information’’ did not
address information that has been
cleared for release by the appropriate
entity but has not yet been officially
released, and that lack of clarity on this
point adversely affects academic
institutions with respect to transferring
nuclear technology to foreign national
researchers. AUECO recommended that
information that will be or is eligible for
unlimited release should be considered
‘‘publicly available information’’ and
therefore not subject to part 810 controls
in academic settings. DOE considers
information published in academic
journals or otherwise available to the
general public to be ‘‘publicly available
technology’’ for the purposes of deemed
exports prior to actual publication as
long as the information has been
appropriately authorized for release and
there is a clear intent to publish all
results, and directs commenters to
examine the definition of ‘‘publicly
available technology’’ for clarification.
This subject will be dealt with in more
detail in the PIP.
NEI also commented that the
definition of ‘‘publicly available
information’’ should conform to the text
of and guidance concerning the ITAR
(International Traffic in Arms
Regulations) administered by DOS and
DOC’s EAR (Export Administration
Regulations). DOE has considered NEI’s
request but has determined to retain the
definition as proposed in the SNOPR
because the definition as formulated in
the final rule adequately and completely
incorporates the characteristics of
information that DOE considers to be
publicly available.
2. Activities Supporting Commercial
Power Reactors
NEI and B&W commented that
controlling LWR technology is
unnecessary, because it is ubiquitous
and available more freely from many
foreign vendors. Further, requiring a
specific authorization for such
technology to any country does little, in
the commenters’ view, to stem
proliferation and would hurt the
competitive position of U.S. vendors.
AHUG, Fluor, and NEI stated that
requiring a specific authorization for
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U.S. vendors offering nuclear
technologies that are identical or similar
to those that have been previously
approved for export burdens U.S.
vendors, giving their competitors an
advantage without a nonproliferation
benefit. Both DOE and the commenters
recognize that the harm to U.S. vendors
is exacerbated by lengthy part 810
application processing time required to
secure a specific authorization. DOE
believes the way to resolve the time-inprocess problem is through the PIP, not
by relaxing the standards for the
Secretary’s non-inimicality
determination. It should be noted that
the 1986 version of § 810.10(b)(7)
expressly states that in making the noninimicality determination, the Secretary
will take into account ‘‘[t]he availability
of comparable assistance from other
sources’’. The final rule retains this
provision.
NEI and AUECO commented that the
description and definition of the
portions of the ‘‘nuclear reactor’’ that
would be covered by part 810, as
proposed in §§ 810.2 and 810.3 of the
SNOPR, were an improvement from the
NOPR and provided clarity, but did not
align with the NRC’s part 110 Appendix
A definition of a nuclear reactor. The
proposed definition of ‘‘nuclear reactor’’
in § 810.3 in the SNOPR is almost
identical to the NRC definition in 10
CFR 110.2. Also, the proposed scope of
part 810 controls concerning nuclear
reactors has been aligned with the
language used in NRC’s part 110
Appendix A. Specifically, the wording
‘‘components within or attached
directly to the reactor vessel, the
equipment that controls the level of
power in the core, and the equipment or
components that normally contain or
come in direct contact with or control
the primary coolant of the reactor core’’
in § 810.2(b)(5) of the SNOPR has been
adopted in today’s rule to align directly
with language used in Appendix A of
NRC’s part 110 regulation.
NEI further commented that the
description of the scope of covered
technologies concerning nuclear
reactors proposed in § 810.2 of the
SNOPR did not address the limits of
application of the regulation to
analogous components or systems in
boiling water reactors and pressurized
water reactors. As a general principle,
DOE considers the technology related to
the primary coolant in the reactor core
as within the scope of part 810 controls.
However, NRC’s part 110 regulation
specifically excludes the steam turbine
generator portion of a nuclear power
plant from its definition of a utilization
facility. Since the definition and scope
statement in the SNOPR’s proposed rule
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were meant to align with part 110, DOE
has determined that the steam turbine
generator portion of a nuclear plant is
licensed by the DOC and is not subject
to part 810 requirements.
B&W commented that DOE should
develop a list of Widely Available
Technologies. B&W further
recommended that DOE solicit national
laboratory and industry input to publish
and update the list through a Federal
Register Notice. Per B&W’s comment,
the technology list would include an
exhaustive list of technologies or
assistance associated with those
technologies and be generally
authorized to non-embargoed countries.
DOE has not added a widely available
technology list to part 810 at this time
because the Secretary has not made a
non-inimicality finding about the
transfer of technologies directly or
indirectly related to the production of
special nuclear material but rather the
destination of those technologies.
Instead, DOE will address technologies
and approving the transfers of them in
the PIP. As a part of the PIP process,
DOE will seek stakeholder input during
planned outreach programs.
NEI, B&W, Fluor, AHUG, and NIC
provided similar comments to the effect
that if technology related to nuclear
reactors continues to be defined as
proposed in § 810.2 of the SNOPR, some
formulation of a ‘‘fast track’’ or hybrid
authorization process should be
included in the regulation text or a
general authorization provided for
transfers of identified technologies. This
process would not apply to technology
transfers to embargoed or non-NSG
member countries but all other
specifically authorized destinations.
Expediting the approval of nuclear
reactor technology transfers to
destinations requiring specific
authorizations will be addressed in the
PIP that is being conducted
independently from this rulemaking.
Therefore DOE will not incorporate a
change or add a general authorization
for nuclear reactor technologies at this
time.
3. Deemed Exports and Deemed ReExports Employee Issues
AUECO, NEI, B&W, and
Westinghouse repeated in response to
the SNOPR their recommendation in
comments on the NOPR concerning the
transfer of part 810-covered technology
to individuals who are citizens
(including those with dual citizenship)
of specific authorization countries but
have lawful permanent residence in a
generally authorized country. The
commenters advanced the view that, in
determining whether a specific
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authorization is required, DOE should
follow the DOC policy of using the
individual’s most recent country of
citizenship or permanent residency to
determine citizenship. Current DOE
practice is to consider all countries of an
individual’s allegiance (citizenship or
permanent residency) in making the
requisite non-inimicality determination.
Authorization decisions in these
situations are fact-specific, and DOE
will continue to deal with them on a
case-by-case basis. Therefore DOE is not
incorporating this suggestion in the final
rule.
ANS, AREVA, AUECO, NEI, and
AHUG welcomed the general
authorization proposed in the SNOPR at
§ 810.6(b) for foreign nationals working
at NRC-licensed facilities who are
granted unescorted access in accordance
with NRC regulations. The commenters
also suggested expanding the general
authorization to include foreign
nationals working in the United States
at non-NRC licensed facilities, based on
NRC regulations governing access to
safeguards information (SGI) or a U.S.
security clearance for access to
classified information. DOE determined
that NRC’s regulations and reviews
governing unescorted access to NRC
licensed facilities are much more
detailed than SGI protection
requirements, which mandate only a
search by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to identify any criminal
records of the individual for whom the
applicant is requesting access.
Alternatively, for unescorted access to
controlled technology in an NRClicensed facility, an individual must
undergo a stringent review in addition
to complying with the SGI’s
requirement, including, but not limited
to, a psychological interview, drug
testing, and employment history check.
After consulting with the NRC, DOE and
NRC concurred that, for the reasons
described above, SGI review criteria are
not sufficient to justify providing a
general authorization under part 810 for
foreign nationals to have access to part
810-controlled technologies. In
addition, DOE was unable to identify a
cohort of foreign nationals who would
have security clearances and are
nationals of countries not on the part
810 Appendix list that would justify
adoption of the suggestion in the final
rule. No other regulatory regimes or
persuasive factors were identified by the
other commenters as a basis for DOE to
make the requested change. Therefore,
DOE has decided to adopt § 810.6(b) as
proposed in the SNOPR.
NEI further requested that DOE
should clarify in guidance that the
general authorization for deemed
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exports would continue to apply to
NRC-cleared individuals working in the
United States for a U.S. company who
are no longer working at the NRClicensed facility, but who require access
to part 810-controlled information.
Under this suggestion, the authorization
would extend to foreign nationals
working in the United States at any U.S.
company, even if unescorted access
status has expired. DOE is not adopting
this proposal in today’s final rule
because the termination of NRC
unescorted access could occur for a
variety of reasons which must be
considered. DOE invites applicants with
respect to the requirements of
§ 810.11(b)(2) to document any NRC
clearances granted to subject foreign
nationals that may be used to inform
DOE’s determination of non-inimicality
for the deemed export.
AREVA commented that positions
requiring critical skill sets may go
unfilled due to the increased number of
foreign nationals working for AREVA in
the United States and overseas that will
no longer be eligible for a general
authorization because under the SNOPR
proposal, more countries would be
specific authorization destinations,
therefore restricting a larger number of
possible hires from accessing part 810controlled technology. In addition,
AREVA stated that the provision would
only address current employees but not
address future hires and thus
complicate hiring decisions. DOE has
weighed this comment and understands
that companies are concerned about
burdens to comply with deemed export
controls under the final rule, given the
increase in the number of specifically
authorized destinations. DOE will
continue to require companies to seek
authorization to provide access to part
810-controlled technologies to
individuals who are citizens of
specifically authorized countries
because the transfer of technology to a
citizen of a specific authorization
destination is considered an export to
that country and therefore deemed an
export, which requires a Secretarial
non-inimicality finding before the
export can be authorized. But under the
PIP, DOE will endeavor to institute
efficiencies to decrease the review and
approval times for deemed export
authorizations.
Exelon stated that the cost of review
of I–9 forms (required by U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services)
to determine the number of foreign
nationals working at U.S. nuclear
facilities who are citizens of specifically
authorized countries will be overly
burdensome and impede hiring and
internal reassignments. In this regard,
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the final rule makes all employees
granted unescorted access to an NRClicensed facility generally authorized,
obviating any need to research the
citizenship status of employees who
have been granted unescorted access to
an NRC-licensed facility. In addition,
the required I–9 forms provide readily
available data on new foreign national
employees that should help companies
determine whether a foreign national
needing access to part 810-controlled
information will require a specific
authorization.
NEI and B&W both commented that
the time frames in the supplemental
proposed rule at § 810.15 were
inadequate, DOE acknowledges that 90
days is too short a time for many entities
to review internal compliance programs,
review employment records, file reports
with DOE on current foreign employees
receiving part 810-controlled
technology, and submit necessary
requests for specific authorization, and
in today’s final rule DOE has therefore
extended the transition period to 180
days.
Fluor commented that it is not
reasonable for a U.S. company to treat
its non-U.S. citizen employees working
in offices/subsidiaries located in foreign
countries differently (e.g., an employee
who is a citizen of specific authorization
country working in a country on the
general authorization Appendix list
would require a specific authorization
to access part 810-controlled
technology); and requested that foreign
nationals employed at U.S. subsidiaries
in countries not listed in the Appendix
be eligible for a general authorization as
long as the company can assure DOE
that the part 810-covered technology
transferred to the foreign national is
protected from unauthorized disclosure.
The final rule retains the approach, as
implemented under the 1986 version of
the rule and as proposed in the NOPR
and SNOPR, to deemed re-exports. That
is, whether a specific authorization is
required for a foreign national (as
defined in § 810.3) employed in a
foreign country depends on the general
or specific authorization designation of
the foreign national’s country of
citizenship. Under the final rule,
companies working with entities
outside the U.S., whether or not they are
wholly owned subsidiaries, are
authorized either generally or through a
specific authorization to transfer
specific technology. DOE will continue
to require compliance with the transfer
of part 810-controlled technology no
matter where the export takes place.
B&W and Fluor made a similar
proposal: That DOE view part 810controlled technology transfers to
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companies in some subset of countries
(B&W proposed NSG member states) as
eligible for general authorization with
respect to deemed re-exports, meaning
the recipient entity would be generally
authorized, as well as all its employees,
regardless of citizenship, so long as the
foreign nationals are employed legally
(and in the case of Fluor’s comment, so
long as a confidentiality agreement is in
place). As noted above, DOE has
determined to retain in the final rule
adopted today the regulatory approach
to deemed re-exports under the 1986
version of part 810 and in the NOPR and
SNOPR.
B&W and NEI suggested that the
language contained in § 810.11(c) as
proposed in the SNOPR (§ 810.11(b) in
the final rule) indicates that mere
‘‘employment’’ of a foreign national who
is a citizen of a country not listed in the
Appendix, by a U.S. company or its
foreign subsidiary, would require a
specific authorization. This is incorrect.
Under the SNOPR and under today’s
final rule, a specific authorization is
required for the transfer of part 810controlled technology or information to
a foreign national, not merely
employment of that individual by a U.S.
company or its foreign subsidiary.
B&W and NEI also recommended that
DOE streamline the proposed part 810
rule to clarify that U.S. companies are
only required to comply with the
proposed deemed export requirements
to the extent that compliance does not
violate applicable employment laws in
those countries where a company’s
foreign national employees are
employed. The intent of § 810.11(b) as
proposed and made final is to control
technology transfers, not employment. It
enables DOE to implement its authority
to authorize re-exports of transferred
technology. Companies may hire
whomever they choose. However, the
AEA is the foundation upon which the
regulation at part 810 and makes clear
that U.S. companies are not free to
transfer part 810-controlled technology
to employees who are citizens of
countries that are not listed in the
Appendix without a specific
authorization or who meet the
requirements of § 810.6(b) of the final
rule.
NEI commented that as proposed in
the SNOPR, a foreign national is
required to interact with DOE to secure
a specific authorization. That assertion
is incorrect. DOE consent is requested
by and granted to the U.S. companyapplicant under the rule, and not
directly to the foreign national. It is the
responsibility of the person subject to
part 810 to ensure that transfers and
retransfers of U.S. technology and
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assistance are under its control and take
place in compliance with part 810.
AUECO commented that the rule
‘‘should also explicitly authorize
deemed exports to foreign nationals of
Appendix A [sic] countries who meet
the requirements of § 810.6(b)(1, 2 and
4) . . .)’’ This recommendation
indicates a misreading of § 810.6.
Proposed § 810.6(a) of the SNOPR
explicitly authorizes specified activities
with entities in countries listed in the
Appendix. Section 810.6 proposed in
the SNOPR and adopted in today’s final
rule includes all nationals or citizens of
countries listed in the Appendix for all
activities except those described in
§ 810.7.
In conclusion, DOE carefully weighed
the comments received concerning
deemed exports and deemed re-exports.
In the discussion above, DOE has
provided clarity for issues raised by
commenters, but has determined that it
is unnecessary to make changes to the
requirements for deemed export and
deemed re-export authorizations as
proposed in the SNOPR. DOE will
address potential improvements for
efficiencies for such applications in the
PIP and continue to work directly with
part 810 applicants that have factspecific compliance questions.
4. Operational Safety Activities
AREVA, AHUG, and EPRI strongly
supported the inclusion of the proposed
definition of ‘‘operational safety’’ and
the proposed general authorization
provisions contained in the SNOPR for
proposed § 810.6(c) (adopted as
§ 810.6(b) in the final rule). AHUG and
EPRI provided comments and a red line
text of the general authorization
provisions at proposed § 810.6(c)(2) and
(3) as well as the definition of
‘‘operational safety’’ contained in
proposed § 810.3 to further expand the
provisions. AHUG, NEI, and EPRI
recommended that DOE consolidate
proposed §§ 810.6(c)(2) and (3) into a
single general authorization that focuses
on the nationality of the recipients of
the operational safety information or
assistance rather than on the nuclear
power plants. The commenters alleged
that proposed § 810.6(c)(2) would be
applicable only to existing plants
overseas, while proposed § 810.6(c)(3)
would include new plants as well as
existing plants in the United States and
that DOE did not provide a clear
rationale for its proposal. AHUG further
commented that extending a general
authorization as proposed in the SNOPR
to include assistance to new nuclear
power plants located in countries that
are not eligible for a general
authorization to ensure state of the art
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safety technologies and methodologies,
including input from U.S. nuclear
operators, are incorporated at the design
phase of a reactor construction is crucial
for the safety of nuclear plants.
Proposed § 810.6(c)(2) is intended to
authorize U.S. companies to provide
operational safety technologies and
assistance to existing plants in foreign
countries so they can meet specific
national or international safety
standards or requirements for
operational safety. Proposed
§ 810.6(c)(3), on the other hand, is
intended to authorize important
benchmarking activities at plants in the
United States by international entities or
individuals, such as those conducted by
the INPO, and NRC-sponsored and
-approved activities. The difference in
treatment between plants located in the
United States and those overseas is
intentional. Assistance to U.S. facilities
is not assistance to foreign entities, and
the incidental transfer of technical
information to foreign nationals
providing the assistance is not deemed
by DOE to be a significant proliferation
risk. However, providing information
during the design and construction of a
new facility in a destination requiring
specific authorization constitutes a
much higher proliferation risk, and
requires DOE approval. The basis for the
DOE decision to adopt the distinction
between assistance to a foreign reactor
and benchmarking in the United States
remains the basis for § 810.6(c)(3) in the
final rule. NRC-sponsored or -licensed
activities in the United States or
overseas are outside the scope of part
810, as explicitly provided in
§ 810.2(c)(1).
DOE also reviewed the proposed
revision to the definition of ‘‘operational
safety’’ provided by AHUG and EPRI.
DOE proposed a definition of
‘‘operational safety’’ in the SNOPR that
would broaden the scope of assistance
and technology that could be generally
authorized. The suggested revisions as
provided by AHUG and EPRI further
broadened DOE’s proposed scope and
include services that are not considered
merely safety but rather services to
improve design and/or efficiencies of
nuclear reactors. Because the general
authorization relates only to operational
safety, the broader definition that
includes design improvements or
efficiencies has not been adopted. DOE
has not made revisions to the proposed
definition of ‘‘operational safety’’, but
rather is adopting unchanged in today’s
final rule the definition proposed in the
SNOPR.
ERIN requested clarification on
whether probabilistic risk assessments
(PRAs) for existing nuclear power plants
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in foreign countries should be generally
authorized. ERIN commented that PRAs
do not fall within the scope of part 810
because the methodology is publicly
available. Further, ERIN stated that
while the information included in the
PRA is specific to the power plant, no
knowledge to design or operate the
reactor more efficiently is transferred in
the process of developing a PRA or the
final report. DOE has considered this
comment and agrees with ERIN’s
comment. DOE concludes in today’s
final rule that PRAs are generally
authorized activities within the
definition of ‘‘operational safety’’ for
destinations typically requiring specific
authorization. No change to the rule is
required to address this comment.
NEI commented that in proposed
§ 810.6(c)(1) of the SNOPR the words
‘‘which emergency cannot be met by
other means’’ should be deleted. NEI
stated that it is not in the interest of the
United States that persons subject to
part 810 should, in the face of a current
or imminent radiological emergency,
spend time trying to demonstrate that
no other means, foreign or domestic,
could defuse that emergency, or that the
proposed assistance is uniquely capable
of successfully doing so. DOE declines
to incorporate that suggestion because
the phrase in question provides DOE
with the latitude to make the
determination that an activity can take
place without the paperwork in place.
This is the qualitative analysis that
DOE, not the U.S. company, must
conduct when considering such
requests. However, to clarify the intent,
the phrase ‘‘in DOE’s assessment’’ has
been added. The phrase now reads
‘‘which emergency in DOE’s assessment
cannot be met by other means.’’
5. Other
NEI reiterated its view that exercise of
the Secretary of Energy’s statutory
authority under § 57 b.(2) of the AEA to
authorize persons to engage or
participate in the development or
production of special nuclear material
outside the United States can and
should be delegated; however, as the
AEA in section 161 n. does not allow for
delegation below the Secretary, the
requested change has not been made in
the rule. NEI also commented that some
language proposed in the SNOPR does
not conform to the NSG Guidelines in
some areas. The U.S. Government is a
member of and fully supports the NSG;
however, the legal underpinning of the
part 810 regulation is U.S. law, namely,
the AEA. The NSG Guidelines are
adopted by the NSG by unanimous
approval; thus, in some important
instances the part 810 regulation will
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not conform to the NSG Guidelines but
instead reflects U.S. law.
DOE will address with Enrichment
Technology U.S. and Integrated Systems
Technology the questions posed in their
comments concerning the application of
the final rule to their specific cases or
authorization conditions. NIC
recommended a users group be created
for part 810 authorization recipients.
After consideration of this request, DOE
has decided that the need for a users
group will be considered upon
completion of the PIP.
TerraPower commented that
clarification is needed concerning
technologies and assistance associated
with fuel research and development
programs that could be viewed as
analogous to reprocessing technologies
and because, without a definition of
‘‘reprocessing’’ in the rule, there is room
for misinterpretation. DOE has
considered this comment and will
address these specific concerns on a
case-by-case basis because the
technology has a number of aspects that
may or may not constitute reprocessing
depending on the specifics of the case.
A definition could be too restrictive in
some applications, and insufficient in
others.
DOE will not address B&W comments
concerning the extraterritorial
application of the rule as this is outside
the scope of this rulemaking. Other
matters that were presented but are
outside the scope of this rulemaking
include: EPRI’s comment that any
revision of part 810 is unnecessary as
the United States already has the most
stringent and unilateral export controls
in the world; and NIC’s
recommendations to modernize the
AEA 123 Agreement process and
conduct a 360-degree peer review of
other nuclear technology export control
regimes.
NEI submitted a number of editorial
and clarifying revisions in a red lined
document, including a proposal that
proposed § 810.5(b) should include a
timeframe for a response (NEI proposed
30 days). The proposed rule and this
final rule already provide 30 days for
responses to requests for advice.
Specific authorizations frequently
require interactions with foreign
governments over whose response time
DOE has no control, thus attempting to
incorporate a timeline in the final rule
would not achieve NEI’s intended
purpose of driving speedier DOE
approvals. Putting a hard deadline in
the rule would require DOE to reject the
application if foreign government
nonproliferation assurances could not
be obtained within the mandated time,
and would require the company to
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resubmit and restart the process. DOE
will address timelines in the PIP and
not in the final rule published today.
D. Technical Corrections
1. § 810.1
NEI recommended adding a clause to
proposed § 810.1 ‘‘(d) Establish orderly
and expeditious procedures for the
consideration of requests for specific
authorization under this part.’’
This phrase is, in part, a direct quote
of § 57 b. of the Atomic Energy Act
directing the adoption of procedures for
processing part 810 specific
authorization requests. Such procedures
were issued in 1978 and amended in
1984. It does not add to the rule, nor
does it create enforceable language that
will either help applicants obtain their
specific authorizations more rapidly or
provide further direction to DOE.
Therefore, DOE does not incorporate
this recommendation into the final rule.
2. § 810.3
Technical Services
AUECO commented that there was no
definition of ‘‘technical services’’
proposed in the SNOPR and requested
clarification concerning whether the
quoted phrase is different from the
defined term ‘‘technical assistance.’’
The term ‘‘technical services’’ occurs
only once in the 1986 version of the rule
and in the SNOPR, in the definition of
‘‘sensitive nuclear technology.’’ To
avoid the potential for confusion, DOE
in today’s final rule has replaced
‘‘technical services’’ with ‘‘assistance’’
because they have the same intended
meaning. A new definition of
‘‘assistance’’ has been added to § 810.3.
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3. § 810.3 Technical Assistance vs.
Assistance
NEI commented that ‘‘assistance’’
should be globally replaced with
‘‘technical assistance’’ or ‘‘assistance’’
should be defined.
The phrase ‘‘technical assistance’’
occurred only twice in the SNOPR
beyond the definitions in proposed
§ 810.3. All usages of ‘‘technical
assistance’’ in today’s final rule have
been replaced with ‘‘assistance’’ and the
definition modified accordingly. As
noted, a new definition of ‘‘assistance’’
has been added to § 810.3.
In addition NEI commented that the
phrase ‘‘as determined by the Secretary’’
in the definition of ‘‘assistance’’ should
be deleted because ‘‘it is vague and
open-ended and reduces certainty about
what types of assistance are covered by
Part 810. Any expansion of the reach of
the regulation should be accomplished
only by an amendment, subject to
Section 553 of the APA. At a minimum,
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the rule should be clear that any
controls asserted on the basis of
Secretarial determination over specific
types of technical assistance that are not
listed in the rule should apply only
prospectively.’’
The definition of ‘‘assistance’’
includes a list of activities that can be
construed as assistance, and cannot, by
its nature, be a comprehensive
description of all the ways persons may
endeavor to assist persons in other
countries with nuclear technology. The
inclusion of the phrase ‘‘as determined
by the Secretary’’ is intended to prevent
circumvention of this rule by the mere
renaming of activities to avoid the
descriptions included in this list.
Therefore, based on consideration of the
comment, DOE determined to retain the
phrase in the final rule.
4. § 810.6(f)
NEI commented that DOE should
delete the ‘‘and’’ at the end of § 810.6(f)
proposed in the SNOPR to clarify that
any one of the activities in subsections
(a) through (g) of this section is
independently generally authorized,
rather than requiring that all of them be
involved in order for the activity to be
generally authorized.
DOE agrees with NEI and in this final
rule replaces ‘‘and’’ with ‘‘or’’ to make
the disjunctive nature of the list clear.
5. §§ 810.6(c)(2) and 810.11(b)
NEI requested that DOE clarify ‘‘that
810.6(c)(2) has correctly numbered
references. It calls for information in
810.11(b), which refers the applicant to
optional information from 810.9(b) and
(c).’’
The SNOPR proposed § 810.11(b),
which provided applicants the option of
providing information concerning the
factors listed in §§ 810.9(b) and (c) of
the SNOPR. DOE has determined that
the factors are more properly considered
by DOE in making non-inimicality
determinations. Therefore, in the final
rule § 810.11(b) as proposed in the
SNOPR has been eliminated and
§ 810.11(c) as proposed in the SNOPR
has been renumbered as § 810.11(b).
In the final rule, the phrase ‘‘and may
provide information cited in
§ 810.11(b)’’ is eliminated from
§ 810.6(c)(2). The elimination of
§ 810.11(b) and subsequent renumbering
also requires changes to § 810.11(a) that
referenced § 810.11(b). This clause now
references §§ 810.9(b)(7), (8), and (9).
6. § 810.16 Savings Clause
NEI and B&W both commented that
the time frames in proposed § 810.15
were inadequate. B&W recommended a
complete grandfathering of all current
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9371
activities in countries moving from
general authorization to specific
authorization classification. NEI pointed
out that such activities were unlikely to
be found problematic by DOE. NEI
recommended a limited time frame and
suggested that a lack of objection from
DOE would constitute acceptance.
DOE acknowledges that 90 days is too
short a time for many entities to request
specific authorization for activities that
were generally authorized prior to
issuance of the final rule, and in today’s
final rule DOE has therefore extended
the transition period to 180 days.
However, a finding of non-inimicality
cannot be met by DOE not meeting a
deadline of any kind. Acknowledging
that technology transfers have already
occurred, the savings clause in the final
rule provides that until DOE acts on an
applicant’s request, the applicant can
continue its part 810-controlled current
activities.
V. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Order 12866
Today’s final rule has been
determined to be an economically
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review,’’ 58 FR 51735
(October 4, 1993). Accordingly, this
action was subject to review under that
Executive Order by the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
the Office of Management and Budget.
The required economic impact analysis
was prepared by DOE. AREVA, AUECO,
George Mason University, and NEI
commented that the economic analysis
performed as a part of the rulemaking
was based on flawed data sets or data
from soft growth periods, which the
commenters contended are not realistic
in normal circumstances.
NEI’s analysis is the most
comprehensive of those provided and is
used in this discussion of the economic
impacts of this final rule. Rather than
debate the assumptions between DOE’s
analysis and NEI’s analysis, DOE
accepts NEI’s basic claim that different
assumptions will result in different
outcomes. NEI’s critique claims that
revisions to part 810 as proposed in the
SNOPR would have an annual impact of
$10 million to the detriment of the U.S.
nuclear industry.
In its analysis, NEI listed 14 key
countries that will be moving from
generally authorized to specifically
authorized classification and based its
conclusion concerning the economic
impact of DOE’s proposed regulatory
revisions on these 14 countries. NEI did
not provide any information about the
specific opportunities provided in each
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acknowledge that there is additional
effort involved in hiring workers from
these destinations into positions where
part 810-controlled technology would
be shared, the final rule does not
preclude such hiring and, in fact, NNSA
is working on a PIP to reduce this
burden. Under the 1986 version of the
rule a large number of the specific
authorizations were, in fact, to allow
such workers to work in those positions.
However, for the sake of discussion,
DOE accepts that there is an impact of
$2.5 million per year.
To be further conservative, DOE has
omitted any potential additional
positive impact of countries moving
country, so DOE has assumed it is
roughly equal to $700,000 per country
per year. As Croatia was included in
NEI’s list, and since that country has
been included on the Appendix list of
generally authorized destinations, any
impact should be reduced by $700,000
per year, bringing the impact down to
$9.3 million per year.
NEI’s critique also included a
projected $5 million per year impact for
losses associated with deemed exports.
The argument is related to an economic
loss attributed to those companies that
would be required to hire workers from
countries that do not require specific
authorizations. While the DOE does
from specific authorizations to general
authorization classification. Such
changes serve to reduce the impact of
this rule further. For example, Vietnam
(although not one of NEI’s identified 14
critical countries) has just entered into
a 123 Agreement with the United States,
and is included in the Appendix to the
final rule as a generally authorized
destination.
These corrections bring the net effect
of the NEI based analysis to $6.8 million
per year, or roughly $100 million over
the analysis period (present to 2030).
The Table below summarizes NEI’s
original assumption and DOE’s
corrections:
Annual
impact
(million/yr)
Changes
NEI ........................................................................................................................................
DOE Changes for Croatia’s status as GA ............................................................................
DOE Changes for Deemed export impact ............................................................................
associated with transferring technology
to specifically authorized countries
reclassified as generally authorized
countries to be between $86 to $154
million per year.
DOE monetized the potential impact
of the rule from moving countries from
the GA to SA category and from the SA
to the GA category. For countries
moving from the GA to SA category, the
monetary impact is expected to be
negative, since specific authorization
involves additional cost to applicants
and time for DOE to process, and some
small fraction of SA applications may
ultimately not be approved. The impact
of moving a country from the SA to GA
category will, for the same reasons, is
expected to be positive. DOE calculated
DOE’s economic analysis compared
the potential impacts on the U.S.
nuclear exports of shifting countries
from one type of authorization to
another for three different nuclear
capacity forecasts. Using the World
Nuclear Association (WNA low
projection), Nuclear Assurance
Corporation, and UxC nuclear capacity
forecasts; DOE estimated the potential
for lost business in nuclear exports to
range from $20 to $86 million per year
over the 18-year window as potential
export volume destined for countries
moving from generally authorized to
specifically authorized status. Using the
same three nuclear capacity forecasts,
DOE also estimated the potential
impacts on U.S. nuclear exports
Primary
Annualized
Monetized
Costs
($Millions/Year) ...............................
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the net effect on U.S. nuclear exports
using the average annual yearly trade
derived from the WNA low projection
from 2013 through 2030 and from four
scenarios that assume 10% to 40% of
annual yearly trade will be impacted
either positively or negatively by the
rule change. Using the 20% impact as
the assumption for the primary impact
estimate, DOE estimated the costs to be
$23 million/year and the benefits to be
$43 million/year with a net benefit of
$20 million/year at a 7% discount rate.
The net benefit of the rule ranged from
a low of $9 million/year to $53 million/
year at a 7% discount rate as shown in
the table below. The estimates using a
3% discount rate are also presented in
the table below.
High estimate
Year dollars
Discount
rate
(%)
Period
covered
$60,508,311
63,131,945
2010
2010
7
3
2013–2030
2013–2030
42,586,759
42,927,555
18,927,448
19,078,913
113,564,690
114,473,479
2010
2010
7
3
2013–2030
2013–2030
19,896,142
19,253,076
8,842,730
8,556,922
53,056,379
51,341,534
2010
2010
7
3
2013–2030
2013–2030
Both NEI and DOE’s analyses concur
that MW’s of nuclear generation serve as
a rough approximation of potential
market opportunity. In looking at
comprehensive forecasts from today to
2030, DOE notes that at the maximum,
the countries moving from generally
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148.8
108.7
$10,084,718
10,521,991
Annualized Monetized Net Benefits
($Millions/Year) ...............................
13:12 Feb 20, 2015
Low estimate
$10
9.3
6.8
$22,690,617
23,674,479
Annualized
Monetized
Benefits
($Millions/Year) ...............................
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Base .............................
$0.7 ..............................
$2.5 ..............................
Impacts
through
2030
(millions)
authorized to specific authorization
status represent significantly less than
1% of the total market.
B. Administrative Procedure Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(B), the DOE finds that
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providing an opportunity for public
comment on office name changes in
DOE’s internal organization structure
prior to publication of this rule is not
necessary and contrary to the public
interest because they are minor
technical changes. Prior notice and
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opportunity to comment on these
changes are unnecessary because they
are not subject to the exercise of
discretion by the DOE.
C. National Environmental Policy Act
DOE determined that today’s final
rule is covered under the Categorical
Exclusion found in DOE’s National
Environmental Policy Act regulations at
paragraph A5 of Appendix A to Subpart
D, 10 CFR part 1021, categorical
exclusion A5, which applies to a rule or
regulation that interprets or amends an
‘‘existing rule or regulation that does not
change the environmental effect of the
rule or regulation being amended.’’
Accordingly, neither an environmental
assessment nor an environmental
impact statement is required.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires preparation
of an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis for any rule that by law must
be proposed for public comment, unless
the agency certifies that the rule, if
promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. As required by
Executive Order 13272, ‘‘Proper
Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking,’’ 67 FR 53461
(August 16, 2002), DOE published
procedures and policies on February 19,
2003, to ensure that the potential
impacts of its rules on small entities are
properly considered during the
rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE
has made its procedures and policies
available on the Office of the General
Counsel’s Web site: https://
www.energy.gov/gc/downloads/
executive-order-13272-considerationsmall-entities-agency-rulemaking.
In the SNOPR, DOE certified that this
rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities and did not
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis
for this rulemaking. The DOE received
no comments on the certification, and
has responded to comments related to
the economic impacts of the rule
elsewhere in this preamble; no changes
to the certification were made based on
comments received. As a result, the
DOE certifies that today’s final rule will
not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The DOE’s certification and supporting
statement of factual basis will be
provided to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
605(b).
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E. Paperwork Reduction Act
U.S. companies that wish to export
nuclear technology or assistance within
the scope of this final rule must provide
DOE with information concerning the
technology to be transferred as well as
the destination and use or application of
the assistance or technology. Depending
on the destination and the technology in
question, a U.S. company will be
required to submit a report of the
activity 30 days after the fact or a
request for a specific authorization from
the Secretary. DOE submitted a request
for the reinstatement of the collection of
information associated with
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of part 810 to OMB for
approval pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.) and the procedures
implementing that Act, 5 CFR 1320.1 et
seq. The collection of information
requirements for compliance with part
810 and recordkeeping is subject to
review and approval by OMB under
OMB Control Number 1901–0263. OMB
approved the reinstatement of the
information collection on October 31,
2014. DOE published notices in the
Federal Register on March 7, 2014,
FRN# 2014–04984, p. 13048, and FRN#
2014–12800, p. 31928 soliciting
comments on the DOE estimate of the
information collection burden. No
public comments were received on the
60-day or 30-day notices. In association
with this rulemaking revision for part
810, DOE is submitting for OMB
approval the revisions to this
information collection.
Under the 1986 version of the rule, a
list of countries at § 810.8(a) contained
73 counties that required case-by-case
review for the Secretary to make a noninimicality finding specifically
authorizing the transfer of any
technology or assistance except where
generally authorized in § 810.7. By
default, all countries not listed were
generally authorized destinations for the
transfer of nuclear power plant
technology and assistance to those
countries without prior approval from
DOE. In this final rule, DOE restructured
the list to a positive list of destinations,
including 51 destinations to which the
transfer of nuclear power plant
technology will be generally authorized.
This revision has effected a net change
of an additional 74 countries that were
by default generally authorized for the
transfer of nuclear power plant
technology but will now require a
specific authorization. While this is an
increase in the number of destinations
not eligible for a general authorization
by default, in DOE’s estimation, the
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9373
positive generally authorized
destination list is not expected to result
in a substantial increase in the volume
of reporting or requests for specific
authorization, as the subject countries
have no civilian nuclear programs or
plans for civilian nuclear programs in
the near future.
The reporting and application burden
is estimated at three hours per response,
and an average of three responses per
distinct entity, regardless of it being a
report of generally authorized activities
or a request for specific authorization.
This number includes the time for
reviewing the regulation, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
of information. DOE estimated for the
1986 version of the rule that the total
number of unduplicated respondents to
be 145 with the average of 2.22
responses per respondent, resulting in
322 responses and 966 total annual
burden hours with the average burden
per response at 3 hours and the average
annual burden per respondent at 6.66
hours. Under the final rule, DOE is
estimating that the number of
respondents will remain the same but
that the number of reports filed per
respondent to increase from 2.22 to
3.19, resulting in 463 total annual
responses and 1389 total annual burden
hours. The average burden per response
is estimated to remain at 3 hours per
respondent and the average annual
burden per respondent at 9.57 hours.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act, unless that collection of
information displays a currently valid
OMB Control Number.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) generally
requires Federal agencies to examine
closely the impacts of regulatory actions
on State, local, and tribal governments.
Subsection 101(5) of title I of that law
defines a Federal intergovernmental
mandate to include any regulation that
would impose upon State, local, or
tribal governments an enforceable duty,
except a condition of Federal assistance
or a duty arising from participating in a
voluntary federal program. Title II of
that law requires each Federal agency to
assess the effects of Federal regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the
private sector, other than to the extent
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such actions merely incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in a
statute. Section 202 of that title requires
a Federal agency to perform a detailed
assessment of the anticipated costs and
benefits of any rule that includes a
Federal mandate which may result in
costs to State, local, or tribal
governments, or to the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year
(adjusted annually for inflation). 2
U.S.C. 1532(a) and (b). Section 204 of
that title requires each agency that
proposes a rule containing a significant
Federal intergovernmental mandate to
develop an effective process for
obtaining meaningful and timely input
from elected officers of State, local, and
tribal governments (2 U.S.C. 1534).
This rule does not impose a Federal
mandate on State, local, or tribal
governments or on the private sector.
Accordingly, no assessment or analysis
is required under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
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G. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999
Section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999 (Pub. L. 105–277) requires
Federal agencies to issue a Family
Policymaking Assessment for any
proposed rule that may affect family
well-being. The final rule will not have
any impact on the autonomy or integrity
of the family as an institution.
Accordingly, DOE has concluded that it
is not necessary to prepare a Family
Policymaking Assessment.
H. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism,’’
64 FR 43255 (August 4, 1999), imposes
certain requirements on agencies
formulating and implementing policies
or regulations that preempt State law or
that have federalism implications.
Agencies are required to examine the
constitutional and statutory authority
supporting any action that would limit
the policymaking discretion of the
States and carefully assess the necessity
for such actions. DOE has examined this
rule and has determined that it does not
pre-empt State law and will not have a
substantial direct effect on the States, on
the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. No further action
is required by Executive Order 13132.
I. Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing
regulations and the promulgation of
new regulations, section 3(a) of
Executive Order 12988, ‘‘Civil Justice
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Reform,’’ 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996),
imposes on Executive agencies the
general duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity; (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation; and
(3) provide a clear legal standard for
affected conduct rather than a general
standard and promote simplification
and burden reduction. With regard to
the review required by section 3(a),
section 3(b) of Executive Order 12988
specifically requires that Executive
agencies make every reasonable effort to
ensure that the regulation: (1) Clearly
specifies the preemptive effect, if any;
(2) clearly specifies any effect on
existing Federal law or regulation; (3)
provides a clear legal standard for
affected conduct while promoting
simplification and burden reduction; (4)
specifies the retroactive effect, if any; (5)
adequately defines key terms; and (6)
addresses other important issues
affecting clarity and general
draftsmanship under any guidelines
issued by the Attorney General. Section
3(c) of Executive Order 12988 requires
Executive agencies to review regulations
in light of applicable standards in
section 3(a) and section 3(b) to
determine whether they are met or it is
unreasonable to meet one or more of
them. DOE has completed the required
review and determined that, to the
extent permitted by law, the rule meets
the relevant standards of Executive
Order 12988.
J. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 2001
The Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 2001
(44 U.S.C. 3516 note), provides for
agencies to review most disseminations
of information to the public under
guidelines established by each agency
pursuant to general guidelines issued by
OMB.
OMB’s guidelines were published at
67 FR 8452 (February 22, 2002), and
DOE’s guidelines were published at 67
FR 62446 (October 7, 2002). DOE has
reviewed this rule under the OMB and
DOE guidelines and has concluded that
it is consistent with applicable policies
in those guidelines.
K. Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use,’’ 66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001), requires Federal agencies to
prepare and submit to OMB a Statement
of Energy Effects for any proposed
significant energy action. A ‘‘significant
energy action’’ is defined as any action
by an agency that promulgated or is
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expected to lead to promulgation of a
final rule, and that: (1) Is a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866, or any successor order; and (2)
is likely to have a significant adverse
effect on the supply, distribution, or use
of energy, or (3) is designated by the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs as a
significant energy action. For any
proposed significant energy action, the
agency must give a detailed statement of
any adverse effects on energy supply,
distribution, or use should the proposal
be implemented, and of reasonable
alternatives to the action and their
expected benefits on energy supply,
distribution, and use. Today’s regulatory
action will not have a significant
adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy and is
therefore not a significant energy action.
Accordingly, DOE has not prepared a
Statement of Energy Effects.
L. Executive Order 13609
Executive Order 13609 of May 1,
2012, ‘‘Promoting International
Regulatory Cooperation,’’ requires that,
to the extent permitted by law and
consistent with the principles and
requirements of Executive Order 13563
and Executive Order 12866, each
Federal agency shall:
(a) If required to submit a Regulatory
Plan pursuant to Executive Order 12866,
include in that plan a summary of its
international regulatory cooperation
activities that are reasonably anticipated
to lead to significant regulations, with
an explanation of how these activities
advance the purposes of Executive
Order 13563 and this order;
(b) Ensure that significant regulations
that the agency identifies as having
significant international impacts are
designated as such in the Unified
Agenda of Federal Regulatory and
Deregulatory Actions, on RegInfo.gov,
and on Regulations.gov;
(c) In selecting which regulations to
include in its retrospective review plan,
as required by Executive Order 13563,
consider:
(i) Reforms to existing significant
regulations that address unnecessary
differences in regulatory requirements
between the United States and its major
trading partners, consistent with section
1 of this order, when stakeholders
provide adequate information to the
agency establishing that the differences
are unnecessary; and
(ii) Such reforms in other
circumstances as the agency deems
appropriate; and
(d) For significant regulations that the
agency identifies as having significant
international impacts, consider, to the
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extent feasible, appropriate, and
consistent with law, any regulatory
approaches by a foreign government that
the United States has agreed to consider
under a regulatory cooperation council
work plan.
DOE has reviewed this rule under the
provisions of Executive Order 13609
and determined that the rule complies
with all requirements set forth in the
order.
Act of 1978, Pub. L. 95–242, 68 Stat. 932,
948, 950, 958, 92 Stat. 126, 136, 137, 138 (42
U.S.C. 2077, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2201, 2272,
2280), and the Intelligence Reform and
Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, Pub. L.
108–458, 118 Stat. 3768; Sec. 104 of the
Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, Pub. L.
93–438; Sec. 301, Department of Energy
Organization Act, Pub. L. 95–91; National
Nuclear Security Administration Act, Pub. L.
106–65, 50 U.S.C. 2401 et seq., as amended.
M. Congressional Notification
As required by 5 U.S.C. 801, DOE will
submit to Congress a report regarding
the issuance of today’s final rule prior
to the effective date set forth at the
outset of this notice. The report will
state that it has been determined that
the rule is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as defined
by 5 U.S.C. 801(2).
The regulations in this part
implement section 57 b.(2) of the
Atomic Energy Act, which empowers
the Secretary, with the concurrence of
the Department of State, and after
consultation with the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, the Department
of Commerce, and the Department of
Defense, to authorize persons to directly
or indirectly engage or participate in the
development or production of special
nuclear material outside the United
States. The purpose of the regulations in
this part is to:
(a) Identify activities that are
generally authorized by the Secretary
and thus require no other authorization
under this part;
(b) Identify activities that require
specific authorization by the Secretary
and explain how to request
authorization; and
(c) Specify reporting requirements for
authorized activities.
VI. Approval by the Office of the
Secretary
The Office of the Secretary of Energy
has approved the publication of this
final rule.
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 810
Foreign relations, Nuclear energy,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 7,
2015.
Ernest J. Moniz,
Secretary of Energy.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, DOE amends title 10 of the
Code of Federal Regulations by revising
part 810 to read as follows:
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PART 810—ASSISTANCE TO FOREIGN
ATOMIC ENERGY ACTIVITIES
Sec.
810.1 Purpose.
810.2 Scope.
810.3 Definitions.
810.4 Communications.
810.5 Interpretations.
810.6 Generally authorized activities.
810.7 Activities requiring specific
authorization.
810.8 Restrictions on general and specific
authorization.
810.9 Grant of specific authorization.
810.10 Revocation, suspension, or
modification of authorization.
810.11 Information required in an
application for specific authorization.
810.12 Reports.
810.13 Additional information.
810.14 Special provision regarding
Ukraine.
810.15 Violations.
810.16 Effective date and savings clause.
Appendix A to Part 810—Generally
Authorized Destinations
Authority: Secs. 57, 127, 128, 129, 161,
222, and 232 Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as
amended by the Nuclear Nonproliferation
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§ 810.1
§ 810.2
Purpose.
Scope.
(a) Part 810 (this part) applies to:
(1) All persons subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States who
directly or indirectly engage or
participate in the development or
production of any special nuclear
material outside the United States; and
(2) The transfer of technology that
involves any of the activities listed in
paragraph (b) of this section either in
the United States or abroad by such
persons or by licensees, contractors or
subsidiaries under their direction,
supervision, responsibility, or control.
(b) The activities referred to in
paragraph (a) of this section are:
(1) Chemical conversion and
purification of uranium and thorium
from milling plant concentrates and in
all subsequent steps in the nuclear fuel
cycle;
(2) Chemical conversion and
purification of plutonium and
neptunium;
(3) Nuclear fuel fabrication, including
preparation of fuel elements, fuel
assemblies and cladding thereof;
(4) Uranium isotope separation
(uranium enrichment), plutonium
isotope separation, and isotope
separation of any other elements
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(including stable isotope separation)
when the technology or process can be
applied directly or indirectly to
uranium or plutonium;
(5) Nuclear reactor development,
production or use of the components
within or attached directly to the reactor
vessel, the equipment that controls the
level of power in the core, and the
equipment or components that normally
contain or come in direct contact with
or control the primary coolant of the
reactor core;
(6) Development, production or use of
production accelerator-driven
subcritical assembly systems;
(7) Heavy water production and
hydrogen isotope separation when the
technology or process has reasonable
potential for large-scale separation of
deuterium (2H) from protium (1H);
(8) Reprocessing of irradiated nuclear
fuel or targets containing special nuclear
material, and post-irradiation
examination of fuel elements, fuel
assemblies and cladding thereof, if it is
part of a reprocessing program; and
(9) The transfer of technology for the
development, production, or use of
equipment or material especially
designed or prepared for any of the
above listed activities. (See Nuclear
Regulatory Commission regulations at
10 CFR part 110, Appendices A through
K, and O, for an illustrative list of items
considered to be especially designed or
prepared for certain listed nuclear
activities.)
(c) This part does not apply to:
(1) Exports authorized by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Department of
State, or Department of Commerce;
(2) Transfer of publicly available
information, publicly available
technology, or the results of
fundamental research;
(3) Uranium and thorium mining and
milling (e.g., production of impure
source material concentrates such as
uranium yellowcake and all activities
prior to that production step);
(4) Nuclear fusion reactors per se,
except for supporting systems involving
hydrogen isotope separation
technologies within the scope defined
in paragraph (b)(7) of this section and
§ 810.7(c)(3);
(5) Production or extraction of
radiopharmaceutical isotopes when the
process does not involve special nuclear
material; and
(6) Transfer of technology to any
individual who is lawfully admitted for
permanent residence in the United
States or is a protected individual under
the Immigration and Naturalization Act
(8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)).
(d) Persons under U.S. jurisdiction are
responsible for their foreign licensees,
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contractors, or subsidiaries to the extent
that the former have control over the
activities of the latter.
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§ 810.3
Definitions.
As used in this part 810:
Agreement for cooperation means an
agreement with another nation or group
of nations concluded under sections 123
or 124 of the Atomic Energy Act.
Assistance means assistance in such
forms as instruction, skills, training,
working knowledge, consulting services,
or any other assistance as determined by
the Secretary. Assistance may involve
the transfer of technical data.
Atomic Energy Act means the Atomic
Energy Act of 1954, as amended.
Classified information means national
security information classified under
Executive Order 13526 or any
predecessor or superseding order, and
Restricted Data classified under the
Atomic Energy Act.
Cooperative enrichment enterprise
means a multi-country or multicompany (where at least two of the
companies are incorporated in different
countries) joint development or
production effort. The term includes a
consortium of countries or companies or
a multinational corporation.
Country, as well as government,
nation, state, and similar entity, shall be
read to include Taiwan, consistent with
section 4 of the Taiwan Relations Act
(22 U.S.C. 3303).
Development means any activity
related to all phases before production
such as: Design, design research, design
analysis, design concepts, assembly and
testing of prototypes, pilot production
schemes, design data, process of
transforming design data into a product,
configuration design, integration design,
and layouts.
DOE means the U.S. Department of
Energy.
Enrichment means isotope separation
of uranium or isotope separation of
plutonium, regardless of the type of
process or separation mechanism used.
Fissile material means isotopes that
readily fission after absorbing a neutron
of any energy, either fast or slow. Fissile
materials are uranium-235, uranium233, plutonium-239, and plutonium241.
Foreign national means an individual
who is not a citizen or national of the
United States, but excludes U.S. lawful
permanent residents and protected
individuals under the Immigration and
Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C.
1324b(a)(3)).
Fundamental research means basic
and applied research in science and
engineering, the results of which
ordinarily are published and shared
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broadly within the scientific
community, as distinguished from
proprietary research and from industrial
development, design, production, and
product utilization, the results of which
ordinarily are restricted for proprietary
or national security reasons.
General authorization means an
authorization granted by the Secretary
under section 57 b.(2) of the Atomic
Energy Act to provide assistance or
technology to foreign atomic energy
activities subject to this part and which
does not require a request for, or the
Secretary’s issuance of, a specific
authorization.
IAEA means the International Atomic
Energy Agency.
NNPA means the Nuclear NonProliferation Act of 1978, 22 U.S.C. 3201
et seq.
NPT means the Treaty on the NonProliferation of Nuclear Weapons, done
on July 1, 1968.
Nuclear reactor means an apparatus,
other than a nuclear explosive device,
designed or used to sustain nuclear
fission in a self-sustaining chain
reaction.
Operational safety means the
capability of a reactor to be operated in
a manner that complies with national
standards or requirements or widelyaccepted international standards and
recommendations to prevent
uncontrolled or inadvertent criticality,
prevent or mitigate uncontrolled release
of radioactivity to the environment,
monitor and limit staff exposure to
radiation and radioactivity, and protect
off-site population from exposure to
radiation or radioactivity. Operational
safety may be enhanced by providing
expert advice, equipment,
instrumentation, technology, software,
services, analyses, procedures, training,
or other assistance that improves the
capability of the reactor to be operated
in compliance with such standards,
requirements or recommendations.
Person means:
(1) Any individual, corporation,
partnership, firm, association, trust,
estate, public or private institution;
(2) Any group, government agency
other than DOE, or any State or political
entity within a State; and
(3) Any legal successor,
representative, agent, or agency of the
foregoing.
Production means all production
phases such as: Construction,
production engineering, manufacture,
integration, assembly or mounting,
inspection, testing, and quality
assurance.
Production accelerator means a
particle accelerator especially designed,
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used, or intended for use with a
production subcritical assembly.
Production accelerator-driven
subcritical assembly system means a
system comprised of a production
subcritical assembly and a production
accelerator and which is especially
designed, used, or intended for the
production of plutonium or uranium233. In such a system, the production
accelerator target provides a source of
neutrons used to effect special nuclear
material production in the production
subcritical assembly.
Production reactor means a nuclear
reactor especially designed or used
primarily for the production of
plutonium or uranium-233.
Production subcritical assembly
means an apparatus that contains source
material or special nuclear material to
produce a nuclear fission chain reaction
that is not self-sustaining and that is
especially designed, used, or intended
for the production of plutonium or
uranium-233.
Publicly available information means
information in any form that is generally
accessible, without restriction, to the
public.
Publicly available technology means
technology that is already published or
has been prepared for publication; arises
during, or results from, fundamental
research; or is included in an
application filed with the U.S. Patent
Office and eligible for foreign filing
under 35 U.S.C. 184.
Restricted Data means all data
concerning:
(1) Design, manufacture, or utilization
of atomic weapons;
(2) The production of special nuclear
material; or
(3) The use of special nuclear material
in the production of energy, but shall
not include data declassified or
removed from the Restricted Data
category pursuant to section 142 of the
Atomic Energy Act.
Secretary means the Secretary of
Energy.
Sensitive nuclear technology means
any information (including information
incorporated in a production or
utilization facility or important
component part thereof) which is not
available to the public (see definition of
‘‘publicly available information’’) and
which is important to the design,
construction, fabrication, operation, or
maintenance of a uranium enrichment
or nuclear fuel reprocessing facility or a
facility for the production of heavy
water, but shall not include Restricted
Data controlled pursuant to chapter 12
of the Atomic Energy Act. The
information may take a tangible form
such as a model, prototype, blueprint, or
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operation manual or an intangible form
such as assistance.
Source material means:
(1) Uranium or thorium, other than
special nuclear material; or
(2) Ores that contain by weight 0.05
percent or more of uranium or thorium,
or any combination of these materials.
Special nuclear material means:
(1) Plutonium,
(2) Uranium-233, or
(3) Uranium enriched above 0.711
percent by weight in the isotope
uranium-235.
Specific authorization means an
authorization granted by the Secretary
under section 57b.(2) of the Atomic
Energy Act, in response to an
application filed under this part, to
engage in specifically authorized
nuclear activities subject to this part.
Technical data means data in such
forms as blueprints, plans, diagrams,
models, formulae, engineering designs,
specifications, manuals, and
instructions written or recorded on
other media or devices such as disks,
tapes, read-only memories, and
computational methodologies,
algorithms, and computer codes that can
directly or indirectly affect the
production of special nuclear material.
Technology means assistance or
technical data required for the
development, production or use of any
plant, facility, or especially designed or
prepared equipment for the activities
described in § 810.2(b).
Use means operation, installation
(including on-site installation),
maintenance (checking), repair,
overhaul, or refurbishing.
United States, when used in a
geographical sense, includes Puerto
Rico and all territories and possessions
of the United States.
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§ 810.4
Communications.
(a) All communications concerning
the regulations in this part should be
addressed to: U.S. Department of
Energy, Washington, DC 20585.
Attention: Senior Policy Advisor,
National Nuclear Security
Administration/Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control
(NPAC), Telephone (202) 586–1007.
(b) Communications also may be
delivered to DOE’s headquarters at 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. All clearly
marked proprietary information will be
given the maximum protection allowed
by law.
(c) Communications may also be
delivered by email to: Part810@
nnsa.doe.gov. For ‘‘fast track’’ activities
described in §§ 810.6(c)(1) and (c)(2)
emails should be sent to: Part810-
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OperationalSafety@nnsa.doe.gov.
Notifications regarding activity in the
Ukraine should be delivered by email
to: Part810-Ukraine@nnsa.doe.gov.
§ 810.5
Interpretations.
(a) The advice of the DOE Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control may
be requested on whether a proposed
activity falls outside the scope of this
part, is generally authorized under
§ 810.6, or requires a specific
authorization under § 810.7. However,
unless authorized by the Secretary in
writing, no interpretation of the
regulations in this part other than a
written interpretation by the DOE
General Counsel is binding upon DOE.
(b) When advice is requested from the
DOE Office of Nonproliferation and
Arms Control, or a binding, written
determination is requested from the
DOE General Counsel, a response
normally will be made within 30
calendar days and, if this is not feasible,
an interim response will explain the
reason for the delay.
(c) The DOE Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control may
periodically publish abstracts of general
or specific authorizations that may be of
general interest, exclusive of proprietary
business-confidential data submitted to
DOE or other information protected by
law from unauthorized disclosure.
§ 810.6
Generally authorized activities.
The Secretary has determined that the
following activities are generally
authorized, provided that no sensitive
nuclear technology or assistance
described in § 810.7 is involved:
(a) Engaging directly or indirectly in
the production of special nuclear
material at facilities in countries or with
entities listed in the Appendix to this
part;
(b) Transfer of technology to a citizen
or national of a country other than the
United States not listed in the Appendix
to this part and working at an NRClicensed facility, provided:
(1) The foreign national is lawfully
employed by or contracted to work for
a U.S. employer in the United States;
(2) The foreign national executes a
confidentiality agreement with the U.S.
employer to safeguard the technology
from unauthorized use or disclosure;
(3) The foreign national has been
granted unescorted access in accordance
with NRC regulations at an NRClicensed facility; and
(4) The foreign national’s U.S.
employer authorizing access to the
technology complies with the reporting
requirements in § 810.12(g).
(c) Activities at any safeguarded or
NRC-licensed facility to:
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(1) Prevent or correct a current or
imminent radiological emergency
posing a significant danger to the health
and safety of the off-site population,
which emergency in DOE’s assessment
cannot be met by other means, provided
DOE is notified in writing in advance
and does not object within 48 hours of
receipt of the advance notification;
(2) Furnish operational safety
information or assistance to existing
safeguarded civilian nuclear reactors
outside the United States in countries
with safeguards agreements with the
IAEA or an equivalent voluntary offer,
provided DOE is notified in writing and
approves the activity in writing within
45 calendar days of the notice. The
applicant should provide all the
information required under § 810.11 and
specific references to the national or
international safety standards or
requirements for operational safety for
nuclear reactors that will be addressed
by the assistance; or
(3) Furnish operational safety
information or assistance to existing,
proposed, or new-build civilian nuclear
facilities in the United States, provided
DOE is notified by certified mail return
receipt requested and approves the
activity in writing within 45 calendar
days of the notice. The applicant should
provide all the information required
under § 810.11.
(d) Participation in exchange
programs approved by the Department
of State in consultation with DOE;
(e) Activities carried out in the course
of implementation of the ‘‘Agreement
between the United States of America
and the IAEA for the Application of
Safeguards in the United States,’’ done
on December 9, 1980;
(f) Activities carried out by persons
who are full-time employees of the
IAEA or whose employment by or work
for the IAEA is sponsored or approved
by the Department of State or DOE; or
(g) Extraction of Molybdenum-99 for
medical use from irradiated targets of
enriched uranium, provided that the
activity does not also involve
purification and recovery of enriched
uranium materials, and provided
further, that the technology used does
not involve significant components
relevant for reprocessing spent nuclear
reactor fuel (e.g., high-speed centrifugal
contactors, pulsed columns).
§ 810.7 Activities requiring specific
authorization.
Any person requires a specific
authorization by the Secretary before:
(a) Engaging in any of the activities
listed in § 810.2(b) with any foreign
country or entity not specified in the
Appendix to this part;
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(b) Providing or transferring sensitive
nuclear technology to any foreign
country or entity; or
(c) Engaging in or providing
technology (including assistance) for
any of the following activities with
respect to any foreign country or entity
(or a citizen or national of that country
other than U.S. lawful permanent
residents or protected individuals under
the Immigration and Naturalization Act
(8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)):
(1) Uranium isotope separation
(uranium enrichment), plutonium
isotope separation, or isotope separation
of any other elements (including stable
isotope separation) when the technology
or process can be applied directly or
indirectly to uranium or plutonium;
(2) Fabrication of nuclear fuel
containing plutonium, including
preparation of fuel elements, fuel
assemblies, and cladding thereof;
(3) Heavy water production, and
hydrogen isotope separation, when the
technology or process has reasonable
potential for large-scale separation of
deuterium (2H) from protium (1H);
(4) Development, production or use of
a production accelerator-driven
subcritical assembly system;
(5) Development, production or use of
a production reactor; or
(6) Reprocessing of irradiated nuclear
fuel or targets containing special nuclear
material.
§ 810.8 Restrictions on general and
specific authorization.
A general or specific authorization
granted by the Secretary under this part:
(a) Is limited to activities involving
only unclassified information and does
not permit furnishing classified
information;
(b) Does not relieve a person from
complying with the relevant laws or the
regulations of other U.S. Government
agencies applicable to exports; and
(c) Does not authorize a person to
engage in any activity when the person
knows or has reason to know that the
activity is intended to provide
assistance in designing, developing,
fabricating, or testing a nuclear
explosive device.
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§ 810.9
Grant of specific authorization.
(a) An application for authorization to
engage in activities for which specific
authorization is required under § 810.7
should be made to the U.S. Department
of Energy, National Nuclear Security
Administration, Washington, DC 20585,
Attention: Senior Policy Advisor, Office
of Nonproliferation and Arms Control
(NPAC).
(b) The Secretary will approve an
application for specific authorization if
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it is determined, with the concurrence
of the Department of State and after
consultation with the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Department of
Commerce, and Department of Defense,
that the activity will not be inimical to
the interest of the United States. In
making such a determination, the
Secretary will take into account the
following factors:
(1) Whether the United States has an
agreement for cooperation in force
covering exports to the country or entity
involved;
(2) Whether the country is a party to,
or has otherwise adhered to, the NPT;
(3) Whether the country is in good
standing with its acknowledged
nonproliferation commitments;
(4) Whether the country is in full
compliance with its obligations under
the NPT;
(5) Whether the country has accepted
IAEA safeguards obligations on all
nuclear materials used for peaceful
purposes and has them in force;
(6) Whether other nonproliferation
controls or conditions exist on the
proposed activity, including that the
recipient is duly authorized by the
country to receive and use the
technology sought to be transferred;
(7) Significance of the assistance or
transferred technology relative to the
existing nuclear capabilities of the
country;
(8) Whether the transferred
technology is part of an existing
cooperative enrichment enterprise or
the supply chain of such an enterprise;
(9) The availability of comparable
assistance or technology from other
sources; and
(10) Any other factors that may bear
upon the political, economic,
competitiveness, or security interests of
the United States, including the
obligations of the United States under
treaties or other international
agreements, and the obligations of the
country under treaties or other
international agreements.
(c) If the proposed activity involves
the export of sensitive nuclear
technology, the requirements of sections
127 and 128 of the Atomic Energy Act
and of any applicable United States
international commitments must also be
met. For the export of sensitive nuclear
technology, in addition to the factors in
paragraph (b) of this section, the
Secretary will take into account:
(1) Whether the country has signed,
ratified, and is implementing a
comprehensive safeguards agreement
with the IAEA and has in force an
Additional Protocol based on the Model
Additional Protocol, or, pending this, in
the case of a regional accounting and
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control arrangement for nuclear
materials, is implementing, in
cooperation with the IAEA, a safeguards
agreement approved by the IAEA Board
of Governors prior to the publication of
INFCIRC/540 (September 1997); or
alternatively whether comprehensive
safeguards, including the measures of
the Model Additional Protocol, are
being applied in the country;
(2) Whether the country has not been
identified in a report by the IAEA
Secretariat that is under consideration
by the IAEA Board of Governors, as
being in breach of obligations to comply
with the applicable safeguards
agreement, nor continues to be the
subject of Board of Governors decisions
calling upon it to take additional steps
to comply with its safeguards
obligations or to build confidence in the
peaceful nature of its nuclear program,
nor as to which the IAEA Secretariat has
reported that it is unable to implement
the applicable safeguards agreement.
This criterion would not apply in cases
where the IAEA Board of Governors or
the United Nations Security Council
subsequently decides that adequate
assurances exist as to the peaceful
purposes of the country’s nuclear
program and its compliance with the
applicable safeguards agreements. For
the purposes of this paragraph, ‘‘breach’’
refers only to serious breaches of
proliferation concern;
(3) Whether the country is adhering to
the Nuclear Suppliers Group Guidelines
and, where applicable, has reported to
the Security Council of the United
Nations that it is implementing effective
export controls as identified by Security
Council Resolution 1540; and
(4) Whether the country adheres to
international safety conventions relating
to nuclear or other radioactive materials
or facilities.
(d) Unless otherwise prohibited by
U.S. law, the Secretary may grant an
application for specific authorization for
activities related to the enrichment of
source material and special nuclear
material, provided that:
(1) The U.S. Government has received
written nonproliferation assurances
from the government of the country;
(2) That it/they accept(s) the sensitive
enrichment equipment and enabling
technologies or an operable enrichment
facility under conditions that do not
permit or enable unauthorized
replication of the facilities;
(3) That the subject enrichment
activity will not result in the production
of uranium enriched to greater than
20% in the isotope uranium-235; and
(4) That there are in place appropriate
security arrangements to protect the
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activity from use or transfer inconsistent
with the country’s national laws.
(e) Approximately 30 calendar days
after the Secretary’s grant of a specific
authorization, a copy of the Secretary’s
determination may be provided to any
person requesting it at DOE’s Public
Reading Room, unless the applicant
submits information demonstrating that
public disclosure will cause substantial
harm to its competitive position. This
provision does not affect any other
authority provided by law for the nondisclosure of information.
§ 810.10 Revocation, suspension, or
modification of authorization.
The Secretary may revoke, suspend,
or modify a general or specific
authorization:
(a) For any material false statement in
an application for specific authorization
or in any additional information
submitted in its support;
(b) For failing to provide a report or
for any material false statement in a
report submitted pursuant to § 810.12;
(c) If any authorization governed by
this part is subsequently determined by
the Secretary to be inimical to the
interest of the United States or
otherwise no longer meets the legal
criteria for approval; or
(d) Pursuant to section 129 of the
Atomic Energy Act.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 810.11 Information required in an
application for specific authorization.
(a) An application letter must include
the following information:
(1) The name, address, and
citizenship of the applicant, and
complete disclosure of all real parties in
interest; if the applicant is a corporation
or other legal entity, where it is
incorporated or organized; the location
of its principal office; and the degree of
any control or ownership by any foreign
individual, corporation, partnership,
firm, association, trust, estate, public or
private institution or government
agency;
(2) The country or entity to receive
the assistance or technology; the name
and location of any facility or project
involved; and the name and address of
the person for which or whom the
activity is to be performed;
(3) A description of the assistance or
technology to be provided, including a
complete description of the proposed
activity, its approximate monetary
value, and a detailed description of any
specific project to which the activity
relates as specified in §§ 810.9(b)(7), (8),
and (9); and
(4) The designation of any
information that if publicly disclosed
would cause substantial harm to the
competitive position of the applicant.
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(b) Except as provided in § 810.6(b),
an applicant seeking to employ a citizen
or national of a country not listed in the
Appendix in a position that could result
in the transfer of technology subject to
§ 810.2, or seeking to employ any
foreign national in the United States or
in a foreign country that could result in
the export of assistance or transfer of
technology subject to § 810.7 must
request a specific authorization. The
applicant must provide, with respect to
each foreign national to whom access to
technology will be granted, the
following:
(1) A description of the technology
that would be made available to the
foreign national;
(2) The purpose of the proposed
transfer, a description of the applicant’s
technology control program, and any
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
standards applicable to the employer’s
grant of access to the technology;
(3) A copy of any confidentiality
agreement to safeguard the technology
from unauthorized use or disclosure
between the applicant and the foreign
national;
(4) Background information about the
foreign national, including the
individual’s citizenship, all countries
where the individual has resided for
more than six months, the training or
educational background of the
individual, all work experience, any
other known affiliations with persons
engaged in activities subject to this part,
and any current immigration or visa
status in the United States; and
(5) A statement signed by the foreign
national that he/she will comply with
the regulations under this part; will not
disclose the applicant’s technology
without DOE’s prior written
authorization; and will not, at any time
during or after his/her employment with
the applicant, use the applicant’s
technology for any nuclear explosive
device, for research on or development
of any nuclear explosive device, or in
furtherance of any military purpose.
(c) An applicant for a specific
authorization related to the enrichment
of fissile material must submit
information that demonstrates that the
proposed transfer will avoid, so far as
practicable, the transfer of enabling
design or manufacturing technology
associated with such items; and that the
applicant will share with the recipient
only information required for the
regulatory purposes of the recipient
country or to ensure the safe installation
and operation of a resulting enrichment
facility, without divulging enabling
technology.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
§ 810.12
9379
Reports.
(a) Each person who has received a
specific authorization shall, within 30
calendar days after beginning the
authorized activity, provide to DOE a
written report containing the following
information:
(1) The name, address, and
citizenship of the person submitting the
report;
(2) The name, address, and
citizenship of the person for whom or
which the activity is being performed;
(3) A description of the activity, the
date it began, its location, status, and
anticipated date of completion; and
(4) A copy of the DOE letter
authorizing the activity.
(b) Each person carrying out a
specifically authorized activity shall
inform DOE, in writing within 30
calendar days, of completion of the
activity or of its termination before
completion.
(c) Each person granted a specific
authorization shall inform DOE, in
writing within 30 calendar days, when
it is known that the proposed activity
will not be undertaken and the granted
authorization will not be used.
(d) DOE may require reports to
include such additional information
that may be required by applicable U.S.
law, regulation, or policy with respect to
the specific nuclear activity or country
for which specific authorization is
required.
(e) Each person, within 30 calendar
days after beginning any generally
authorized activity under § 810.6, shall
provide to DOE:
(1) The name, address, and
citizenship of the person submitting the
report;
(2) The name, address, and
citizenship of the person for whom or
which the activity is being performed;
(3) A description of the activity, the
date it began, its location, status, and
anticipated date of completion; and
(4) A written assurance that the
applicant has an agreement with the
recipient ensuring that any subsequent
transfer of materials, equipment, or
technology transferred under general
authorization under circumstances in
which the conditions in § 810.6 would
not be met will take place only if the
applicant obtains DOE’s prior written
approval.
(f) Individuals engaging in generally
authorized activities as employees of
persons required to report are not
themselves required to submit the
reports described in paragraph (e) of this
section.
(g) Persons engaging in generally
authorized activities under § 810.6(b)
are required to notify DOE that a citizen
E:\FR\FM\23FER1.SGM
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9380
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 35 / Monday, February 23, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
or national of a country not listed in the
Appendix to this part has been granted
access to information subject to § 810.2
in accordance with Nuclear Regulatory
Commission access requirements. The
report should contain the information
required in § 810.11(b).
(h) All reports should be sent to: U.S.
Department of Energy, National Nuclear
Security Administration, Washington,
DC 20585, Attention: Senior Policy
Advisor, Office of Nonproliferation and
Arms Control (NPAC).
§ 810.13
Additional information.
DOE may at any time require a person
engaging in any generally or specifically
authorized activity to submit additional
information.
§ 810.14 Special provisions regarding
Ukraine.
§ 810.16
(a) Pre-activity notification
requirements. Any person beginning
any generally authorized activity
involving Ukraine shall provide to DOE
at least ten days prior to beginning that
activity a report containing the
following information:
(1) The name, address, and
citizenship of the person submitting the
notification;
(2) The name, address, and
citizenship of the person for which the
activity is to be performed;
(3) A description of the activity, the
date it is proposed to begin, its location,
status, and anticipated date of
completion; and
(4) A written assurance that the
person that is to perform the activity has
an agreement with the recipient that any
subsequent transfer of technology or
information transferred under general
authorization will not be transferred to
a country that is not listed in the
Appendix to this part without the prior
written approval of DOE.
(b) Post-activity reporting
requirements. Every person completing
a generally authorized activity in
Ukraine shall provide to DOE within ten
days following the original transfer of
technology or information written
confirmation that such transfer was
completed in accordance with the
description of the activity provided as
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 810.15
Violations.
(a) The Atomic Energy Act provides
that:
(1) In accordance with section 232 of
the AEA, permanent or temporary
injunctions, restraining or other orders
may be granted to prevent a violation of
any provision of the Atomic Energy Act
or any regulation or order issued
thereunder.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:12 Feb 20, 2015
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(2) In accordance with section 222 of
the AEA, whoever willfully violates,
attempts to violate, or conspires to
violate any provision of section 57 of
the Atomic Energy Act may be fined up
to $10,000 or imprisoned up to 10 years,
or both. If the offense is committed with
intent to injure the United States or to
aid any foreign nation, the penalty
could be up to life imprisonment or a
$20,000 fine, or both.
(b) In accordance with Title 18 of the
United States Code, section 1001,
whoever knowingly and willfully
falsifies, conceals, or covers up a
material fact or makes or uses false,
fictitious or fraudulent statements or
representations shall be fined under that
title or imprisoned up to five or eight
years depending on the crime, or both.
Effective date and savings clause.
(a) The regulations in this part are
effective March 25, 2015.
(b) Except for actions that may be
taken by DOE pursuant to § 810.10, the
regulations in this part do not affect the
validity or terms of any specific
authorizations granted under
regulations in effect before March 25,
2015 or generally authorized activities
under those regulations for which the
contracts, purchase orders, or licensing
arrangements were already in effect.
Persons engaging in activities that were
generally authorized under regulations
in effect before March 25, 2015, but that
require specific authorization under the
regulations in this part, must request
specific authorization by August 24,
2015 and may continue their activities
until DOE acts on the request.
Appendix A to Part 810—Generally
Authorized Destinations
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada
Chile (For all activities related to INFCIRC/
834 only)
Colombia
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Egypt
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Indonesia
International Atomic Energy Agency
Ireland
Italy
Japan
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Kazakhstan
Korea, Republic of
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Mexico (For all activities related to INFCIRC/
203 Parts 1 and 2 and INFCIRC/825 only)
Morocco
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Turkey
Ukraine (Refer to § 810.14 for specific
information and requirements)
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Vietnam
[FR Doc. 2015–03479 Filed 2–20–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2014–0561; Directorate
Identifier 2014–NE–12–AD; Amendment 39–
18105; AD 2015–04–03]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Rolls-Royce
plc Turbofan Engines
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for certain
Rolls-Royce plc (RR) RB211 Trent 768–
60, 772–60, and 772B–60 turbofan
engines. This AD requires inspection of
the oil feed tube sealing sleeve and
removal of those oil feed tube sealing
sleeves that are affected by this AD. This
AD was prompted by fractures of the
high-pressure/intermediate-pressure
(HP/IP) turbine support internal oil feed
tube. We are issuing this AD to prevent
failure of the HP/IP turbine support
internal oil feed tube, which could
result in uncontained engine failure and
damage to the airplane.
DATES: This AD becomes effective
March 30, 2015.
ADDRESSES: See the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\23FER1.SGM
23FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 35 (Monday, February 23, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 9359-9380]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-03479]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 35 / Monday, February 23, 2015 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 9359]]
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Part 810
RIN 1994-AA02
Assistance to Foreign Atomic Energy Activities
AGENCY: National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: DOE is issuing the first comprehensive updating of regulations
concerning Assistance to Foreign Atomic Energy Activities since 1986,
reflecting a need to make the regulations consistent with current
global civil nuclear trade practices and nonproliferation norms, and to
update the activities and technologies subject to the Secretary of
Energy's specific authorization and DOE reporting requirements. This
rule also identifies destinations with respect to which most assistance
would be generally authorized and destinations that would require a
specific authorization by the Secretary of Energy.
DATES: This rule is effective March 25, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Richard Goorevich, Senior Policy
Advisor, or Ms. Katie Strangis, Senior Policy Advisor, Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control (NPAC), National Nuclear Security
Administration, Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, telephone 202-586-0589 (Mr. Goorevich) or 202-
586-8623 (Ms. Strangis); Mr. Elliot Oxman, Office of the General
Counsel, GC-53, Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, telephone 202-586-1755; or Mr. Zachary Stern,
Office of the General Counsel, National Nuclear Security
Administration, Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585, telephone 202-586-8627.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Description of Changes in the Final Rule
III. Transition Process to Final Rule
A. Current Specific Authorization Requests
B. Current Generally Authorized Activities
C. Previously Unreported Deemed Exports and Deemed Re-Exports
IV. Discussion of Public Comments and the Final Rule
A. Process Issues
1. Compliance With Administrative Procedure Act Rulemaking
Requirements
2. Part 810 Process Improvements
B. Classification of Foreign Destinations
1. Mexico
2. Ukraine
3. Croatia and Vietnam
4. Continued Specific Authorization Destinations (Russia, India
and China)
5. Thailand and Norway
C. Activities Requiring Part 810 Authorization
1. Special Nuclear Material Nexus Requirement
2. Activities Supporting Commercial Power Reactors
3. Deemed Exports and Deemed Re-Exports Employee Issues
4. Operational Safety Activities
5. Other
D. Technical Corrections
1. Sec. 810.1
2. Sec. 810.3 Technical Services
3. Sec. 810.3 Technical Assistance vs. Assistance
4. Sec. 810.6(f)
5. Sec. Sec. 810.6(c)(2) and 810.11(b)
6. Sec. 810.16 Savings Clause
V. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Order 12866
B. Administrative Procedure Act
C. National Environmental Policy Act
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
G. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999
H. Executive Order 13132
I. Executive Order 12988
J. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001
K. Executive Order 13211
L. Executive Order 13609
M. Congressional Notification
VI. Approval by the Office of the Secretary
PART 810--ASSISTANCE TO FOREIGN ATOMIC ENERGY ACTIVITIES
I. Background
The Department of Energy's part 810 regulation (10 CFR part 810)
implements section 57b.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (AEA), as
amended by section 302 of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Act of 1978
(NNPA). Part 810 controls the export of unclassified nuclear technology
and assistance. It enables peaceful nuclear trade by helping to assure
that nuclear technologies exported from the United States will not be
used for non-peaceful purposes. Part 810 controls the export of nuclear
technology and assistance by identifying activities that can be
``generally authorized'' by the Secretary, thereby requiring no further
authorization under part 810. It also controls those activities that
require ``specific authorization'' by the Secretary. Part 810 also
delineates the process for applying for specific authorization from the
Secretary and identifies the reporting requirements for activities
subject to part 810.
While some revisions to part 810 were made in 1993 and 2000, part
810 has not been comprehensively updated since 1986. Since then, the
global civil nuclear market has expanded, particularly in China, the
Middle East, and Eastern Europe, with vendors from France, Japan, the
Republic of Korea, Russia, and Canada emerging to serve customers in
these markets. DOE believes the regulation should be updated to ensure
that the part 810 nuclear export controls remain effective and
efficient as the commercial nuclear market continues to expand. This
means carefully determining which destinations and activities can be
generally authorized and which will require a specific authorization,
and assuring that the determinations are consistent with U.S. national
security, diplomatic, and trade policy.
On September 7, 2011, DOE issued the NOPR to propose the updating
of part 810 (76 FR 55278). The NOPR listed destinations for which most
assistance to foreign atomic energy activities would be generally
authorized, and activities that would require a specific authorization
by the Secretary of Energy. Additionally, the NOPR identified types of
technology transfers subject to the regulation. DOE received numerous
comments on the NOPR. After careful consideration of all comments
received on the NOPR, on August 2, 2013 DOE issued a supplemental
notice of proposed rulemaking (SNOPR) and public meetings to respond to
those comments, propose new or revised rule changes,
[[Page 9360]]
and afford interested parties a second opportunity to comment (78 FR
46829). DOE held its first public meeting on August 5, 2013. On October
29, 2013 DOE issued a notice of a second public meeting and extension
of the comment period and on March 25, 2014 re-opened the comment
period until April 2, 2014. Today, DOE is issuing this final rule.
As described below and in response to comments received from the
public on the SNOPR, in the final rule announced today, DOE makes only
a few changes to the existing rule, what will be referred to
hereinafter as ``the 1986 version of the rule,'' that are different
than those proposed in the SNOPR. Details of today's changes to the
1986 version of part 810 are summarized in Section II. Responses to
public comments received on the SNOPR are discussed in Section IV.
II. Description of Changes in the Final Rule
In response to the SNOPR, DOE received written comments from 26
entities as well as oral comments made at public meetings. All of the
comments and meeting transcripts are available for review on line at:
https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=DOE-HQ-2011-0035, Docket
ID: DOE-HQ-2011-0035. This final rule responds to the comments received
in response to the SNOPR and makes changes to the 1986 version of the
rule. Final changes to the current rule, organized by section, are
summarized below:
1. The change to Sec. 810.1 ``Purpose'' states the statutory basis
and purpose of the part 810 regulation, eliminating the need for the
1986 version of Sec. 810.6. ``U.S. persons'' has been replaced with
``persons.''
2. The change to paragraph (a) in Sec. 810.2 ``Scope'' states
DOE's jurisdiction under Sec. 57b.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act.
Paragraph (b) in Sec. 810.2 identifies activities governed by the
regulation when those activities, whether conducted in the United
States or abroad, constitute engaging or participating, directly or
indirectly, in the development or production of special nuclear
material outside the United States. Paragraph (c) of Sec. 810.2
identifies exempt activities, some retained from the 1986 version of
the rule. A person directly or indirectly engaging or participating in
the development or production of special nuclear material outside the
United States may be, for example, a U.S. citizen, a foreign national
or a subsidiary of a U.S. company located abroad. The activity may take
place in the United States, in a country listed in the Appendix or in a
country not listed in the Appendix. Part 810 does not apply to
transfers of nuclear technology or assistance within the United States
between or among U.S. citizens, citizens or nationals of foreign
countries who are U.S. lawful permanent residents, or protected
individuals under the Immigration and Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C.
1324b(a)(3)), because such transfers would not constitute engaging or
participating, directly or indirectly, in the development or production
of special nuclear material outside the United States.
3. The following exempt activities are added:
Exports authorized by the Department of State (DOS) or
Department of Commerce (DOC), or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
(NRC);
Transfer of ``publicly available information,'' ``publicly
available technology,'' and the results of ``fundamental research'';
Assistance for certain mining and milling activities, and
certain fusion reactors because these activities do not involve the
production or use of special nuclear material;
Production or extraction of radiopharmaceutical isotopes
when the process does not involve special nuclear material; and
Transfers to lawful permanent residents of the United
States or protected individuals under the Immigration and
Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)).
4. In Sec. 810.3 ``Definitions'' of this final rule, a number of
definitions are added and revisions are made to existing definitions to
reflect terminological changes and technological developments since the
part 810 regulation was last updated, and to provide additional clarity
to certain terms defined and used in the 1986 version of the rule.
The 1986 version of the rule has 23 defined terms. This final rule
substantially revises 5 terms, adds 23 terms, deletes 5 terms, and
leaves 13 terms essentially unchanged, for a total of 36 defined terms
in the regulation.
The following terms have been added to the final rule to update the
terms used in part 810 to make them consistent with terms used in other
U.S. export control programs and Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)
guidelines (IAEA Information Circular [INFCIRC] 254/Part 1):
Assistance, cooperative enrichment enterprise, development, enrichment,
fissile material, fundamental research, production, technical data,
technology, and use. The following terms are added or revised in line
with changes in the approach of the final rule to authorized
destinations and authorized activities: Foreign national, general
authorization, operational safety, production accelerator, production
accelerator-driven subcritical assembly system, production subcritical
assembly, publicly available information, publicly available
technology, and specific authorization. The term ``country'' has been
added to clarify that Taiwan is covered under this final rule,
consistent with section 4 of the Taiwan Relations Act (22 U.S.C. 3303).
The terms ``Secretary'' and ``DOE'' were added to define administrative
terms. The following terms are retained with no change except technical
edits or format changes: ``Agreement for cooperation'', ``Atomic Energy
Act'', ``classified information'', ``IAEA'', ``NNPA'', ``NPT'',
``nuclear reactor'', ``person'', ``production reactor'', ``Restricted
Data'', ``sensitive nuclear technology'', ``source material'',
``special nuclear material'', and ``United States''. The following
terms have been deleted as unused: ``accelerator-driven subassembly'',
``non-nuclear-weapon state'', ``open meeting'', ``public information'',
and ``subcritical assembly''.
Several changes from the definitions proposed in the SNOPR are made
in the final rule including: ``technical assistance'' is changed to
``assistance,'' the term ``technical assistance'' is replaced with
``assistance'' in the definition of ``technology'', and the term
``technical services'' is replaced with ``assistance'' in the
definition of ``sensitive nuclear technology''. These changes are
explained in section IV.D. in response to public comments on the SNOPR.
5. Sections 810.4 ``Communications'' and Sec. 810.5
``Interpretations'' update points of contact information to reflect the
current DOE organizational structure and office designations for
applications, questions, or requests. Section 810.4(c) has been added
to allow communication, fast-track requests, and Ukraine notifications
to be emailed. The final rule adds paragraph (c) to Sec. 810.5 that
states DOE may periodically publish abstracts of general or specific
authorizations, excluding applicants' proprietary data and other
information protected by law from public disclosure, that may be of
general interest.
6. The 1986 version of Sec. 810.6 ``Authorization requirement,''
which quotes Sec. 57 b. of the Atomic Energy Act, is deleted and
replaced by Sec. 810.1 ``Purpose.''
7. The 1986 version of Sec. 810.7 ``Generally authorized
activities'' is re-numbered as Sec. 810.6. It identifies
[[Page 9361]]
activities the Secretary has found to be not inimical to the interest
of the United States if conducted in a destination listed in the
Appendix to the final rule. The introductory text eliminates the
specific reference to Sec. 57 b.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act.
(i) Paragraph (a) generally authorizes assistance or transfers of
technology to destinations listed in the Appendix to the final rule.
The 1986 version of Sec. 810.8(a) uses the opposite classification
approach. It lists destinations for which a specific authorization is
required.
(ii) The 1986 version of Sec. 810.7(a) ``furnishing public
information'' is deleted from the list of generally authorized
activities because under the final rule ``public information'' is no
longer a defined term. Specifically, in Sec. 810.2(c)(2) of the final
rule, ``publicly available information,'' ``publicly available
technology,'' and the results of ``fundamental research'' (all as
defined in Sec. 810.3 of this final rule) are exempt from the scope of
part 810.
(iii) In a new approach to deemed exports, Sec. 810.6(b) of this
final rule generally authorizes nuclear technology transfers to
citizens or nationals of specific authorization destinations who are
lawfully employed by or contracted to work for nuclear industry
employers in the United States, subject to such individuals meeting NRC
unescorted access requirements and executing a confidentiality
agreement to prevent unauthorized disclosure of nuclear technology to
which those individuals are afforded access. Deemed export reporting
requirements with respect to these individuals are set forth in Sec.
810.12(g).
(iv) The existing ``fast track'' general authorization in the 1986
version of Sec. 810.7(b) for emergency activities at any safeguarded
facility and operational safety assistance to existing foreign
safeguarded reactors has been retained in Sec. Sec. 810.6 (c)(1) and
(c)(2) of the final rule, respectively, but with a revised definition
of ``operational safety.'' Paragraph (c)(1) includes the phrase ``in
DOE's assessment,'' modifying the emergency clause to make DOE
responsible for deciding potential ``other means.'' Furnishing
operational safety information or assistance to existing safeguarded
civilian nuclear reactors outside the United States in countries with
safeguards agreements with the IAEA or an equivalent voluntary offer,
for example, performance of probabilistic risk assessments, is
authorized in Sec. 810.6(c)(2). In Sec. 810.6(c)(2) the SNOPR
proposed to include an option to provide information cited in Sec.
810.11(b). This proposal has not been adopted in the final rule.
(v) Furnishing operational safety information or assistance to
existing, proposed, or new-build nuclear power plants in the United
States is authorized in Sec. 810.6(c)(3), for example, participation
in safety assessments by organizations such as the Institute of Nuclear
Power Operations (INPO).
(vi) Section 810.6(d) generally authorizes exchange programs
approved by the DOS with DOE consultation. Sections 810.6(e) and (f)
authorize certain cooperative activities with the IAEA, namely,
activities carried out in the course of implementation of the
``Agreement between the United States of America and the [IAEA] for the
Application of Safeguards in the United States''; and those carried out
by full-time employees of the IAEA, or by individuals whose employment
or work is sponsored or approved by the DOS or DOE. The final rule
replaces the word ``and'' with the disjunctive ``or'' at the end of
subparagraph (f) to clarify that any of the listed activities are
generally authorized.
(vii) Section 810.6(g) is a new provision that authorizes transfers
of technology and assistance for the extraction of Molybdenum-99 from
irradiated nuclear material in certain circumstances.
8. Section 810.7--renumbered from the 1986 version of Sec. 810.8--
``Activities requiring specific authorization'' continues to list
activities that require a specific authorization for all foreign
destinations. The initial phrase ``Unless generally authorized by Sec.
810.6'' proposed in the SNOPR has been removed as unnecessary.
9. Section 810.8 ``Restrictions on general and specific
authorization'' remains unchanged from Sec. 810.9 in the 1986 version
of the rule, except for the following editorial revisions: Replacing
``these regulations'' with ``this part'' in the introductory phrase;
replacing ``Restricted Data and other classified information'' with
``classified information'' in paragraph (a), and replacing ``Government
agencies'' with ``U.S. Government agencies'' in paragraph (b).
10. Section 810.9 ``Grant of specific authorization'' of the final
rule, Sec. 810.10 of the 1986 version, identifies the factors
consistent with U.S. international nonproliferation commitments that
will be considered by the Secretary in granting a specific
authorization. Paragraph (b) adds as factors to be considered: Whether
the government of the country concerned is in good standing with
respect to its nonproliferation commitments (subparagraph (b)(3)); and
whether, under subparagraph (b)(8), the transfer is part of an existing
``cooperative enrichment enterprise'' (as defined in Sec. 810.3 of
this final rule) or the supply chain of such an enterprise. Section
810.9(c) addresses the export of ``sensitive nuclear technology'' as
the quoted term is defined in Sec. 810.3 of this final rule. This
section is expanded to describe additional factors, which include
compliance with the United States' NSG commitments, the Secretary will
take into account when considering a specific authorization request for
transfers of sensitive nuclear technology. The United States adheres to
the NSG Guidelines for Nuclear Transfers, and NSG Guidelines for
Transfers of Nuclear-related Dual-Use Equipment, Materials, Software
and Related Technology (IAEA INFCIRC/254/Part 2). The current versions
of both sets of Guidelines can be found at
www.nuclearsuppliersgroup.org. In the final rule a new paragraph (d) is
added to Sec. 810.9 concerning requests to engage in authorized
foreign atomic energy assistance activities related to the enrichment
of source material and special nuclear material. Approval of such
requests will be conditioned upon the receipt of written
nonproliferation assurances from the government of the destination
country concerned. This process is designed to facilitate U.S.
conformity to the NSG Guidelines.
11. Section 810.10 ``Revocation, suspension, or modification of
authorization,'' as renumbered from the 1986 version of Sec. 810.11,
makes an editorial revision, changing ``authorized assistance'' in
paragraph (c) to ``authorization governed by this part.''
12. The 1986 version of Sec. 810.12, renumbered in the final rule
as Sec. 810.11 ``Information required in an application for specific
authorization,'' is expanded to add more detail about the information
required for DOE to process a specific authorization request, including
applications for ``deemed export'' and ``deemed re-export''
authorizations. Section 810.11(a) of the final rule requires the
submission of the same information required by the 1986 version of the
rule (Sec. 810.12(a)).
The 1986 version of Sec. 810.12(a) required that an application
for specific authorization include information regarding ``the degree
of any control or ownership by any foreign person or entity''. Since
the term ``foreign person'' is used only once in the 1986 version of
the regulation (in Sec. 810.12(a)), DOE proposed in the SNOPR to
revise proposed Sec. 810.11(a) without reference to ``foreign
person''. To avoid any possible confusion between usages of
[[Page 9362]]
``person'' and ``foreign national'', the final rule adopts this change
and Sec. 810.11(a)(1) requests information concerning an applicant's
foreign ownership or control by asking about ``the degree of any
control or ownership by any foreign individual, corporation,
partnership, firm, association, trust, estate, public or private
institution or government agency''.
The SNOPR proposed in paragraph (b) to solicit any information the
applicant wishes to provide concerning the factors listed in proposed
Sec. Sec. 810.9(b) and (c). However, this proposal has not been
adopted. Instead, specific required applicant information has been
added to Sec. 810.11(a)(3) of the final rule. Therefore, proposed
Sec. 810.11(c) of the SNOPR is renumbered Sec. 810.11(b) in this
final rule. Likewise, proposed Sec. 810.11(d) of the SNOPR is numbered
Sec. 810.11(c) in this final rule.
Section 810.11(b) addresses the required content for applications
filed by U.S. companies seeking to employ in the United States citizens
or nationals of specific authorization countries that could result in
the transfer of technology subject to Sec. Sec. 810.2 or 810.7 (deemed
exports). Submission of the same information is also required with
respect to any such citizen or national whom the part 810 applicant
seeks to directly employ abroad in either a general or specific
authorization country (a deemed re-export) that could result in the
export of assistance or transfer of technology requiring a specific
authorization. As proposed in the SNOPR, and adopted in the final rule,
no part 810 authorization is required for an individual who is lawfully
admitted for permanent residence in the United States or is a protected
individual under the Immigration and Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C.
1324b(a)(3)).
As proposed in the SNOPR and adopted in the final rule, Sec.
810.11(b) makes explicit DOE's current practice of requiring an
applicant for a specific authorization to provide detailed information
concerning the citizenship, visa status, educational background, and
employment history of each foreign national to whom the applicant seeks
to grant access to technology subject to the part 810 regulation. The
applicant is also required to provide a description of the subject
technology, a copy of any confidentiality agreement between the U.S.
employer and the employee concerning the protection of the employer's
proprietary business data from unauthorized disclosure, and written
nonproliferation assurances by the individual. Section 810.11(b)(3) has
been revised to eliminate the reference to Sec. 810.6(b)(2), and
reduce cross-referencing in the document.
Finally, Sec. 810.11(c) identifies the information required to be
submitted by an applicant seeking a specific authorization to engage in
foreign atomic energy assistance activities related to the enrichment
of fissile material.
13. The 1986 version of Sec. 810.13 is renumbered as Sec. 810.12
in the final rule and changes reporting obligations. An addition in
Sec. 810.12(d) of the final rule requires companies to submit reports
to DOE concerning activities requiring specific authorization, to
include information required by U.S. law concerning specific civil
nuclear activities in or exports to destinations for which a specific
authorization is required. Under Sec. 810.12(e)(4) of the final rule
the reference to reporting on materials and equipment transferred under
a general authorization is retained to ensure, among other things, that
any technical data that is transferred as part of dual-use equipment is
reported. In this final rule, paragraph (g) describes the reporting
requirements of U.S. employers with respect to their deemed export and
deemed re-export employees.
14. The 1986 version of Sec. 810.14 is renumbered in the final
rule as Sec. 810.13, ``Additional information.'' The section is
otherwise unchanged.
15. In the final rule, a new Sec. 810.14 has been added to
describe specific reporting requirements with respect to Ukraine. While
the SNOPR contained a proposal to move Ukraine to the general
authorization list, that proposal was made prior to the current
geopolitical situation in that country. In light of those
circumstances, DOE is finalizing its SNOPR proposal with the inclusion
of advance notification requirements prior to beginning any generally
authorized activity in Ukraine. A written report within 10 days
following the original transfer of material, equipment or technology is
also required for all activities in Ukraine subject to part 810. A more
detailed explanation of the reason for this addition is in Section
IV.B.2.
16. Section 810.15 ``Violations'' retains the same section number
in the final rule as it has in the 1986 version of the rule, although
it was proposed to be renumbered in both the NOPR and the SNOPR.
Section 810.15 in the final rule contains a number of revisions that
bring the wording into alignment with the applicable statutory
language.
17. Section 810.16, ``Effective date and savings clause'', which
was proposed to be renumbered in the NOPR and the SNOPR, retains the
same section number in the final rule as it has in the 1986 version of
the rule. The only change to the language, as proposed in the SNOPR, is
an extension of the date persons must come into compliance with the
rule from 90 to 180 days.
18. In this final rule, Croatia is added to the Appendix list of
generally authorized destinations because on July 1, 2013, it joined
the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) and therefore the
provisions of the peaceful nuclear cooperation agreement entered into
pursuant to AEA Sec. 123 (``123 Agreement'') between the United States
and Euratom apply to supply to Croatia of U.S. nuclear material and
equipment. Vietnam is also added to the Appendix list of generally
authorized destinations because on October 3, 2014, a 123 Agreement
between Vietnam and the United States entered into force. Thailand has
been deleted from the list of generally authorized destinations because
its 123 Agreement with the United States has expired and there has not
been a decision to renew the Agreement. In this final rule, a reference
has been added to the Appendix list regarding Ukraine, in order to
ensure applicants are aware of the added requirements in Sec. 810.14
of the final rule, as discussed in Section IV.B.2.
19. DOE/NNSA recently changed the name of the Office of
Nonproliferation and International Security (NA-24) to the Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control (NPAC). The final rule in Sec. Sec.
810.4, 810.5, 810.9, and 810.12 reflect this change.
III. Transition Process to Final Rule
DOE recognizes that, as a result of the rule announced today, some
persons will have foreign atomic energy assistance activities in
process concerning destinations whose general authorization or specific
authorization status has changed. This section describes actions to
provide a seamless transition to the final rule.
A. Current Specific Authorization Requests
Any pending specific authorization request for a destination that
is now generally authorized in the final rule, namely, Croatia,
Kazakhstan, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, and Vietnam, should be
withdrawn starting on the effective date of the rule. Contact DOE to
formally withdraw the request. Pending requests for specific
authorization to Ukraine are subject to the 10-day notification
requirement set forth in Sec. 810.14(a) of the final rule.
[[Page 9363]]
B. Current Generally Authorized Activities
As stated in Sec. 810.16, generally authorized activities for
which the contracts, purchase orders, or licensing arrangements were
already in effect before March 25, 2015, but that require specific
authorization under the final rule, must be the subject of a specific
authorization request by August 24, 2015 but may continue until DOE
acts on the request.
C. Previously Unreported Deemed Exports and Deemed Re-Exports
DOE recognizes that many companies with employees who are citizens
or nationals of countries now subject to specific authorization
requirements under the final rule announced today may not have
previously reported the transfer of part 810 covered technology to such
individuals to DOE under the 1986 version of the rule, as required, and
further, that in many cases technology transfers already have occurred.
A record of part 810-controlled generally authorized technology
transfers to these employees is necessary for DOE to adequately monitor
these transfers. Companies that have made unreported generally
authorized transfers should provide the information required by Sec.
810.11 of the final rule for each transfer to any foreign national who
continues to have access to part 810-controlled technology by August
24, 2015.
IV. Discussion of Public Comments and the Final Rule
On August 2, 2013 DOE published the SNOPR, inviting public comments
on regulatory proposals DOE formulated in consideration of comments
received on the NOPR. Thereafter, DOE held two formal public meetings
to give the public an opportunity to make oral comments and ask
questions about the proposed regulatory changes in the SNOPR. In
addition, DOE extended the time period for the public to submit written
comments on the SNOPR. DOE received comments from 26 industry members
and organizations. The majority of commenters expressly supported some
of the SNOPR changes to the NOPR, such as proposals:
1. Limiting the scope of technology covered by part 810
2. Generally authorizing deemed exports to certain U.S. nuclear
industry employees
3. Facilitating nuclear safety and other exchange activities
4. Generally authorizing nuclear technology exports to Mexico,
Chile, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and the United Arab Emirates
5. Continuing the general authorization for emergency activities
and operational safety assistance
6. Proposing that
a. Routine storage, processing, and transportation of spent nuclear
fuel would be outside the scope of part 810,
b. Activities licensed by the DOS and DOC would be outside the
scope of part 810, and
c. The transfer of publicly available information would be outside
the scope of part 810.
Commenters also supported DOE's initiation of a process improvement
program (PIP) to reduce specific authorization processing time, and
DOE's plan to create a guide to part 810 and an electronic application
and tracking (e-810) system. Several organizations and companies
offered to participate in developing the PIP and drafting a guide.
The Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), the primary industry trade
association, provided a comprehensive set of comments in response to
the SNOPR. The Ad-hoc Utility Group (AHUG), Exelon, and the Chamber of
Commerce of the United States (USCC) fully endorsed NEI's comments.
AREVA and the US India Business Council (USIBC) supported NEI's
comments. Black and Veatch endorsed NEI's comments. Westinghouse stated
that it ``largely concurred'' with NEI comments. In this discussion of
the public comments, unless these commenters provided different
perspectives on the same matter, NEI will be referenced when discussing
the comments.
Many commenters, including the American Nuclear Society (ANS),
AREVA, Babcock and Wilcox (B&W), the Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS), EnergySolutions, Exelon, Fluor, G.C.
Rudy/Integrated Systems Technology (IST), NEI, the Nuclear
Infrastructure Council (NIC), and Westinghouse, also made requests for
guidance or clarification on part 810 that would not require a change
from the regulatory text proposed in the SNOPR. Depending on the
specific nature of these requests, DOE may address each request as part
of a formal guide, more informally as part of a Frequently Asked
Questions (FAQ) page on the proposed Web site, or in response to
individual requests made pursuant to Sec. 810.5--Interpretations.
This final rule implements the important goals of part 810:
Effective nuclear proliferation threat reduction,
Effective civil nuclear trade support, and
Efficient regulation.
DOE has reviewed the public comments received in response to the
SNOPR. The final rule adopts most of the regulatory revisions proposed
in the SNOPR, and incorporates some further changes based on careful
consideration of public comments. The public comments were analyzed and
placed into three categories:
Process Issues
Classification of Foreign Destinations
Activities Requiring Part 810 Authorization
A. Process Issues
1. Compliance With Administrative Procedure Act Rulemaking Requirements
NEI in part claimed the SNOPR violated the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA) by providing inadequate explanation of the proposed changes,
particularly the proposed general vs. specific authorization
destination classifications. NEI included China, Russia, and India in
this discussion, although these three countries have been, and remain,
destinations requiring specific authorization. NEI, in 80 pages of
comments on the destination classification issue, called for DOE to
``withdraw and re-publish the rule with enough information regarding
its factual, legal and policy rationales to allow stakeholders to
comment meaningfully.'' AREVA stated ``DOE has not put forth a
sufficient rationale for the change in designation of these
countries.'' AUECO ``join[ed] the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in calling
upon DOE to withdraw the rule.'' In response to these concerns and
comments, and the desire to hear from as many commenters as possible,
DOE re-opened the comment period to allow for more public comments.
The SNOPR preamble adequately and reasonably explained the reasons
for DOE's proposed reclassification of foreign destinations, as well as
other proposed changes to the part 810 regulation. It also explained
the reasons why DOE proposed the Secretary could not generally
authorize nuclear technology transfers to China, Russia, and India.
Adequate notice was provided for meaningful comments from the public on
the SNOPR as evidenced by 26 separate letters of comments submitted to
DOE, including lengthy and detailed comments from NEI and AREVA. DOE's
new approach in the final rule to classifying general and specific
authorization destinations is a reasonable policy decision, made in
compliance with the requirements of the APA and as authorized by the
AEA.
[[Page 9364]]
2. Part 810 Process Improvements
As noted in the SNOPR, many NOPR commenters were concerned that the
part 810 specific authorization process is unduly protracted, and that
processing delays put U.S. suppliers at a competitive disadvantage with
companies in other countries. It appeared that many concerns with the
NOPR and SNOPR proposals indicated less dissatisfaction with the merits
of the proposed regulatory changes than the commenters' belief that the
proposed rule revisions would continue or worsen delays in receiving
specific authorizations.
AHUG, ANS, AREVA, B&W, CSIS, EnergySolutions, Exelon, Fluor, GC
Rudy/IST, NEI, NIC, and Westinghouse all made suggestions and comments
related to improving the processing of specific authorization requests.
In many cases these comments reiterated those received during the NOPR
comment period. As these comments are not directed to the content of
the proposed rule, they will not be addressed here but rather in the
PIP that is ongoing currently.
Similarly, commenters' concerns about process ``burdens'' appeared
to drive their comments about the substance of the proposed regulatory
changes. As noted, DOE proposed and has underway a PIP separate from
the rulemaking to make the part 810 authorization process more
transparent, orderly, and efficient in order to address specific
authorization time in process.
The part 810 PIP is part of a larger NNSA plan to be ISO 9001
compliant. The PIP team will focus on improving performance as measured
by these critical to quality characteristics:
Effective nuclear proliferation threat reduction in a
changing world,
Openness, predictability, and clarity of regulation, and
Efficiency: Performing the mission of preventing
proliferation without wasting time, money, or placing unnecessary
burdens on U.S. companies competing in global markets.
The PIP team also will:
Measure process performance by listening to applicant
``customers'' and process implementers. Receiving these inputs will be
key to realistic problem definition and development of effective
process improvements.
Analyze causes of delays in DOE processing time for an
application.
Recommend actions to sustain improved performance in
processing part 810 applications for specific authorization.
Anticipated improvements in the processing time of part 810
applications that may come from the PIP include these recommended
actions from commenters:
Digitize the 810 authorization process (e810)--
Digitization of the authorization process will make the applications
easier to complete; streamline the review process, increase
transparency by enabling applicant tracking; provide a searchable
archive of past decisions; and facilitate audits required for ISO
compliance. In this rule, DOE has added explicit email communication
options, including applications, fast-track requests, and Ukraine
notifications in Sec. 810.4(c).
Reduce application processing time--This effort will begin
by DOE analyzing the authorization case database to determine causes of
processing time variation and undue delay. The PIP team will conduct
benchmark studies to identify best practices and methods to improve
efficiency. The team will work with the DOS to find ways to request and
secure foreign governments' nonproliferation assurances more promptly,
and make internal DOE and inter-agency reviews of part 810 specific
authorization applications more efficient by reducing unnecessary
reviews and approvals.
Develop a guidance document--Many SNOPR commenters sought
guidance or clarification on specific issues and recommended DOE
prepare a guidance document or Web site to improve transparency. As
noted above, DOE intends to develop a document or Web site that may
include responses to requests made under Sec. 810.5 (with proprietary
information redacted), FAQs, and process maps of various part 810
activities. DOE will continue to adhere to current inter-agency
procedures for processing, reviewing and approving specific
authorizations as set forth in the ``Amendment to Procedures
Established Pursuant to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Act of 1978.'' 49
FR 20780 (May 16, 1984).
B. Classification of Foreign Destinations
The general authorization versus specific authorization proposed
country classifications provoked considerable comments in response to
the NOPR. The SNOPR explained the rationale for the proposed changes
and proposed to change some classifications. Many of the NOPR comments
were repeated in SNOPR comments. AHUG, AREVA, AUECO, B&W, CSIS,
EnergySolutions, Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), Exelon,
Fluor, National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), NEI, NIC, USIBC,
U.S. Russia Business Council, and Westinghouse all expressed concerns
with the reclassification of countries that was proposed in the SNOPR.
AHUG cited Chile, Jamaica, Jordan, Namibia, New Zealand, Nigeria,
and the Philippines as countries that deserved generally authorized
status ``due to their participation in key international nuclear
nonproliferation regimes, including the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), the comprehensive safeguards agreement (CSA)
with the IAEA and an Additional Protocol (AP) thereto, and the NSG''.
Further, they noted that New Zealand and the Philippines have been
granted a general license pursuant to 10 CFR 110.26 under NRC's
regulations as destinations authorized to receive ``minor'' reactor
components.
B&W named Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the Philippines, and Malaysia, and
Fluor named the Philippines and Singapore as countries that deserved
generally authorized status, but provided no specific arguments
regarding their suitability for the non-inimicality determination
mandated by AEA Sec. 57b.(2).
EnergySolutions commented ``The Department has failed to account
for the burden imposed by the proposed rule and the message it sends to
foreign nations.'' The company repeated the claim it made in response
to the NOPR that reversing the approach to country designations was
unwarranted. In its comments on the SNOPR, EnergySolutions further
commented ``the SNOPR sends a message to countries that have not been
considered a proliferation risk for over 70 years and have maintained
safe nuclear operations, that the United States now views them as a
potential liability. While the Department may view this new Rulemaking
as a way to provide additional oversight to trade countries,
EnergySolutions fears that it has the potential to adversely affect
foreign relations with our trading partners.''
DOE has considered commenters' recommendations for countries to be
reconsidered for classification as generally authorized destinations.
Under section 57b.(2) of the AEA, the Secretary may authorize the
transfer of nuclear technology for the development or production of
special nuclear material by persons subject to U.S. jurisdiction upon a
determination that the activity will not be ``inimical'' to the
interest of the United States. Classification of activities and foreign
destinations as ``generally authorized'' or, conversely, the
determination that other activities and destinations necessitate a
specific authorization is a matter committed to agency discretion. The
Secretary's decision that a specific
[[Page 9365]]
authorization is or is not required for a proposed transaction is based
on U.S. nuclear and national security policies. Consonant with those
policies, the Secretary may determine that transactions with a country
or entity are either generally authorized or require a specific
authorization. Under the AEA, DOE is to promote widespread
participation in the development and utilization of atomic energy for
peaceful purposes. The AEA, however, makes national security the
paramount concern. Consequently, assistance to, participation in, or
technology transfer for the development or production of special
nuclear material outside the United States may be authorized only upon
a determination by the Secretary that such activities will not be
``inimical to the interest of the United States''. A destination is
included on the proposed generally authorized list based on the
Secretary's ``not inimical'' determination required by section 57b.(2)
of the AEA. Examples of types of considerations taken into account
include the existence of a 123 Agreement with the United States, a full
scope safeguards agreement with the IAEA, satisfactory experience as a
civil nuclear trading partner, and being a party to nonproliferation
treaties and membership in international nonproliferation regimes. That
determination can be made only with the concurrence of the DOS and
after consultation with the NRC, the Department of Defense (DOD), and
the DOC.
DOE appreciates commenters' recommendations for countries to be
reconsidered for classification to generally authorized status.
However, classification of activities by destination as ``generally
authorized'' is an administrative tool to avoid unnecessary reviews of
foreign atomic energy assistance activities in countries that present
little or no proliferation risk, and are known nuclear trading
partners. General authorizations reflect the assessment that the
Secretary has made a non-inimicality finding regarding the provision of
assistance and technology to particular countries on an advance
programmatic basis, without performing a transaction-specific analysis
or obtaining specific nonproliferation assurances from the government
of the intended foreign recipient.
The world has changed since the original part 810 rule was issued.
The creation of new countries and the threat of proliferative
activities in countries with limited ability to manage or deter such
threats must be considered in the Secretary's determination of non-
inimicality. The Secretary has considered that being a party to
nonproliferation treaties (including but not limited to other regional
treaties such as the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in
Latin America (Treaty of Tlatelolco), African Nuclear Weapon Free Zone
Treaty (Treaty of Pelindaba), South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty
(Treaty of Roratonga)), while an important part of such a determination
is not alone sufficient to make a finding of non-inimicality. The NRC's
regulation at 10 CFR 110.26 is limited to reactor components only for
reactors generating less than 5MW, which is not an adequate indication
of a country's ability to manage nuclear technology and prevent its use
in ways ``inimical to the interest of the United States.''
No comments were received regarding the SNOPR proposal to remove
Bangladesh and Peru from the generally authorized destination list;
therefore the proposed deletion is retained in the final rule.
The final rule retains the destination classifications proposed in
the SNOPR unchanged, except for clarification concerning the
availability of general authorizations for Ukraine (Sec. 810.14) and
the addition of Croatia and Vietnam as generally authorized
destinations and the removal of Thailand. DOE will provide notice of
future changes to the Appendix in the Federal Register.
1. Mexico
EPRI noted that additional IAEA agreements beyond INFCIRC/203 and
INFCIRC/825 with Mexico may be developed, and suggested clarifying
language to allow countries concluding such agreements to be included
in the general authorization destinations Appendix list to the final
rule. DOE has decided not to incorporate such changes in the final
rule. While DOE is prepared at present to include Mexico on the
Appendix list, on the basis of its agreement with the IAEA, DOE has
determined to approach other such agreements on a case-by-case basis.
2. Ukraine
The Secretary's decision that a specific authorization is or is not
required for a particular proposed export is based on U.S. nuclear and
national security policies. When the existing regulations were
promulgated in 1986, Ukraine was not a party to any international
nuclear cooperation agreements. Ukraine has since entered into a 123
Agreement with the United States, has engaged in civil nuclear trade
with the United States under the 123 Agreement, and has developed a
track record as a responsible nuclear nonproliferation partner.
Moreover, Ukraine is heavily dependent on nuclear reactors for
generation of electricity. Currently, there are 15 operating reactors
in Ukraine that generate about 50% of the electricity used there. While
Ukraine is now a civil nuclear trading partner of the United States,
these reactors rely almost entirely on services and nuclear fuel from
the Russian Federation to operate. Recent geopolitical developments in
Ukraine involving the Russian Federation underlie the U.S. Government's
determination to help ensure that Ukraine is able to maintain a stable
civil nuclear energy program independent of and without support from
the Russian Federation.
However, transfers of nuclear technology and assistance to areas
that are not under control of the Government of Ukraine could present a
proliferation risk, and a case-by-case non-inimicality determination is
needed for transfers to those areas. For this reason, Sec. 810.14 in
the final rule identifies an additional requirement, for persons about
to begin any generally authorized activity involving Ukraine, to notify
DOE at least ten days prior to beginning such activity. Following
notification of a proposed transfer to Ukraine pursuant to Sec.
810.14, the Secretary may invoke the authority in Sec. 810.10 (c) if
he determines that transfer is inimical to the interest of the United
States at that time. Thus, that transfer would not be considered
generally authorized and the applicant would need to file a request for
specific authorization in accordance with Sec. Sec. 810.7 and 11.
3. Croatia and Vietnam
NEI noted that ``Croatia, now a member-state of the European Union,
should be added to the Appendix.'' In addition, as noted in section II,
Vietnam, as of May 26, 2014 signed a 123 Agreement with the United
States, and that agreement entered into force on October 3, 2014. DOE
has added both Croatia and Vietnam to the list of generally authorized
destinations in the Appendix to this final rule.
4. Continued Specific Authorization Destinations (Russia, India and
China)
B&W, EnergySolutions, Fluor, Lightbridge, and NEI all repeated
comments on the NOPR regarding DOE's proposal to retain Russia, India,
and China as destinations requiring specific authorization. Some
disagreed with the SNOPR's explanatory rationale in section IV.B.2, but
failed to provide sufficient justification to warrant any change in the
current specific
[[Page 9366]]
authorization status of these three countries.
After duly considering the comments and consulting with the DOS,
DOC, DOD, and NRC, the Secretary remains of the view that it is not
appropriate to change the part 810 specific authorization status of
these three countries at this time for the same reasons as articulated
in the SNOPR in section IV.B.2.
5. Thailand and Norway
The Appendix to the final rule has been changed from the SNOPR to
omit Thailand, whose 123 Agreement with the United States has expired.
As there has not been a decision regarding renewal of the Agreement at
this time, under this final rule Thailand will therefore be a
specifically authorized destination.
The Appendix to the final rule includes Norway, whose 123 Agreement
with the United States has expired. However, the United States and
Norway are negotiating a renewal of the 123 Agreement. Thus, the
Department has determined that Norway will remain a generally
authorized destination under this final rule.
C. Activities Requiring Part 810 Authorization
1. Special Nuclear Material Nexus Requirement
As explained in SNOPR section IV.C.1, the Secretary has broad
discretion to determine which activities indirectly constitute
sufficient engagement or participation in the production of special
nuclear material to bring them within the scope of part 810. The
decision is based on the nature of the technology or assistance to be
provided. As such, whether an activity is generally authorized is a
matter of policy. A number of commenters (including; NEI, B&W,
Westinghouse, Fluor, ANS, NIC, AREVA, EPRI and ERIN Engineering and
Research Inc. (ERIN)) stated that the SNOPR resolved some of their
concerns with the sufficiency of the nexus between some covered
activities or technologies and the production of special nuclear
material to be subject to part 810 but maintained that the scope
remained too broad or unclear in some cases. NEI also supported the
proposed exclusion from part 810 of technologies and assistance under
the jurisdiction of the DOS and DOC and requested the same treatment
for NRC-approved activities, which was already explicit in Sec.
810.2(c)(1) as proposed in the SNOPR and adopted in the final rule.
NEI commented that DOE should limit the scope of part 810 to
technologies that are ``especially designed for the production or
processing of special nuclear material,'' such as enrichment,
reprocessing, and production reactors. Adoption of this proposal would
move light water reactor (LWR) technology outside the scope of part
810, even though it has been within the scope since the inception of
part 810. Although LWRs are designed primarily for power production,
they do directly produce plutonium, which is within the scope of part
810. Therefore, the final rule retains LWRs in the scope of part 810.
NEI and NIC further commented that there should be explicit
exemptions or authorization for the transfer of sales, marketing or
sourcing information, to provide U.S. business with more flexibility to
operate in the very competitive international civil nuclear market
because U.S. businesses are at a disadvantage to foreign competitors
that are not subject to technology controls similar to part 810
requirements. DOE is not prepared to exempt the transfer of part 810-
controlled technology based on the intent of the transfer but will
consider the content of the transfer when making a determination of
part 810's applicability. That means that if part 810-controlled
technical data is transferred in a bid, proposal, solicitation, trade
show, or plant tour, the activity is subject to part 810 controls and
requirements but if no such technical data is transferred, the activity
is not within the scope of part 810 and therefore not subject to those
controls.
NEI and B&W commented that the SNOPR lacked clear and justified
thresholds for how much recipient control, modification or U.S. content
in jointly developed technology would be enough to trigger part 810
coverage of an activity. NEI recommended that DOE adopt specific
percentage values as de minimis thresholds based on the total value of
technology to be transferred. NEI also proposed that only
``enhancements'' to foreign technology should be subject to part 810,
but other changes, such as conforming foreign technology to U.S. codes
and standards (commonly known as Americanization), should not generally
make the transfer of technology subject to part 810. In a related
comment, TerraPower asserted that DOE should set a de minimis threshold
of 5% ownership before that ownership must be disclosed in an
application for specific authorization. The comments above are largely
restatements of views expressed in response to the NOPR and were
addressed in the SNOPR preamble (Section IV.C.13.). The SNOPR explained
that a mechanistic approach is not appropriate for part 810 coverage
determinations for authorization of activities such as cooperative
enrichment enterprises and other technology transfers by collaborative
enterprises. DOE will continue to make coverage determinations based on
the specific facts of the proposed activity including but not limited
to technology to be transferred, the significance of the technology to
the production of special nuclear material, end user destination, and
end use duration of the activity such as single transfer or an ongoing
activity, rather than by mechanistic rule because the facts of each
case are unique and not readily addressed by a de minimis threshold or
characterization.
NEI reiterated its recommendation to add the term ``control-in-
fact'' to the definition in Sec. 810.3 and to apply the concept to the
application of the scope of Sec. 810.2(a)(1) as well as revisions and
clarifications to that provision to include the term ``control-in-
fact.'' NEI recommended that DOE explicitly include in Sec.
810.2(a)(2) the clarification that foreign ``licensees, contractors, or
subsidiaries under [the] direction, supervision, responsibility or
control'' of persons described by the proposed rule in Sec.
810.2(a)(1) are within the scope of part 810 only if the technology
transferred is of U.S. origin. Further, NEI recommended that control be
determined by reference to corporate governance arrangements, instead
of the specific terms and circumstances of the proposed activity. DOE
has considered this comment again and has determined to adopt Sec.
810.2(a) and (b) as proposed without further revision. DOE will review
the specific fact pattern of the activity that includes the transfer of
part 810-controlled technologies, which in some cases may not match the
stated governance or ``control'' of the company but which is specific
to the technology transfer in question.
B&W, TerraPower, NEI, and AHUG also commented that the definition
of ``technology'' should be revised to use the conjunctive ``and'' in
place of ``or'' before ``use'' in proposed Sec. 810.3, thereby
limiting the scope of part 810 to activities and technologies directly
associated with the production of special nuclear material, creating a
minimum threshold for technology and assistance provided, and mirroring
the wording currently guiding the NSG. The proposed use of the
disjunctive ``or'' in the definition of ``technology'' in proposed
Sec. 810.3 was intentional. Any of the listed forms of assistance is
sufficient to trigger part 810 coverage. It is not necessary to specify
all of the
[[Page 9367]]
technology forms; therefore the change has not been made to the
definition.
AUECO commented that under the SNOPR, DOE would subject academic
and scientific communications and research to new and burdensome deemed
export requirements without sufficient statutory basis, and that burden
would be further exacerbated by the general/specific authorization
proposed reclassification of 77 countries. The SNOPR proposal, they
argued, would jeopardize the free flow of academic collaboration that
is explicitly protected by the AEA, without DOE identifying a clear or
direct connection to the production of special nuclear material.
Part 810's statutory basis is the AEA, which states its purpose is
to ``support the conducting, assisting and fostering of research in
order to encourage maximum scientific progress'' through the
establishment of policies that benefit not only the development of
technology but also, and paramount, the common defense and security of
the United States. While part 810 requirements concerning deemed
exports may apply in an academic setting, DOE understands that most
work performed by academic institutions qualifies as fundamental
research, which is exempt from part 810 coverage under Sec.
810.2(c)(2) of the final rule. Issuance of the final rule does not
constitute a new burden for academic institutions and comports with AEA
purposes. It is those activities that go beyond fundamental research
and are applied research and development that have always been within
the scope of part 810 controls. No change has been made in this final
rule in response to this comment.
AUECO and NEI welcomed the definition of ``fundamental research''
proposed in the SNOPR but commented that it fell short of protecting
applied research and development at universities, which they argued is
the intent of the AEA. The definition announced today achieves the
intent of the AEA both to encourage fundamental research and to protect
information whose dissemination is restricted for national security
reasons. NEI also recommended revising the definition of ``fundamental
research'' to exclude proprietary ``industrial development'' and
``product utilization'' from the definition. DOE wishes to clarify that
proprietary development or utilization information is not exempted from
controls in the final rule because development and use technology is
beyond basic scientific exploration that is intended to remain outside
the scope of part 810. Applied research crosses the boundary from
theoretical scientific inquiry to potential reactor specific
applications of new technologies. This type of research will not be
generally authorized because it can be applied to a facility that could
be involved in the production of special nuclear material. The
definition of ``fundamental research'' in the final rule remains
unchanged from that proposed in the SNOPR.
AUECO also commented that the SNOPR's proposed definition of
``publicly available information'' did not address information that has
been cleared for release by the appropriate entity but has not yet been
officially released, and that lack of clarity on this point adversely
affects academic institutions with respect to transferring nuclear
technology to foreign national researchers. AUECO recommended that
information that will be or is eligible for unlimited release should be
considered ``publicly available information'' and therefore not subject
to part 810 controls in academic settings. DOE considers information
published in academic journals or otherwise available to the general
public to be ``publicly available technology'' for the purposes of
deemed exports prior to actual publication as long as the information
has been appropriately authorized for release and there is a clear
intent to publish all results, and directs commenters to examine the
definition of ``publicly available technology'' for clarification. This
subject will be dealt with in more detail in the PIP.
NEI also commented that the definition of ``publicly available
information'' should conform to the text of and guidance concerning the
ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) administered by DOS
and DOC's EAR (Export Administration Regulations). DOE has considered
NEI's request but has determined to retain the definition as proposed
in the SNOPR because the definition as formulated in the final rule
adequately and completely incorporates the characteristics of
information that DOE considers to be publicly available.
2. Activities Supporting Commercial Power Reactors
NEI and B&W commented that controlling LWR technology is
unnecessary, because it is ubiquitous and available more freely from
many foreign vendors. Further, requiring a specific authorization for
such technology to any country does little, in the commenters' view, to
stem proliferation and would hurt the competitive position of U.S.
vendors. AHUG, Fluor, and NEI stated that requiring a specific
authorization for U.S. vendors offering nuclear technologies that are
identical or similar to those that have been previously approved for
export burdens U.S. vendors, giving their competitors an advantage
without a nonproliferation benefit. Both DOE and the commenters
recognize that the harm to U.S. vendors is exacerbated by lengthy part
810 application processing time required to secure a specific
authorization. DOE believes the way to resolve the time-in-process
problem is through the PIP, not by relaxing the standards for the
Secretary's non-inimicality determination. It should be noted that the
1986 version of Sec. 810.10(b)(7) expressly states that in making the
non-inimicality determination, the Secretary will take into account
``[t]he availability of comparable assistance from other sources''. The
final rule retains this provision.
NEI and AUECO commented that the description and definition of the
portions of the ``nuclear reactor'' that would be covered by part 810,
as proposed in Sec. Sec. 810.2 and 810.3 of the SNOPR, were an
improvement from the NOPR and provided clarity, but did not align with
the NRC's part 110 Appendix A definition of a nuclear reactor. The
proposed definition of ``nuclear reactor'' in Sec. 810.3 in the SNOPR
is almost identical to the NRC definition in 10 CFR 110.2. Also, the
proposed scope of part 810 controls concerning nuclear reactors has
been aligned with the language used in NRC's part 110 Appendix A.
Specifically, the wording ``components within or attached directly to
the reactor vessel, the equipment that controls the level of power in
the core, and the equipment or components that normally contain or come
in direct contact with or control the primary coolant of the reactor
core'' in Sec. 810.2(b)(5) of the SNOPR has been adopted in today's
rule to align directly with language used in Appendix A of NRC's part
110 regulation.
NEI further commented that the description of the scope of covered
technologies concerning nuclear reactors proposed in Sec. 810.2 of the
SNOPR did not address the limits of application of the regulation to
analogous components or systems in boiling water reactors and
pressurized water reactors. As a general principle, DOE considers the
technology related to the primary coolant in the reactor core as within
the scope of part 810 controls. However, NRC's part 110 regulation
specifically excludes the steam turbine generator portion of a nuclear
power plant from its definition of a utilization facility. Since the
definition and scope statement in the SNOPR's proposed rule
[[Page 9368]]
were meant to align with part 110, DOE has determined that the steam
turbine generator portion of a nuclear plant is licensed by the DOC and
is not subject to part 810 requirements.
B&W commented that DOE should develop a list of Widely Available
Technologies. B&W further recommended that DOE solicit national
laboratory and industry input to publish and update the list through a
Federal Register Notice. Per B&W's comment, the technology list would
include an exhaustive list of technologies or assistance associated
with those technologies and be generally authorized to non-embargoed
countries. DOE has not added a widely available technology list to part
810 at this time because the Secretary has not made a non-inimicality
finding about the transfer of technologies directly or indirectly
related to the production of special nuclear material but rather the
destination of those technologies. Instead, DOE will address
technologies and approving the transfers of them in the PIP. As a part
of the PIP process, DOE will seek stakeholder input during planned
outreach programs.
NEI, B&W, Fluor, AHUG, and NIC provided similar comments to the
effect that if technology related to nuclear reactors continues to be
defined as proposed in Sec. 810.2 of the SNOPR, some formulation of a
``fast track'' or hybrid authorization process should be included in
the regulation text or a general authorization provided for transfers
of identified technologies. This process would not apply to technology
transfers to embargoed or non-NSG member countries but all other
specifically authorized destinations. Expediting the approval of
nuclear reactor technology transfers to destinations requiring specific
authorizations will be addressed in the PIP that is being conducted
independently from this rulemaking. Therefore DOE will not incorporate
a change or add a general authorization for nuclear reactor
technologies at this time.
3. Deemed Exports and Deemed Re-Exports Employee Issues
AUECO, NEI, B&W, and Westinghouse repeated in response to the SNOPR
their recommendation in comments on the NOPR concerning the transfer of
part 810-covered technology to individuals who are citizens (including
those with dual citizenship) of specific authorization countries but
have lawful permanent residence in a generally authorized country. The
commenters advanced the view that, in determining whether a specific
authorization is required, DOE should follow the DOC policy of using
the individual's most recent country of citizenship or permanent
residency to determine citizenship. Current DOE practice is to consider
all countries of an individual's allegiance (citizenship or permanent
residency) in making the requisite non-inimicality determination.
Authorization decisions in these situations are fact-specific, and DOE
will continue to deal with them on a case-by-case basis. Therefore DOE
is not incorporating this suggestion in the final rule.
ANS, AREVA, AUECO, NEI, and AHUG welcomed the general authorization
proposed in the SNOPR at Sec. 810.6(b) for foreign nationals working
at NRC-licensed facilities who are granted unescorted access in
accordance with NRC regulations. The commenters also suggested
expanding the general authorization to include foreign nationals
working in the United States at non-NRC licensed facilities, based on
NRC regulations governing access to safeguards information (SGI) or a
U.S. security clearance for access to classified information. DOE
determined that NRC's regulations and reviews governing unescorted
access to NRC licensed facilities are much more detailed than SGI
protection requirements, which mandate only a search by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation to identify any criminal records of the
individual for whom the applicant is requesting access. Alternatively,
for unescorted access to controlled technology in an NRC-licensed
facility, an individual must undergo a stringent review in addition to
complying with the SGI's requirement, including, but not limited to, a
psychological interview, drug testing, and employment history check.
After consulting with the NRC, DOE and NRC concurred that, for the
reasons described above, SGI review criteria are not sufficient to
justify providing a general authorization under part 810 for foreign
nationals to have access to part 810-controlled technologies. In
addition, DOE was unable to identify a cohort of foreign nationals who
would have security clearances and are nationals of countries not on
the part 810 Appendix list that would justify adoption of the
suggestion in the final rule. No other regulatory regimes or persuasive
factors were identified by the other commenters as a basis for DOE to
make the requested change. Therefore, DOE has decided to adopt Sec.
810.6(b) as proposed in the SNOPR.
NEI further requested that DOE should clarify in guidance that the
general authorization for deemed exports would continue to apply to
NRC-cleared individuals working in the United States for a U.S. company
who are no longer working at the NRC-licensed facility, but who require
access to part 810-controlled information. Under this suggestion, the
authorization would extend to foreign nationals working in the United
States at any U.S. company, even if unescorted access status has
expired. DOE is not adopting this proposal in today's final rule
because the termination of NRC unescorted access could occur for a
variety of reasons which must be considered. DOE invites applicants
with respect to the requirements of Sec. 810.11(b)(2) to document any
NRC clearances granted to subject foreign nationals that may be used to
inform DOE's determination of non-inimicality for the deemed export.
AREVA commented that positions requiring critical skill sets may go
unfilled due to the increased number of foreign nationals working for
AREVA in the United States and overseas that will no longer be eligible
for a general authorization because under the SNOPR proposal, more
countries would be specific authorization destinations, therefore
restricting a larger number of possible hires from accessing part 810-
controlled technology. In addition, AREVA stated that the provision
would only address current employees but not address future hires and
thus complicate hiring decisions. DOE has weighed this comment and
understands that companies are concerned about burdens to comply with
deemed export controls under the final rule, given the increase in the
number of specifically authorized destinations. DOE will continue to
require companies to seek authorization to provide access to part 810-
controlled technologies to individuals who are citizens of specifically
authorized countries because the transfer of technology to a citizen of
a specific authorization destination is considered an export to that
country and therefore deemed an export, which requires a Secretarial
non-inimicality finding before the export can be authorized. But under
the PIP, DOE will endeavor to institute efficiencies to decrease the
review and approval times for deemed export authorizations.
Exelon stated that the cost of review of I-9 forms (required by
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) to determine the number of
foreign nationals working at U.S. nuclear facilities who are citizens
of specifically authorized countries will be overly burdensome and
impede hiring and internal reassignments. In this regard,
[[Page 9369]]
the final rule makes all employees granted unescorted access to an NRC-
licensed facility generally authorized, obviating any need to research
the citizenship status of employees who have been granted unescorted
access to an NRC-licensed facility. In addition, the required I-9 forms
provide readily available data on new foreign national employees that
should help companies determine whether a foreign national needing
access to part 810-controlled information will require a specific
authorization.
NEI and B&W both commented that the time frames in the supplemental
proposed rule at Sec. 810.15 were inadequate, DOE acknowledges that 90
days is too short a time for many entities to review internal
compliance programs, review employment records, file reports with DOE
on current foreign employees receiving part 810-controlled technology,
and submit necessary requests for specific authorization, and in
today's final rule DOE has therefore extended the transition period to
180 days.
Fluor commented that it is not reasonable for a U.S. company to
treat its non-U.S. citizen employees working in offices/subsidiaries
located in foreign countries differently (e.g., an employee who is a
citizen of specific authorization country working in a country on the
general authorization Appendix list would require a specific
authorization to access part 810-controlled technology); and requested
that foreign nationals employed at U.S. subsidiaries in countries not
listed in the Appendix be eligible for a general authorization as long
as the company can assure DOE that the part 810-covered technology
transferred to the foreign national is protected from unauthorized
disclosure. The final rule retains the approach, as implemented under
the 1986 version of the rule and as proposed in the NOPR and SNOPR, to
deemed re-exports. That is, whether a specific authorization is
required for a foreign national (as defined in Sec. 810.3) employed in
a foreign country depends on the general or specific authorization
designation of the foreign national's country of citizenship. Under the
final rule, companies working with entities outside the U.S., whether
or not they are wholly owned subsidiaries, are authorized either
generally or through a specific authorization to transfer specific
technology. DOE will continue to require compliance with the transfer
of part 810-controlled technology no matter where the export takes
place.
B&W and Fluor made a similar proposal: That DOE view part 810-
controlled technology transfers to companies in some subset of
countries (B&W proposed NSG member states) as eligible for general
authorization with respect to deemed re-exports, meaning the recipient
entity would be generally authorized, as well as all its employees,
regardless of citizenship, so long as the foreign nationals are
employed legally (and in the case of Fluor's comment, so long as a
confidentiality agreement is in place). As noted above, DOE has
determined to retain in the final rule adopted today the regulatory
approach to deemed re-exports under the 1986 version of part 810 and in
the NOPR and SNOPR.
B&W and NEI suggested that the language contained in Sec.
810.11(c) as proposed in the SNOPR (Sec. 810.11(b) in the final rule)
indicates that mere ``employment'' of a foreign national who is a
citizen of a country not listed in the Appendix, by a U.S. company or
its foreign subsidiary, would require a specific authorization. This is
incorrect. Under the SNOPR and under today's final rule, a specific
authorization is required for the transfer of part 810-controlled
technology or information to a foreign national, not merely employment
of that individual by a U.S. company or its foreign subsidiary.
B&W and NEI also recommended that DOE streamline the proposed part
810 rule to clarify that U.S. companies are only required to comply
with the proposed deemed export requirements to the extent that
compliance does not violate applicable employment laws in those
countries where a company's foreign national employees are employed.
The intent of Sec. 810.11(b) as proposed and made final is to control
technology transfers, not employment. It enables DOE to implement its
authority to authorize re-exports of transferred technology. Companies
may hire whomever they choose. However, the AEA is the foundation upon
which the regulation at part 810 and makes clear that U.S. companies
are not free to transfer part 810-controlled technology to employees
who are citizens of countries that are not listed in the Appendix
without a specific authorization or who meet the requirements of Sec.
810.6(b) of the final rule.
NEI commented that as proposed in the SNOPR, a foreign national is
required to interact with DOE to secure a specific authorization. That
assertion is incorrect. DOE consent is requested by and granted to the
U.S. company-applicant under the rule, and not directly to the foreign
national. It is the responsibility of the person subject to part 810 to
ensure that transfers and retransfers of U.S. technology and assistance
are under its control and take place in compliance with part 810.
AUECO commented that the rule ``should also explicitly authorize
deemed exports to foreign nationals of Appendix A [sic] countries who
meet the requirements of Sec. 810.6(b)(1, 2 and 4) . . .)'' This
recommendation indicates a misreading of Sec. 810.6. Proposed Sec.
810.6(a) of the SNOPR explicitly authorizes specified activities with
entities in countries listed in the Appendix. Section 810.6 proposed in
the SNOPR and adopted in today's final rule includes all nationals or
citizens of countries listed in the Appendix for all activities except
those described in Sec. 810.7.
In conclusion, DOE carefully weighed the comments received
concerning deemed exports and deemed re-exports. In the discussion
above, DOE has provided clarity for issues raised by commenters, but
has determined that it is unnecessary to make changes to the
requirements for deemed export and deemed re-export authorizations as
proposed in the SNOPR. DOE will address potential improvements for
efficiencies for such applications in the PIP and continue to work
directly with part 810 applicants that have fact-specific compliance
questions.
4. Operational Safety Activities
AREVA, AHUG, and EPRI strongly supported the inclusion of the
proposed definition of ``operational safety'' and the proposed general
authorization provisions contained in the SNOPR for proposed Sec.
810.6(c) (adopted as Sec. 810.6(b) in the final rule). AHUG and EPRI
provided comments and a red line text of the general authorization
provisions at proposed Sec. 810.6(c)(2) and (3) as well as the
definition of ``operational safety'' contained in proposed Sec. 810.3
to further expand the provisions. AHUG, NEI, and EPRI recommended that
DOE consolidate proposed Sec. Sec. 810.6(c)(2) and (3) into a single
general authorization that focuses on the nationality of the recipients
of the operational safety information or assistance rather than on the
nuclear power plants. The commenters alleged that proposed Sec.
810.6(c)(2) would be applicable only to existing plants overseas, while
proposed Sec. 810.6(c)(3) would include new plants as well as existing
plants in the United States and that DOE did not provide a clear
rationale for its proposal. AHUG further commented that extending a
general authorization as proposed in the SNOPR to include assistance to
new nuclear power plants located in countries that are not eligible for
a general authorization to ensure state of the art
[[Page 9370]]
safety technologies and methodologies, including input from U.S.
nuclear operators, are incorporated at the design phase of a reactor
construction is crucial for the safety of nuclear plants.
Proposed Sec. 810.6(c)(2) is intended to authorize U.S. companies
to provide operational safety technologies and assistance to existing
plants in foreign countries so they can meet specific national or
international safety standards or requirements for operational safety.
Proposed Sec. 810.6(c)(3), on the other hand, is intended to authorize
important benchmarking activities at plants in the United States by
international entities or individuals, such as those conducted by the
INPO, and NRC-sponsored and -approved activities. The difference in
treatment between plants located in the United States and those
overseas is intentional. Assistance to U.S. facilities is not
assistance to foreign entities, and the incidental transfer of
technical information to foreign nationals providing the assistance is
not deemed by DOE to be a significant proliferation risk. However,
providing information during the design and construction of a new
facility in a destination requiring specific authorization constitutes
a much higher proliferation risk, and requires DOE approval. The basis
for the DOE decision to adopt the distinction between assistance to a
foreign reactor and benchmarking in the United States remains the basis
for Sec. 810.6(c)(3) in the final rule. NRC-sponsored or -licensed
activities in the United States or overseas are outside the scope of
part 810, as explicitly provided in Sec. 810.2(c)(1).
DOE also reviewed the proposed revision to the definition of
``operational safety'' provided by AHUG and EPRI. DOE proposed a
definition of ``operational safety'' in the SNOPR that would broaden
the scope of assistance and technology that could be generally
authorized. The suggested revisions as provided by AHUG and EPRI
further broadened DOE's proposed scope and include services that are
not considered merely safety but rather services to improve design and/
or efficiencies of nuclear reactors. Because the general authorization
relates only to operational safety, the broader definition that
includes design improvements or efficiencies has not been adopted. DOE
has not made revisions to the proposed definition of ``operational
safety'', but rather is adopting unchanged in today's final rule the
definition proposed in the SNOPR.
ERIN requested clarification on whether probabilistic risk
assessments (PRAs) for existing nuclear power plants in foreign
countries should be generally authorized. ERIN commented that PRAs do
not fall within the scope of part 810 because the methodology is
publicly available. Further, ERIN stated that while the information
included in the PRA is specific to the power plant, no knowledge to
design or operate the reactor more efficiently is transferred in the
process of developing a PRA or the final report. DOE has considered
this comment and agrees with ERIN's comment. DOE concludes in today's
final rule that PRAs are generally authorized activities within the
definition of ``operational safety'' for destinations typically
requiring specific authorization. No change to the rule is required to
address this comment.
NEI commented that in proposed Sec. 810.6(c)(1) of the SNOPR the
words ``which emergency cannot be met by other means'' should be
deleted. NEI stated that it is not in the interest of the United States
that persons subject to part 810 should, in the face of a current or
imminent radiological emergency, spend time trying to demonstrate that
no other means, foreign or domestic, could defuse that emergency, or
that the proposed assistance is uniquely capable of successfully doing
so. DOE declines to incorporate that suggestion because the phrase in
question provides DOE with the latitude to make the determination that
an activity can take place without the paperwork in place. This is the
qualitative analysis that DOE, not the U.S. company, must conduct when
considering such requests. However, to clarify the intent, the phrase
``in DOE's assessment'' has been added. The phrase now reads ``which
emergency in DOE's assessment cannot be met by other means.''
5. Other
NEI reiterated its view that exercise of the Secretary of Energy's
statutory authority under Sec. 57 b.(2) of the AEA to authorize
persons to engage or participate in the development or production of
special nuclear material outside the United States can and should be
delegated; however, as the AEA in section 161 n. does not allow for
delegation below the Secretary, the requested change has not been made
in the rule. NEI also commented that some language proposed in the
SNOPR does not conform to the NSG Guidelines in some areas. The U.S.
Government is a member of and fully supports the NSG; however, the
legal underpinning of the part 810 regulation is U.S. law, namely, the
AEA. The NSG Guidelines are adopted by the NSG by unanimous approval;
thus, in some important instances the part 810 regulation will not
conform to the NSG Guidelines but instead reflects U.S. law.
DOE will address with Enrichment Technology U.S. and Integrated
Systems Technology the questions posed in their comments concerning the
application of the final rule to their specific cases or authorization
conditions. NIC recommended a users group be created for part 810
authorization recipients. After consideration of this request, DOE has
decided that the need for a users group will be considered upon
completion of the PIP.
TerraPower commented that clarification is needed concerning
technologies and assistance associated with fuel research and
development programs that could be viewed as analogous to reprocessing
technologies and because, without a definition of ``reprocessing'' in
the rule, there is room for misinterpretation. DOE has considered this
comment and will address these specific concerns on a case-by-case
basis because the technology has a number of aspects that may or may
not constitute reprocessing depending on the specifics of the case. A
definition could be too restrictive in some applications, and
insufficient in others.
DOE will not address B&W comments concerning the extraterritorial
application of the rule as this is outside the scope of this
rulemaking. Other matters that were presented but are outside the scope
of this rulemaking include: EPRI's comment that any revision of part
810 is unnecessary as the United States already has the most stringent
and unilateral export controls in the world; and NIC's recommendations
to modernize the AEA 123 Agreement process and conduct a 360-degree
peer review of other nuclear technology export control regimes.
NEI submitted a number of editorial and clarifying revisions in a
red lined document, including a proposal that proposed Sec. 810.5(b)
should include a timeframe for a response (NEI proposed 30 days). The
proposed rule and this final rule already provide 30 days for responses
to requests for advice. Specific authorizations frequently require
interactions with foreign governments over whose response time DOE has
no control, thus attempting to incorporate a timeline in the final rule
would not achieve NEI's intended purpose of driving speedier DOE
approvals. Putting a hard deadline in the rule would require DOE to
reject the application if foreign government nonproliferation
assurances could not be obtained within the mandated time, and would
require the company to
[[Page 9371]]
resubmit and restart the process. DOE will address timelines in the PIP
and not in the final rule published today.
D. Technical Corrections
1. Sec. 810.1
NEI recommended adding a clause to proposed Sec. 810.1 ``(d)
Establish orderly and expeditious procedures for the consideration of
requests for specific authorization under this part.''
This phrase is, in part, a direct quote of Sec. 57 b. of the
Atomic Energy Act directing the adoption of procedures for processing
part 810 specific authorization requests. Such procedures were issued
in 1978 and amended in 1984. It does not add to the rule, nor does it
create enforceable language that will either help applicants obtain
their specific authorizations more rapidly or provide further direction
to DOE. Therefore, DOE does not incorporate this recommendation into
the final rule.
2. Sec. 810.3 Technical Services
AUECO commented that there was no definition of ``technical
services'' proposed in the SNOPR and requested clarification concerning
whether the quoted phrase is different from the defined term
``technical assistance.'' The term ``technical services'' occurs only
once in the 1986 version of the rule and in the SNOPR, in the
definition of ``sensitive nuclear technology.'' To avoid the potential
for confusion, DOE in today's final rule has replaced ``technical
services'' with ``assistance'' because they have the same intended
meaning. A new definition of ``assistance'' has been added to Sec.
810.3.
3. Sec. 810.3 Technical Assistance vs. Assistance
NEI commented that ``assistance'' should be globally replaced with
``technical assistance'' or ``assistance'' should be defined.
The phrase ``technical assistance'' occurred only twice in the
SNOPR beyond the definitions in proposed Sec. 810.3. All usages of
``technical assistance'' in today's final rule have been replaced with
``assistance'' and the definition modified accordingly. As noted, a new
definition of ``assistance'' has been added to Sec. 810.3.
In addition NEI commented that the phrase ``as determined by the
Secretary'' in the definition of ``assistance'' should be deleted
because ``it is vague and open-ended and reduces certainty about what
types of assistance are covered by Part 810. Any expansion of the reach
of the regulation should be accomplished only by an amendment, subject
to Section 553 of the APA. At a minimum, the rule should be clear that
any controls asserted on the basis of Secretarial determination over
specific types of technical assistance that are not listed in the rule
should apply only prospectively.''
The definition of ``assistance'' includes a list of activities that
can be construed as assistance, and cannot, by its nature, be a
comprehensive description of all the ways persons may endeavor to
assist persons in other countries with nuclear technology. The
inclusion of the phrase ``as determined by the Secretary'' is intended
to prevent circumvention of this rule by the mere renaming of
activities to avoid the descriptions included in this list. Therefore,
based on consideration of the comment, DOE determined to retain the
phrase in the final rule.
4. Sec. 810.6(f)
NEI commented that DOE should delete the ``and'' at the end of
Sec. 810.6(f) proposed in the SNOPR to clarify that any one of the
activities in subsections (a) through (g) of this section is
independently generally authorized, rather than requiring that all of
them be involved in order for the activity to be generally authorized.
DOE agrees with NEI and in this final rule replaces ``and'' with
``or'' to make the disjunctive nature of the list clear.
5. Sec. Sec. 810.6(c)(2) and 810.11(b)
NEI requested that DOE clarify ``that 810.6(c)(2) has correctly
numbered references. It calls for information in 810.11(b), which
refers the applicant to optional information from 810.9(b) and (c).''
The SNOPR proposed Sec. 810.11(b), which provided applicants the
option of providing information concerning the factors listed in
Sec. Sec. 810.9(b) and (c) of the SNOPR. DOE has determined that the
factors are more properly considered by DOE in making non-inimicality
determinations. Therefore, in the final rule Sec. 810.11(b) as
proposed in the SNOPR has been eliminated and Sec. 810.11(c) as
proposed in the SNOPR has been renumbered as Sec. 810.11(b).
In the final rule, the phrase ``and may provide information cited
in Sec. 810.11(b)'' is eliminated from Sec. 810.6(c)(2). The
elimination of Sec. 810.11(b) and subsequent renumbering also requires
changes to Sec. 810.11(a) that referenced Sec. 810.11(b). This clause
now references Sec. Sec. 810.9(b)(7), (8), and (9).
6. Sec. 810.16 Savings Clause
NEI and B&W both commented that the time frames in proposed Sec.
810.15 were inadequate. B&W recommended a complete grandfathering of
all current activities in countries moving from general authorization
to specific authorization classification. NEI pointed out that such
activities were unlikely to be found problematic by DOE. NEI
recommended a limited time frame and suggested that a lack of objection
from DOE would constitute acceptance.
DOE acknowledges that 90 days is too short a time for many entities
to request specific authorization for activities that were generally
authorized prior to issuance of the final rule, and in today's final
rule DOE has therefore extended the transition period to 180 days.
However, a finding of non-inimicality cannot be met by DOE not meeting
a deadline of any kind. Acknowledging that technology transfers have
already occurred, the savings clause in the final rule provides that
until DOE acts on an applicant's request, the applicant can continue
its part 810-controlled current activities.
V. Regulatory Review
A. Executive Order 12866
Today's final rule has been determined to be an economically
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory
Planning and Review,'' 58 FR 51735 (October 4, 1993). Accordingly, this
action was subject to review under that Executive Order by the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs of the Office of Management and
Budget. The required economic impact analysis was prepared by DOE.
AREVA, AUECO, George Mason University, and NEI commented that the
economic analysis performed as a part of the rulemaking was based on
flawed data sets or data from soft growth periods, which the commenters
contended are not realistic in normal circumstances.
NEI's analysis is the most comprehensive of those provided and is
used in this discussion of the economic impacts of this final rule.
Rather than debate the assumptions between DOE's analysis and NEI's
analysis, DOE accepts NEI's basic claim that different assumptions will
result in different outcomes. NEI's critique claims that revisions to
part 810 as proposed in the SNOPR would have an annual impact of $10
million to the detriment of the U.S. nuclear industry.
In its analysis, NEI listed 14 key countries that will be moving
from generally authorized to specifically authorized classification and
based its conclusion concerning the economic impact of DOE's proposed
regulatory revisions on these 14 countries. NEI did not provide any
information about the specific opportunities provided in each
[[Page 9372]]
country, so DOE has assumed it is roughly equal to $700,000 per country
per year. As Croatia was included in NEI's list, and since that country
has been included on the Appendix list of generally authorized
destinations, any impact should be reduced by $700,000 per year,
bringing the impact down to $9.3 million per year.
NEI's critique also included a projected $5 million per year impact
for losses associated with deemed exports. The argument is related to
an economic loss attributed to those companies that would be required
to hire workers from countries that do not require specific
authorizations. While the DOE does acknowledge that there is additional
effort involved in hiring workers from these destinations into
positions where part 810-controlled technology would be shared, the
final rule does not preclude such hiring and, in fact, NNSA is working
on a PIP to reduce this burden. Under the 1986 version of the rule a
large number of the specific authorizations were, in fact, to allow
such workers to work in those positions. However, for the sake of
discussion, DOE accepts that there is an impact of $2.5 million per
year.
To be further conservative, DOE has omitted any potential
additional positive impact of countries moving from specific
authorizations to general authorization classification. Such changes
serve to reduce the impact of this rule further. For example, Vietnam
(although not one of NEI's identified 14 critical countries) has just
entered into a 123 Agreement with the United States, and is included in
the Appendix to the final rule as a generally authorized destination.
These corrections bring the net effect of the NEI based analysis to
$6.8 million per year, or roughly $100 million over the analysis period
(present to 2030). The Table below summarizes NEI's original assumption
and DOE's corrections:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Impacts
impact through
Changes (million/ 2030
yr) (millions)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NEI.......................... Base........... $10 160
DOE Changes for Croatia's $0.7........... 9.3 148.8
status as GA.
DOE Changes for Deemed export $2.5........... 6.8 108.7
impact.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DOE's economic analysis compared the potential impacts on the U.S.
nuclear exports of shifting countries from one type of authorization to
another for three different nuclear capacity forecasts. Using the World
Nuclear Association (WNA low projection), Nuclear Assurance
Corporation, and UxC nuclear capacity forecasts; DOE estimated the
potential for lost business in nuclear exports to range from $20 to $86
million per year over the 18-year window as potential export volume
destined for countries moving from generally authorized to specifically
authorized status. Using the same three nuclear capacity forecasts, DOE
also estimated the potential impacts on U.S. nuclear exports associated
with transferring technology to specifically authorized countries
reclassified as generally authorized countries to be between $86 to
$154 million per year.
DOE monetized the potential impact of the rule from moving
countries from the GA to SA category and from the SA to the GA
category. For countries moving from the GA to SA category, the monetary
impact is expected to be negative, since specific authorization
involves additional cost to applicants and time for DOE to process, and
some small fraction of SA applications may ultimately not be approved.
The impact of moving a country from the SA to GA category will, for the
same reasons, is expected to be positive. DOE calculated the net effect
on U.S. nuclear exports using the average annual yearly trade derived
from the WNA low projection from 2013 through 2030 and from four
scenarios that assume 10% to 40% of annual yearly trade will be
impacted either positively or negatively by the rule change. Using the
20% impact as the assumption for the primary impact estimate, DOE
estimated the costs to be $23 million/year and the benefits to be $43
million/year with a net benefit of $20 million/year at a 7% discount
rate. The net benefit of the rule ranged from a low of $9 million/year
to $53 million/year at a 7% discount rate as shown in the table below.
The estimates using a 3% discount rate are also presented in the table
below.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Discount Period
Primary Low estimate High estimate dollars rate (%) covered
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized Monetized Costs ($Millions/Year)............. $22,690,617 $10,084,718 $60,508,311 2010 7 2013-2030
23,674,479 10,521,991 63,131,945 2010 3 2013-2030
Annualized Monetized Benefits ($Millions/Year).......... 42,586,759 18,927,448 113,564,690 2010 7 2013-2030
42,927,555 19,078,913 114,473,479 2010 3 2013-2030
Annualized Monetized Net Benefits ($Millions/Year)...... 19,896,142 8,842,730 53,056,379 2010 7 2013-2030
19,253,076 8,556,922 51,341,534 2010 3 2013-2030
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Both NEI and DOE's analyses concur that MW's of nuclear generation
serve as a rough approximation of potential market opportunity. In
looking at comprehensive forecasts from today to 2030, DOE notes that
at the maximum, the countries moving from generally authorized to
specific authorization status represent significantly less than 1% of
the total market.
B. Administrative Procedure Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B), the DOE finds that
providing an opportunity for public comment on office name changes in
DOE's internal organization structure prior to publication of this rule
is not necessary and contrary to the public interest because they are
minor technical changes. Prior notice and
[[Page 9373]]
opportunity to comment on these changes are unnecessary because they
are not subject to the exercise of discretion by the DOE.
C. National Environmental Policy Act
DOE determined that today's final rule is covered under the
Categorical Exclusion found in DOE's National Environmental Policy Act
regulations at paragraph A5 of Appendix A to Subpart D, 10 CFR part
1021, categorical exclusion A5, which applies to a rule or regulation
that interprets or amends an ``existing rule or regulation that does
not change the environmental effect of the rule or regulation being
amended.'' Accordingly, neither an environmental assessment nor an
environmental impact statement is required.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires
preparation of an initial regulatory flexibility analysis for any rule
that by law must be proposed for public comment, unless the agency
certifies that the rule, if promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. As required
by Executive Order 13272, ``Proper Consideration of Small Entities in
Agency Rulemaking,'' 67 FR 53461 (August 16, 2002), DOE published
procedures and policies on February 19, 2003, to ensure that the
potential impacts of its rules on small entities are properly
considered during the rulemaking process (68 FR 7990). DOE has made its
procedures and policies available on the Office of the General
Counsel's Web site: https://www.energy.gov/gc/downloads/executive-order-13272-consideration-small-entities-agency-rulemaking.
In the SNOPR, DOE certified that this rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
and did not prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis for this
rulemaking. The DOE received no comments on the certification, and has
responded to comments related to the economic impacts of the rule
elsewhere in this preamble; no changes to the certification were made
based on comments received. As a result, the DOE certifies that today's
final rule will not have a significant impact on a substantial number
of small entities. The DOE's certification and supporting statement of
factual basis will be provided to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
U.S. companies that wish to export nuclear technology or assistance
within the scope of this final rule must provide DOE with information
concerning the technology to be transferred as well as the destination
and use or application of the assistance or technology. Depending on
the destination and the technology in question, a U.S. company will be
required to submit a report of the activity 30 days after the fact or a
request for a specific authorization from the Secretary. DOE submitted
a request for the reinstatement of the collection of information
associated with recordkeeping and reporting requirements of part 810 to
OMB for approval pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and the procedures implementing that Act, 5 CFR
1320.1 et seq. The collection of information requirements for
compliance with part 810 and recordkeeping is subject to review and
approval by OMB under OMB Control Number 1901-0263. OMB approved the
reinstatement of the information collection on October 31, 2014. DOE
published notices in the Federal Register on March 7, 2014, FRN# 2014-
04984, p. 13048, and FRN# 2014-12800, p. 31928 soliciting comments on
the DOE estimate of the information collection burden. No public
comments were received on the 60-day or 30-day notices. In association
with this rulemaking revision for part 810, DOE is submitting for OMB
approval the revisions to this information collection.
Under the 1986 version of the rule, a list of countries at Sec.
810.8(a) contained 73 counties that required case-by-case review for
the Secretary to make a non-inimicality finding specifically
authorizing the transfer of any technology or assistance except where
generally authorized in Sec. 810.7. By default, all countries not
listed were generally authorized destinations for the transfer of
nuclear power plant technology and assistance to those countries
without prior approval from DOE. In this final rule, DOE restructured
the list to a positive list of destinations, including 51 destinations
to which the transfer of nuclear power plant technology will be
generally authorized. This revision has effected a net change of an
additional 74 countries that were by default generally authorized for
the transfer of nuclear power plant technology but will now require a
specific authorization. While this is an increase in the number of
destinations not eligible for a general authorization by default, in
DOE's estimation, the positive generally authorized destination list is
not expected to result in a substantial increase in the volume of
reporting or requests for specific authorization, as the subject
countries have no civilian nuclear programs or plans for civilian
nuclear programs in the near future.
The reporting and application burden is estimated at three hours
per response, and an average of three responses per distinct entity,
regardless of it being a report of generally authorized activities or a
request for specific authorization. This number includes the time for
reviewing the regulation, searching existing data sources, gathering
and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the
collection of information. DOE estimated for the 1986 version of the
rule that the total number of unduplicated respondents to be 145 with
the average of 2.22 responses per respondent, resulting in 322
responses and 966 total annual burden hours with the average burden per
response at 3 hours and the average annual burden per respondent at
6.66 hours. Under the final rule, DOE is estimating that the number of
respondents will remain the same but that the number of reports filed
per respondent to increase from 2.22 to 3.19, resulting in 463 total
annual responses and 1389 total annual burden hours. The average burden
per response is estimated to remain at 3 hours per respondent and the
average annual burden per respondent at 9.57 hours.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act, unless that collection of
information displays a currently valid OMB Control Number.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4) generally
requires Federal agencies to examine closely the impacts of regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal governments. Subsection 101(5) of
title I of that law defines a Federal intergovernmental mandate to
include any regulation that would impose upon State, local, or tribal
governments an enforceable duty, except a condition of Federal
assistance or a duty arising from participating in a voluntary federal
program. Title II of that law requires each Federal agency to assess
the effects of Federal regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the private sector, other than to
the extent
[[Page 9374]]
such actions merely incorporate requirements specifically set forth in
a statute. Section 202 of that title requires a Federal agency to
perform a detailed assessment of the anticipated costs and benefits of
any rule that includes a Federal mandate which may result in costs to
State, local, or tribal governments, or to the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year (adjusted annually for inflation). 2
U.S.C. 1532(a) and (b). Section 204 of that title requires each agency
that proposes a rule containing a significant Federal intergovernmental
mandate to develop an effective process for obtaining meaningful and
timely input from elected officers of State, local, and tribal
governments (2 U.S.C. 1534).
This rule does not impose a Federal mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments or on the private sector. Accordingly, no assessment
or analysis is required under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
G. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999
Section 654 of the Treasury and General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999 (Pub. L. 105-277) requires Federal agencies to issue a Family
Policymaking Assessment for any proposed rule that may affect family
well-being. The final rule will not have any impact on the autonomy or
integrity of the family as an institution. Accordingly, DOE has
concluded that it is not necessary to prepare a Family Policymaking
Assessment.
H. Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, ``Federalism,'' 64 FR 43255 (August 4,
1999), imposes certain requirements on agencies formulating and
implementing policies or regulations that preempt State law or that
have federalism implications. Agencies are required to examine the
constitutional and statutory authority supporting any action that would
limit the policymaking discretion of the States and carefully assess
the necessity for such actions. DOE has examined this rule and has
determined that it does not pre-empt State law and will not have a
substantial direct effect on the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government. No further
action is required by Executive Order 13132.
I. Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of existing regulations and the
promulgation of new regulations, section 3(a) of Executive Order 12988,
``Civil Justice Reform,'' 61 FR 4729 (February 7, 1996), imposes on
Executive agencies the general duty to adhere to the following
requirements: (1) Eliminate drafting errors and ambiguity; (2) write
regulations to minimize litigation; and (3) provide a clear legal
standard for affected conduct rather than a general standard and
promote simplification and burden reduction. With regard to the review
required by section 3(a), section 3(b) of Executive Order 12988
specifically requires that Executive agencies make every reasonable
effort to ensure that the regulation: (1) Clearly specifies the
preemptive effect, if any; (2) clearly specifies any effect on existing
Federal law or regulation; (3) provides a clear legal standard for
affected conduct while promoting simplification and burden reduction;
(4) specifies the retroactive effect, if any; (5) adequately defines
key terms; and (6) addresses other important issues affecting clarity
and general draftsmanship under any guidelines issued by the Attorney
General. Section 3(c) of Executive Order 12988 requires Executive
agencies to review regulations in light of applicable standards in
section 3(a) and section 3(b) to determine whether they are met or it
is unreasonable to meet one or more of them. DOE has completed the
required review and determined that, to the extent permitted by law,
the rule meets the relevant standards of Executive Order 12988.
J. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001
The Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2001 (44
U.S.C. 3516 note), provides for agencies to review most disseminations
of information to the public under guidelines established by each
agency pursuant to general guidelines issued by OMB.
OMB's guidelines were published at 67 FR 8452 (February 22, 2002),
and DOE's guidelines were published at 67 FR 62446 (October 7, 2002).
DOE has reviewed this rule under the OMB and DOE guidelines and has
concluded that it is consistent with applicable policies in those
guidelines.
K. Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211, ``Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use,'' 66 FR 28355
(May 22, 2001), requires Federal agencies to prepare and submit to OMB
a Statement of Energy Effects for any proposed significant energy
action. A ``significant energy action'' is defined as any action by an
agency that promulgated or is expected to lead to promulgation of a
final rule, and that: (1) Is a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, or any successor order; and (2) is likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use
of energy, or (3) is designated by the Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs as a significant energy action. For
any proposed significant energy action, the agency must give a detailed
statement of any adverse effects on energy supply, distribution, or use
should the proposal be implemented, and of reasonable alternatives to
the action and their expected benefits on energy supply, distribution,
and use. Today's regulatory action will not have a significant adverse
effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy and is therefore
not a significant energy action. Accordingly, DOE has not prepared a
Statement of Energy Effects.
L. Executive Order 13609
Executive Order 13609 of May 1, 2012, ``Promoting International
Regulatory Cooperation,'' requires that, to the extent permitted by law
and consistent with the principles and requirements of Executive Order
13563 and Executive Order 12866, each Federal agency shall:
(a) If required to submit a Regulatory Plan pursuant to Executive
Order 12866, include in that plan a summary of its international
regulatory cooperation activities that are reasonably anticipated to
lead to significant regulations, with an explanation of how these
activities advance the purposes of Executive Order 13563 and this
order;
(b) Ensure that significant regulations that the agency identifies
as having significant international impacts are designated as such in
the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions, on
RegInfo.gov, and on Regulations.gov;
(c) In selecting which regulations to include in its retrospective
review plan, as required by Executive Order 13563, consider:
(i) Reforms to existing significant regulations that address
unnecessary differences in regulatory requirements between the United
States and its major trading partners, consistent with section 1 of
this order, when stakeholders provide adequate information to the
agency establishing that the differences are unnecessary; and
(ii) Such reforms in other circumstances as the agency deems
appropriate; and
(d) For significant regulations that the agency identifies as
having significant international impacts, consider, to the
[[Page 9375]]
extent feasible, appropriate, and consistent with law, any regulatory
approaches by a foreign government that the United States has agreed to
consider under a regulatory cooperation council work plan.
DOE has reviewed this rule under the provisions of Executive Order
13609 and determined that the rule complies with all requirements set
forth in the order.
M. Congressional Notification
As required by 5 U.S.C. 801, DOE will submit to Congress a report
regarding the issuance of today's final rule prior to the effective
date set forth at the outset of this notice. The report will state that
it has been determined that the rule is not a ``major rule'' as defined
by 5 U.S.C. 801(2).
VI. Approval by the Office of the Secretary
The Office of the Secretary of Energy has approved the publication
of this final rule.
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 810
Foreign relations, Nuclear energy, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 7, 2015.
Ernest J. Moniz,
Secretary of Energy.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, DOE amends title 10 of the
Code of Federal Regulations by revising part 810 to read as follows:
PART 810--ASSISTANCE TO FOREIGN ATOMIC ENERGY ACTIVITIES
Sec.
810.1 Purpose.
810.2 Scope.
810.3 Definitions.
810.4 Communications.
810.5 Interpretations.
810.6 Generally authorized activities.
810.7 Activities requiring specific authorization.
810.8 Restrictions on general and specific authorization.
810.9 Grant of specific authorization.
810.10 Revocation, suspension, or modification of authorization.
810.11 Information required in an application for specific
authorization.
810.12 Reports.
810.13 Additional information.
810.14 Special provision regarding Ukraine.
810.15 Violations.
810.16 Effective date and savings clause.
Appendix A to Part 810--Generally Authorized Destinations
Authority: Secs. 57, 127, 128, 129, 161, 222, and 232 Atomic
Energy Act of 1954, as amended by the Nuclear Nonproliferation Act
of 1978, Pub. L. 95-242, 68 Stat. 932, 948, 950, 958, 92 Stat. 126,
136, 137, 138 (42 U.S.C. 2077, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2201, 2272, 2280),
and the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004,
Pub. L. 108-458, 118 Stat. 3768; Sec. 104 of the Energy
Reorganization Act of 1974, Pub. L. 93-438; Sec. 301, Department of
Energy Organization Act, Pub. L. 95-91; National Nuclear Security
Administration Act, Pub. L. 106-65, 50 U.S.C. 2401 et seq., as
amended.
Sec. 810.1 Purpose.
The regulations in this part implement section 57 b.(2) of the
Atomic Energy Act, which empowers the Secretary, with the concurrence
of the Department of State, and after consultation with the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, the Department of Commerce, and the Department
of Defense, to authorize persons to directly or indirectly engage or
participate in the development or production of special nuclear
material outside the United States. The purpose of the regulations in
this part is to:
(a) Identify activities that are generally authorized by the
Secretary and thus require no other authorization under this part;
(b) Identify activities that require specific authorization by the
Secretary and explain how to request authorization; and
(c) Specify reporting requirements for authorized activities.
Sec. 810.2 Scope.
(a) Part 810 (this part) applies to:
(1) All persons subject to the jurisdiction of the United States
who directly or indirectly engage or participate in the development or
production of any special nuclear material outside the United States;
and
(2) The transfer of technology that involves any of the activities
listed in paragraph (b) of this section either in the United States or
abroad by such persons or by licensees, contractors or subsidiaries
under their direction, supervision, responsibility, or control.
(b) The activities referred to in paragraph (a) of this section
are:
(1) Chemical conversion and purification of uranium and thorium
from milling plant concentrates and in all subsequent steps in the
nuclear fuel cycle;
(2) Chemical conversion and purification of plutonium and
neptunium;
(3) Nuclear fuel fabrication, including preparation of fuel
elements, fuel assemblies and cladding thereof;
(4) Uranium isotope separation (uranium enrichment), plutonium
isotope separation, and isotope separation of any other elements
(including stable isotope separation) when the technology or process
can be applied directly or indirectly to uranium or plutonium;
(5) Nuclear reactor development, production or use of the
components within or attached directly to the reactor vessel, the
equipment that controls the level of power in the core, and the
equipment or components that normally contain or come in direct contact
with or control the primary coolant of the reactor core;
(6) Development, production or use of production accelerator-driven
subcritical assembly systems;
(7) Heavy water production and hydrogen isotope separation when the
technology or process has reasonable potential for large-scale
separation of deuterium (\2\H) from protium (\1\H);
(8) Reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel or targets containing
special nuclear material, and post-irradiation examination of fuel
elements, fuel assemblies and cladding thereof, if it is part of a
reprocessing program; and
(9) The transfer of technology for the development, production, or
use of equipment or material especially designed or prepared for any of
the above listed activities. (See Nuclear Regulatory Commission
regulations at 10 CFR part 110, Appendices A through K, and O, for an
illustrative list of items considered to be especially designed or
prepared for certain listed nuclear activities.)
(c) This part does not apply to:
(1) Exports authorized by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Department of State, or Department of Commerce;
(2) Transfer of publicly available information, publicly available
technology, or the results of fundamental research;
(3) Uranium and thorium mining and milling (e.g., production of
impure source material concentrates such as uranium yellowcake and all
activities prior to that production step);
(4) Nuclear fusion reactors per se, except for supporting systems
involving hydrogen isotope separation technologies within the scope
defined in paragraph (b)(7) of this section and Sec. 810.7(c)(3);
(5) Production or extraction of radiopharmaceutical isotopes when
the process does not involve special nuclear material; and
(6) Transfer of technology to any individual who is lawfully
admitted for permanent residence in the United States or is a protected
individual under the Immigration and Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C.
1324b(a)(3)).
(d) Persons under U.S. jurisdiction are responsible for their
foreign licensees,
[[Page 9376]]
contractors, or subsidiaries to the extent that the former have control
over the activities of the latter.
Sec. 810.3 Definitions.
As used in this part 810:
Agreement for cooperation means an agreement with another nation or
group of nations concluded under sections 123 or 124 of the Atomic
Energy Act.
Assistance means assistance in such forms as instruction, skills,
training, working knowledge, consulting services, or any other
assistance as determined by the Secretary. Assistance may involve the
transfer of technical data.
Atomic Energy Act means the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended.
Classified information means national security information
classified under Executive Order 13526 or any predecessor or
superseding order, and Restricted Data classified under the Atomic
Energy Act.
Cooperative enrichment enterprise means a multi-country or multi-
company (where at least two of the companies are incorporated in
different countries) joint development or production effort. The term
includes a consortium of countries or companies or a multinational
corporation.
Country, as well as government, nation, state, and similar entity,
shall be read to include Taiwan, consistent with section 4 of the
Taiwan Relations Act (22 U.S.C. 3303).
Development means any activity related to all phases before
production such as: Design, design research, design analysis, design
concepts, assembly and testing of prototypes, pilot production schemes,
design data, process of transforming design data into a product,
configuration design, integration design, and layouts.
DOE means the U.S. Department of Energy.
Enrichment means isotope separation of uranium or isotope
separation of plutonium, regardless of the type of process or
separation mechanism used.
Fissile material means isotopes that readily fission after
absorbing a neutron of any energy, either fast or slow. Fissile
materials are uranium-235, uranium-233, plutonium-239, and plutonium-
241.
Foreign national means an individual who is not a citizen or
national of the United States, but excludes U.S. lawful permanent
residents and protected individuals under the Immigration and
Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)).
Fundamental research means basic and applied research in science
and engineering, the results of which ordinarily are published and
shared broadly within the scientific community, as distinguished from
proprietary research and from industrial development, design,
production, and product utilization, the results of which ordinarily
are restricted for proprietary or national security reasons.
General authorization means an authorization granted by the
Secretary under section 57 b.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act to provide
assistance or technology to foreign atomic energy activities subject to
this part and which does not require a request for, or the Secretary's
issuance of, a specific authorization.
IAEA means the International Atomic Energy Agency.
NNPA means the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act of 1978, 22 U.S.C.
3201 et seq.
NPT means the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,
done on July 1, 1968.
Nuclear reactor means an apparatus, other than a nuclear explosive
device, designed or used to sustain nuclear fission in a self-
sustaining chain reaction.
Operational safety means the capability of a reactor to be operated
in a manner that complies with national standards or requirements or
widely-accepted international standards and recommendations to prevent
uncontrolled or inadvertent criticality, prevent or mitigate
uncontrolled release of radioactivity to the environment, monitor and
limit staff exposure to radiation and radioactivity, and protect off-
site population from exposure to radiation or radioactivity.
Operational safety may be enhanced by providing expert advice,
equipment, instrumentation, technology, software, services, analyses,
procedures, training, or other assistance that improves the capability
of the reactor to be operated in compliance with such standards,
requirements or recommendations.
Person means:
(1) Any individual, corporation, partnership, firm, association,
trust, estate, public or private institution;
(2) Any group, government agency other than DOE, or any State or
political entity within a State; and
(3) Any legal successor, representative, agent, or agency of the
foregoing.
Production means all production phases such as: Construction,
production engineering, manufacture, integration, assembly or mounting,
inspection, testing, and quality assurance.
Production accelerator means a particle accelerator especially
designed, used, or intended for use with a production subcritical
assembly.
Production accelerator-driven subcritical assembly system means a
system comprised of a production subcritical assembly and a production
accelerator and which is especially designed, used, or intended for the
production of plutonium or uranium-233. In such a system, the
production accelerator target provides a source of neutrons used to
effect special nuclear material production in the production
subcritical assembly.
Production reactor means a nuclear reactor especially designed or
used primarily for the production of plutonium or uranium-233.
Production subcritical assembly means an apparatus that contains
source material or special nuclear material to produce a nuclear
fission chain reaction that is not self-sustaining and that is
especially designed, used, or intended for the production of plutonium
or uranium-233.
Publicly available information means information in any form that
is generally accessible, without restriction, to the public.
Publicly available technology means technology that is already
published or has been prepared for publication; arises during, or
results from, fundamental research; or is included in an application
filed with the U.S. Patent Office and eligible for foreign filing under
35 U.S.C. 184.
Restricted Data means all data concerning:
(1) Design, manufacture, or utilization of atomic weapons;
(2) The production of special nuclear material; or
(3) The use of special nuclear material in the production of
energy, but shall not include data declassified or removed from the
Restricted Data category pursuant to section 142 of the Atomic Energy
Act.
Secretary means the Secretary of Energy.
Sensitive nuclear technology means any information (including
information incorporated in a production or utilization facility or
important component part thereof) which is not available to the public
(see definition of ``publicly available information'') and which is
important to the design, construction, fabrication, operation, or
maintenance of a uranium enrichment or nuclear fuel reprocessing
facility or a facility for the production of heavy water, but shall not
include Restricted Data controlled pursuant to chapter 12 of the Atomic
Energy Act. The information may take a tangible form such as a model,
prototype, blueprint, or
[[Page 9377]]
operation manual or an intangible form such as assistance.
Source material means:
(1) Uranium or thorium, other than special nuclear material; or
(2) Ores that contain by weight 0.05 percent or more of uranium or
thorium, or any combination of these materials.
Special nuclear material means:
(1) Plutonium,
(2) Uranium-233, or
(3) Uranium enriched above 0.711 percent by weight in the isotope
uranium-235.
Specific authorization means an authorization granted by the
Secretary under section 57b.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, in response
to an application filed under this part, to engage in specifically
authorized nuclear activities subject to this part.
Technical data means data in such forms as blueprints, plans,
diagrams, models, formulae, engineering designs, specifications,
manuals, and instructions written or recorded on other media or devices
such as disks, tapes, read-only memories, and computational
methodologies, algorithms, and computer codes that can directly or
indirectly affect the production of special nuclear material.
Technology means assistance or technical data required for the
development, production or use of any plant, facility, or especially
designed or prepared equipment for the activities described in Sec.
810.2(b).
Use means operation, installation (including on-site installation),
maintenance (checking), repair, overhaul, or refurbishing.
United States, when used in a geographical sense, includes Puerto
Rico and all territories and possessions of the United States.
Sec. 810.4 Communications.
(a) All communications concerning the regulations in this part
should be addressed to: U.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC
20585. Attention: Senior Policy Advisor, National Nuclear Security
Administration/Office of Nonproliferation and Arms Control (NPAC),
Telephone (202) 586-1007.
(b) Communications also may be delivered to DOE's headquarters at
1000 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585. All clearly marked
proprietary information will be given the maximum protection allowed by
law.
(c) Communications may also be delivered by email to:
Part810@nnsa.doe.gov. For ``fast track'' activities described in
Sec. Sec. 810.6(c)(1) and (c)(2) emails should be sent to: Part810-OperationalSafety@nnsa.doe.gov. Notifications regarding activity in the
Ukraine should be delivered by email to: Part810-Ukraine@nnsa.doe.gov.
Sec. 810.5 Interpretations.
(a) The advice of the DOE Office of Nonproliferation and Arms
Control may be requested on whether a proposed activity falls outside
the scope of this part, is generally authorized under Sec. 810.6, or
requires a specific authorization under Sec. 810.7. However, unless
authorized by the Secretary in writing, no interpretation of the
regulations in this part other than a written interpretation by the DOE
General Counsel is binding upon DOE.
(b) When advice is requested from the DOE Office of
Nonproliferation and Arms Control, or a binding, written determination
is requested from the DOE General Counsel, a response normally will be
made within 30 calendar days and, if this is not feasible, an interim
response will explain the reason for the delay.
(c) The DOE Office of Nonproliferation and Arms Control may
periodically publish abstracts of general or specific authorizations
that may be of general interest, exclusive of proprietary business-
confidential data submitted to DOE or other information protected by
law from unauthorized disclosure.
Sec. 810.6 Generally authorized activities.
The Secretary has determined that the following activities are
generally authorized, provided that no sensitive nuclear technology or
assistance described in Sec. 810.7 is involved:
(a) Engaging directly or indirectly in the production of special
nuclear material at facilities in countries or with entities listed in
the Appendix to this part;
(b) Transfer of technology to a citizen or national of a country
other than the United States not listed in the Appendix to this part
and working at an NRC-licensed facility, provided:
(1) The foreign national is lawfully employed by or contracted to
work for a U.S. employer in the United States;
(2) The foreign national executes a confidentiality agreement with
the U.S. employer to safeguard the technology from unauthorized use or
disclosure;
(3) The foreign national has been granted unescorted access in
accordance with NRC regulations at an NRC-licensed facility; and
(4) The foreign national's U.S. employer authorizing access to the
technology complies with the reporting requirements in Sec. 810.12(g).
(c) Activities at any safeguarded or NRC-licensed facility to:
(1) Prevent or correct a current or imminent radiological emergency
posing a significant danger to the health and safety of the off-site
population, which emergency in DOE's assessment cannot be met by other
means, provided DOE is notified in writing in advance and does not
object within 48 hours of receipt of the advance notification;
(2) Furnish operational safety information or assistance to
existing safeguarded civilian nuclear reactors outside the United
States in countries with safeguards agreements with the IAEA or an
equivalent voluntary offer, provided DOE is notified in writing and
approves the activity in writing within 45 calendar days of the notice.
The applicant should provide all the information required under Sec.
810.11 and specific references to the national or international safety
standards or requirements for operational safety for nuclear reactors
that will be addressed by the assistance; or
(3) Furnish operational safety information or assistance to
existing, proposed, or new-build civilian nuclear facilities in the
United States, provided DOE is notified by certified mail return
receipt requested and approves the activity in writing within 45
calendar days of the notice. The applicant should provide all the
information required under Sec. 810.11.
(d) Participation in exchange programs approved by the Department
of State in consultation with DOE;
(e) Activities carried out in the course of implementation of the
``Agreement between the United States of America and the IAEA for the
Application of Safeguards in the United States,'' done on December 9,
1980;
(f) Activities carried out by persons who are full-time employees
of the IAEA or whose employment by or work for the IAEA is sponsored or
approved by the Department of State or DOE; or
(g) Extraction of Molybdenum-99 for medical use from irradiated
targets of enriched uranium, provided that the activity does not also
involve purification and recovery of enriched uranium materials, and
provided further, that the technology used does not involve significant
components relevant for reprocessing spent nuclear reactor fuel (e.g.,
high-speed centrifugal contactors, pulsed columns).
Sec. 810.7 Activities requiring specific authorization.
Any person requires a specific authorization by the Secretary
before:
(a) Engaging in any of the activities listed in Sec. 810.2(b) with
any foreign country or entity not specified in the Appendix to this
part;
[[Page 9378]]
(b) Providing or transferring sensitive nuclear technology to any
foreign country or entity; or
(c) Engaging in or providing technology (including assistance) for
any of the following activities with respect to any foreign country or
entity (or a citizen or national of that country other than U.S. lawful
permanent residents or protected individuals under the Immigration and
Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(3)):
(1) Uranium isotope separation (uranium enrichment), plutonium
isotope separation, or isotope separation of any other elements
(including stable isotope separation) when the technology or process
can be applied directly or indirectly to uranium or plutonium;
(2) Fabrication of nuclear fuel containing plutonium, including
preparation of fuel elements, fuel assemblies, and cladding thereof;
(3) Heavy water production, and hydrogen isotope separation, when
the technology or process has reasonable potential for large-scale
separation of deuterium (\2\H) from protium (\1\H);
(4) Development, production or use of a production accelerator-
driven subcritical assembly system;
(5) Development, production or use of a production reactor; or
(6) Reprocessing of irradiated nuclear fuel or targets containing
special nuclear material.
Sec. 810.8 Restrictions on general and specific authorization.
A general or specific authorization granted by the Secretary under
this part:
(a) Is limited to activities involving only unclassified
information and does not permit furnishing classified information;
(b) Does not relieve a person from complying with the relevant laws
or the regulations of other U.S. Government agencies applicable to
exports; and
(c) Does not authorize a person to engage in any activity when the
person knows or has reason to know that the activity is intended to
provide assistance in designing, developing, fabricating, or testing a
nuclear explosive device.
Sec. 810.9 Grant of specific authorization.
(a) An application for authorization to engage in activities for
which specific authorization is required under Sec. 810.7 should be
made to the U.S. Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security
Administration, Washington, DC 20585, Attention: Senior Policy Advisor,
Office of Nonproliferation and Arms Control (NPAC).
(b) The Secretary will approve an application for specific
authorization if it is determined, with the concurrence of the
Department of State and after consultation with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Department of Commerce, and Department of Defense, that the
activity will not be inimical to the interest of the United States. In
making such a determination, the Secretary will take into account the
following factors:
(1) Whether the United States has an agreement for cooperation in
force covering exports to the country or entity involved;
(2) Whether the country is a party to, or has otherwise adhered to,
the NPT;
(3) Whether the country is in good standing with its acknowledged
nonproliferation commitments;
(4) Whether the country is in full compliance with its obligations
under the NPT;
(5) Whether the country has accepted IAEA safeguards obligations on
all nuclear materials used for peaceful purposes and has them in force;
(6) Whether other nonproliferation controls or conditions exist on
the proposed activity, including that the recipient is duly authorized
by the country to receive and use the technology sought to be
transferred;
(7) Significance of the assistance or transferred technology
relative to the existing nuclear capabilities of the country;
(8) Whether the transferred technology is part of an existing
cooperative enrichment enterprise or the supply chain of such an
enterprise;
(9) The availability of comparable assistance or technology from
other sources; and
(10) Any other factors that may bear upon the political, economic,
competitiveness, or security interests of the United States, including
the obligations of the United States under treaties or other
international agreements, and the obligations of the country under
treaties or other international agreements.
(c) If the proposed activity involves the export of sensitive
nuclear technology, the requirements of sections 127 and 128 of the
Atomic Energy Act and of any applicable United States international
commitments must also be met. For the export of sensitive nuclear
technology, in addition to the factors in paragraph (b) of this
section, the Secretary will take into account:
(1) Whether the country has signed, ratified, and is implementing a
comprehensive safeguards agreement with the IAEA and has in force an
Additional Protocol based on the Model Additional Protocol, or, pending
this, in the case of a regional accounting and control arrangement for
nuclear materials, is implementing, in cooperation with the IAEA, a
safeguards agreement approved by the IAEA Board of Governors prior to
the publication of INFCIRC/540 (September 1997); or alternatively
whether comprehensive safeguards, including the measures of the Model
Additional Protocol, are being applied in the country;
(2) Whether the country has not been identified in a report by the
IAEA Secretariat that is under consideration by the IAEA Board of
Governors, as being in breach of obligations to comply with the
applicable safeguards agreement, nor continues to be the subject of
Board of Governors decisions calling upon it to take additional steps
to comply with its safeguards obligations or to build confidence in the
peaceful nature of its nuclear program, nor as to which the IAEA
Secretariat has reported that it is unable to implement the applicable
safeguards agreement. This criterion would not apply in cases where the
IAEA Board of Governors or the United Nations Security Council
subsequently decides that adequate assurances exist as to the peaceful
purposes of the country's nuclear program and its compliance with the
applicable safeguards agreements. For the purposes of this paragraph,
``breach'' refers only to serious breaches of proliferation concern;
(3) Whether the country is adhering to the Nuclear Suppliers Group
Guidelines and, where applicable, has reported to the Security Council
of the United Nations that it is implementing effective export controls
as identified by Security Council Resolution 1540; and
(4) Whether the country adheres to international safety conventions
relating to nuclear or other radioactive materials or facilities.
(d) Unless otherwise prohibited by U.S. law, the Secretary may
grant an application for specific authorization for activities related
to the enrichment of source material and special nuclear material,
provided that:
(1) The U.S. Government has received written nonproliferation
assurances from the government of the country;
(2) That it/they accept(s) the sensitive enrichment equipment and
enabling technologies or an operable enrichment facility under
conditions that do not permit or enable unauthorized replication of the
facilities;
(3) That the subject enrichment activity will not result in the
production of uranium enriched to greater than 20% in the isotope
uranium-235; and
(4) That there are in place appropriate security arrangements to
protect the
[[Page 9379]]
activity from use or transfer inconsistent with the country's national
laws.
(e) Approximately 30 calendar days after the Secretary's grant of a
specific authorization, a copy of the Secretary's determination may be
provided to any person requesting it at DOE's Public Reading Room,
unless the applicant submits information demonstrating that public
disclosure will cause substantial harm to its competitive position.
This provision does not affect any other authority provided by law for
the non-disclosure of information.
Sec. 810.10 Revocation, suspension, or modification of authorization.
The Secretary may revoke, suspend, or modify a general or specific
authorization:
(a) For any material false statement in an application for specific
authorization or in any additional information submitted in its
support;
(b) For failing to provide a report or for any material false
statement in a report submitted pursuant to Sec. 810.12;
(c) If any authorization governed by this part is subsequently
determined by the Secretary to be inimical to the interest of the
United States or otherwise no longer meets the legal criteria for
approval; or
(d) Pursuant to section 129 of the Atomic Energy Act.
Sec. 810.11 Information required in an application for specific
authorization.
(a) An application letter must include the following information:
(1) The name, address, and citizenship of the applicant, and
complete disclosure of all real parties in interest; if the applicant
is a corporation or other legal entity, where it is incorporated or
organized; the location of its principal office; and the degree of any
control or ownership by any foreign individual, corporation,
partnership, firm, association, trust, estate, public or private
institution or government agency;
(2) The country or entity to receive the assistance or technology;
the name and location of any facility or project involved; and the name
and address of the person for which or whom the activity is to be
performed;
(3) A description of the assistance or technology to be provided,
including a complete description of the proposed activity, its
approximate monetary value, and a detailed description of any specific
project to which the activity relates as specified in Sec. Sec.
810.9(b)(7), (8), and (9); and
(4) The designation of any information that if publicly disclosed
would cause substantial harm to the competitive position of the
applicant.
(b) Except as provided in Sec. 810.6(b), an applicant seeking to
employ a citizen or national of a country not listed in the Appendix in
a position that could result in the transfer of technology subject to
Sec. 810.2, or seeking to employ any foreign national in the United
States or in a foreign country that could result in the export of
assistance or transfer of technology subject to Sec. 810.7 must
request a specific authorization. The applicant must provide, with
respect to each foreign national to whom access to technology will be
granted, the following:
(1) A description of the technology that would be made available to
the foreign national;
(2) The purpose of the proposed transfer, a description of the
applicant's technology control program, and any Nuclear Regulatory
Commission standards applicable to the employer's grant of access to
the technology;
(3) A copy of any confidentiality agreement to safeguard the
technology from unauthorized use or disclosure between the applicant
and the foreign national;
(4) Background information about the foreign national, including
the individual's citizenship, all countries where the individual has
resided for more than six months, the training or educational
background of the individual, all work experience, any other known
affiliations with persons engaged in activities subject to this part,
and any current immigration or visa status in the United States; and
(5) A statement signed by the foreign national that he/she will
comply with the regulations under this part; will not disclose the
applicant's technology without DOE's prior written authorization; and
will not, at any time during or after his/her employment with the
applicant, use the applicant's technology for any nuclear explosive
device, for research on or development of any nuclear explosive device,
or in furtherance of any military purpose.
(c) An applicant for a specific authorization related to the
enrichment of fissile material must submit information that
demonstrates that the proposed transfer will avoid, so far as
practicable, the transfer of enabling design or manufacturing
technology associated with such items; and that the applicant will
share with the recipient only information required for the regulatory
purposes of the recipient country or to ensure the safe installation
and operation of a resulting enrichment facility, without divulging
enabling technology.
Sec. 810.12 Reports.
(a) Each person who has received a specific authorization shall,
within 30 calendar days after beginning the authorized activity,
provide to DOE a written report containing the following information:
(1) The name, address, and citizenship of the person submitting the
report;
(2) The name, address, and citizenship of the person for whom or
which the activity is being performed;
(3) A description of the activity, the date it began, its location,
status, and anticipated date of completion; and
(4) A copy of the DOE letter authorizing the activity.
(b) Each person carrying out a specifically authorized activity
shall inform DOE, in writing within 30 calendar days, of completion of
the activity or of its termination before completion.
(c) Each person granted a specific authorization shall inform DOE,
in writing within 30 calendar days, when it is known that the proposed
activity will not be undertaken and the granted authorization will not
be used.
(d) DOE may require reports to include such additional information
that may be required by applicable U.S. law, regulation, or policy with
respect to the specific nuclear activity or country for which specific
authorization is required.
(e) Each person, within 30 calendar days after beginning any
generally authorized activity under Sec. 810.6, shall provide to DOE:
(1) The name, address, and citizenship of the person submitting the
report;
(2) The name, address, and citizenship of the person for whom or
which the activity is being performed;
(3) A description of the activity, the date it began, its location,
status, and anticipated date of completion; and
(4) A written assurance that the applicant has an agreement with
the recipient ensuring that any subsequent transfer of materials,
equipment, or technology transferred under general authorization under
circumstances in which the conditions in Sec. 810.6 would not be met
will take place only if the applicant obtains DOE's prior written
approval.
(f) Individuals engaging in generally authorized activities as
employees of persons required to report are not themselves required to
submit the reports described in paragraph (e) of this section.
(g) Persons engaging in generally authorized activities under Sec.
810.6(b) are required to notify DOE that a citizen
[[Page 9380]]
or national of a country not listed in the Appendix to this part has
been granted access to information subject to Sec. 810.2 in accordance
with Nuclear Regulatory Commission access requirements. The report
should contain the information required in Sec. 810.11(b).
(h) All reports should be sent to: U.S. Department of Energy,
National Nuclear Security Administration, Washington, DC 20585,
Attention: Senior Policy Advisor, Office of Nonproliferation and Arms
Control (NPAC).
Sec. 810.13 Additional information.
DOE may at any time require a person engaging in any generally or
specifically authorized activity to submit additional information.
Sec. 810.14 Special provisions regarding Ukraine.
(a) Pre-activity notification requirements. Any person beginning
any generally authorized activity involving Ukraine shall provide to
DOE at least ten days prior to beginning that activity a report
containing the following information:
(1) The name, address, and citizenship of the person submitting the
notification;
(2) The name, address, and citizenship of the person for which the
activity is to be performed;
(3) A description of the activity, the date it is proposed to
begin, its location, status, and anticipated date of completion; and
(4) A written assurance that the person that is to perform the
activity has an agreement with the recipient that any subsequent
transfer of technology or information transferred under general
authorization will not be transferred to a country that is not listed
in the Appendix to this part without the prior written approval of DOE.
(b) Post-activity reporting requirements. Every person completing a
generally authorized activity in Ukraine shall provide to DOE within
ten days following the original transfer of technology or information
written confirmation that such transfer was completed in accordance
with the description of the activity provided as required by paragraph
(a) of this section.
Sec. 810.15 Violations.
(a) The Atomic Energy Act provides that:
(1) In accordance with section 232 of the AEA, permanent or
temporary injunctions, restraining or other orders may be granted to
prevent a violation of any provision of the Atomic Energy Act or any
regulation or order issued thereunder.
(2) In accordance with section 222 of the AEA, whoever willfully
violates, attempts to violate, or conspires to violate any provision of
section 57 of the Atomic Energy Act may be fined up to $10,000 or
imprisoned up to 10 years, or both. If the offense is committed with
intent to injure the United States or to aid any foreign nation, the
penalty could be up to life imprisonment or a $20,000 fine, or both.
(b) In accordance with Title 18 of the United States Code, section
1001, whoever knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up
a material fact or makes or uses false, fictitious or fraudulent
statements or representations shall be fined under that title or
imprisoned up to five or eight years depending on the crime, or both.
Sec. 810.16 Effective date and savings clause.
(a) The regulations in this part are effective March 25, 2015.
(b) Except for actions that may be taken by DOE pursuant to Sec.
810.10, the regulations in this part do not affect the validity or
terms of any specific authorizations granted under regulations in
effect before March 25, 2015 or generally authorized activities under
those regulations for which the contracts, purchase orders, or
licensing arrangements were already in effect. Persons engaging in
activities that were generally authorized under regulations in effect
before March 25, 2015, but that require specific authorization under
the regulations in this part, must request specific authorization by
August 24, 2015 and may continue their activities until DOE acts on the
request.
Appendix A to Part 810--Generally Authorized Destinations
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Brazil
Bulgaria
Canada
Chile (For all activities related to INFCIRC/834 only)
Colombia
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Egypt
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Indonesia
International Atomic Energy Agency
Ireland
Italy
Japan
Kazakhstan
Korea, Republic of
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Mexico (For all activities related to INFCIRC/203 Parts 1 and 2 and
INFCIRC/825 only)
Morocco
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Turkey
Ukraine (Refer to Sec. 810.14 for specific information and
requirements)
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Vietnam
[FR Doc. 2015-03479 Filed 2-20-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P