Dominion Energy Kewaunee, Inc.; Kewaunee Power Station, 15638-15641 [2015-06730]
Download as PDF
15638
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 56 / Tuesday, March 24, 2015 / Notices
RPV beltline region will not result in
changes in operation or configuration of
the facility. The change does not impose
any new or different requirements or
eliminate any existing requirements.
The change is consistent with the
current safety analysis assumptions and
current plant operating practice. No new
accident scenarios, transient precursors,
failure mechanisms, or limiting single
failures are introduced as a result of the
proposed change. Equipment important
to safety will continue to operate as
designed. The change does not result in
any event previously deemed incredible
being more credible. The change does
not result in any adverse conditions or
result in any increase in the challenges
to safety systems.
Therefore, this change does not create
the possibility of a new or different kind
of accident from an accident previously
evaluated.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
3. Does the proposed exemption involve
a significant reduction in a margin of
safety?
Response: No.
The proposed exemption does not
alter safety limits, limiting safety system
settings, or limiting conditions for
operation. The setpoints at which
protective actions are initiated are not
altered by the change. There are no new
or significant changes to initial
conditions contributing to accident
severity or consequences. The
exemption will not otherwise affect
plant protective boundaries, will not
cause a release of fission products to the
public, nor will it degrade the
performance of any other structures,
systems or components important to
safety.
Therefore, the proposed exemption
does not involve a significant reduction
in a margin of safety.
Based on the above evaluation of the
standards set forth in 10 CFR 50.92(c),
the NRC concludes that the proposed
exemption involves no significant
hazards consideration. Accordingly, the
requirements of 10 CFR 51.22(c)(9)(i) are
met.
Requirements in 10 CFR 51.22(c)(9)(ii–
iii)
The proposed exemption does not
make any changes to the facility,
equipment at the facility, or to fuel or
core design. The proposed alternate
methodology serves the same purpose as
the requirements set forth in 10 CFR
50.61 and 10 CFR part 50, appendix G.
Therefore, the NRC concludes that the
exemption involves no significant
change in the types or a significant
increase in the amounts of any effluents
that may be released offsite, and that
VerDate Sep<11>2014
01:09 Mar 24, 2015
Jkt 235001
there is no significant increase in
individual or cumulative public or
occupational radiation exposure.
Therefore, the requirements of 10 CFR
51.22(c)(9)(ii–iii) are met.
Conclusion
Based on the above, the NRC
concludes that the proposed exemption
meets the eligibility criteria for the
categorical exclusion set forth in 10 CFR
51.22(c)(9). Therefore, in accordance
with 10 CFR 51.22(b), no environmental
impact statement or environmental
assessment need be prepared in
connection with the NRC’s issuance of
this exemption.
IV. Conclusions
Accordingly, the Commission has
determined that, pursuant to 10 CFR
50.12(a), the exemption is authorized by
law, will not present an undue risk to
the public health and safety, and is
consistent with the common defense
and security. Also, special
circumstances are present. Therefore,
the Commission hereby grants the
licensee an exemption from 10 CFR part
50, appendix G.II.D(i) and 10 CFR
50.61(a)(5) requirements, in order to use
the alternate methodology specified in
AREVA TR BAW–2308, Revisions 1–A
and 2–A, in lieu of the existing
requirement to use CV and drop weightbased methodologies to evaluate the
initial (unirradiated) RTNDT of the Linde
80 weld materials in the RPV beltline
region at ANO, Unit 1.
This exemption is effective upon
issuance.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 16th day
of March 2015.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Michele G. Evans,
Director, Division of Operating Reactor
Licensing, Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation.
[FR Doc. 2015–06700 Filed 3–23–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. 50–305; NRC–2015–0068]
Dominion Energy Kewaunee, Inc.;
Kewaunee Power Station
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Exemption; issuance.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is issuing an
exemption from certain power reactor
liability insurance requirements in
response to a request from Dominion
Energy Kewaunee, Inc. (DEK or the
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
licensee) dated March 20, 2014. This
exemption would permit the licensee to
reduce its primary offsite liability
insurance and withdraw from
participation in the secondary
retrospective rating pool for deferred
premium charges.
DATES: March 24, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Please refer to Docket ID
NRC–2015–0068 when contacting the
NRC about the availability of
information regarding this document.
You may obtain publicly-available
information related to this document
using any of the following methods:
• Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2015–0068. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol
Gallagher; telephone: 301–415–3463;
email: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov. For
technical questions, contact the
individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document.
• NRC’s Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publiclyavailable documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. To begin the search, select
‘‘ADAMS Public Documents’’ and then
select ‘‘Begin Web-based ADAMS
Search.’’ For problems with ADAMS,
please contact the NRC’s Public
Document Room (PDR) reference staff at
1–800–397–4209, 301–415–4737, or by
email to pdr.resource@nrc.gov. The
ADAMS accession number for each
document referenced (if it available in
ADAMS) is provided the first time that
a document is referenced.
• NRC’s PDR: You may examine and
purchase copies of public documents at
the NRC’s PDR, Room O1–F21, One
White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William Huffman, Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001; telephone: 301–415–
2046; email: William.Huffman@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Kewaunee Power Station (KPS)
facility is a decommissioning power
reactor located on approximately 900
acres in Carlton (Kewaunee County),
Wisconsin, 27 miles southeast of Green
Bay, Wisconsin. The licensee, DEK, is
the holder of the KPS Renewed Facility
Operating License No. DPR–43. The
license provides, among other things,
that the facility is subject to all rules,
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
24MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 56 / Tuesday, March 24, 2015 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
regulations, and orders of the NRC now
or hereafter in effect.
By letter dated February 25, 2013
(ADAMS Accession No. ML13058A065),
DEK submitted a certification to the
NRC indicating it would permanently
cease power operations at KPS on May
7, 2013. On May 7, 2013, DEK
permanently shut down the KPS reactor.
On May 14, 2013, DEK certified that it
had permanently defueled the KPS
reactor vessel (ADAMS Accession No.
ML13135A209). As a permanently
shutdown and defueled facility, and in
accordance with § 50.82(a)(2) of Title 10
of the Code of Federal Regulations (10
CFR), KPS is no longer authorized to
operate the reactor or emplace nuclear
fuel into the reactor vessel. The licensee
is still authorized to possess and store
irradiated nuclear fuel. Irradiated fuel is
currently being stored onsite in a spent
fuel pool (SFP) and in independent
spent fuel storage installation dry casks.
II. Request/Action
Pursuant to 10 CFR 140.8, ‘‘Specific
exemptions,’’ DEK has requested an
exemption from 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4), by
letter dated March 20, 2014 (ADAMS
Accession No. ML14090A112). The
exemption from 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4)
would permit the licensee to reduce the
required level of primary offsite liability
insurance from $375 million to $100
million, and would allow DEK to
withdraw from participation in the
secondary financial protection (also
known as the secondary retrospective
rating pool for deferred premium
charges).
The regulation in 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4)
requires each licensee to have and
maintain financial protection. For a
single unit reactor site, which has a
rated capacity of 100,000 kilowatts
electric or more, 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4)
requires the licensee to maintain $375
million in primary financial protection.
In addition, the licensee is required to
participate in a secondary retrospective
rating pool (secondary financial
protection) that commits each licensee
to additional indemnification for
damages that may exceed primary
insurance coverage. Participation in the
secondary retrospective rating pool
could potentially subject DEK to
deferred premium charges up to a
maximum total deferred premium of
$121,255,000 with respect to any
nuclear incident at any operating
nuclear power plant, and up to a
maximum annual deferred premium of
$18,963,000 per incident.
The licensee states that the risk of an
offsite radiological release is
significantly lower at a nuclear power
reactor that has permanently shut down
VerDate Sep<11>2014
01:09 Mar 24, 2015
Jkt 235001
and defueled, when compared to an
operating power reactor. Similarly, the
associated risk of offsite liability
damages that require insurance
indemnification is commensurately
lower. Therefore, DEK is requesting an
exemption from 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4), to
permit a reduction in primary offsite
liability insurance and to withdraw
from participation in the secondary
financial protection pool.
III. Discussion
Pursuant to 10 CFR 140.8, the
Commission may, upon application by
any interested person or upon its own
initiative, grant exemptions from the
requirements of 10 CFR part 140, when
the exemptions are authorized by law
and are otherwise in the public interest.
The financial protection limits of 10
CFR 140.11(a)(4) were established to
require a licensee to maintain sufficient
insurance to satisfy liability claims by
members of the public for personal
injury, property damage, or the legal
cost associated with lawsuits, as the
result of a nuclear accident. The
insurance levels established by this
regulation were derived from the risks
and potential consequences of an
accident at an operating reactor with a
rated capacity of 100,000 kilowatts
electric (or greater). During normal
power reactor operations, the forced
flow of water through the reactor
coolant system (RCS) removes heat
generated by the reactor. The RCS,
operating at high temperatures and
pressures, transfers this heat through the
steam generator tubes converting nonradioactive feedwater to steam, which
then flows to the main turbine generator
to produce electricity. Many of the
accident scenarios postulated for
operating power reactors involve
failures or malfunctions of systems that
could affect the fuel in the reactor core,
which in the most severe postulated
accidents, would involve the release of
large quantities of fission products.
With the permanent cessation of reactor
operations at KPS and the permanent
removal of the fuel from the reactor
core, such accidents are no longer
possible. The reactor, RCS, and
supporting systems no longer operate
and have no function related to the
storage of the irradiated fuel. Therefore,
postulated accidents involving failure or
malfunction of the reactor, RCS, or
supporting systems are no longer
applicable.
During reactor decommissioning, the
principal radiological risks are
associated with the storage of spent fuel
onsite. In its March 20, 2014, exemption
request, DEK discusses both designbasis and beyond design-basis events
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
15639
involving irradiated fuel stored in the
SFP. The licensee states that there are
no possible design-basis events at KPS
that could result in an offsite
radiological release exceeding the limits
established by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s early-phase
Protective Action Guidelines of 1 rem
(roentgen equivalent man) at the
exclusion area boundary. The only
accident that might lead to a significant
radiological release at a
decommissioning reactor is a zirconium
fire. The zirconium fire scenario is a
postulated, but highly unlikely, beyond
design-basis accident scenario that
involves loss of water inventory from
the SFP, resulting in a significant heatup of the spent fuel, and culminating in
substantial zirconium cladding
oxidation and fuel damage. The
probability of a zirconium fire scenario
is related to the decay heat of the
irradiated fuel stored in the SFP.
Therefore, the risks from a zirconium
fire scenario continue to decrease as a
function of the time that KPS has been
permanently shut down.
The licensee provided a detailed
analysis of the events that could result
in an offsite radiological release at KPS
in its January 16, 2014, submittal to the
NRC (ADAMS Accession No.
ML14029A076). One of these beyond
design-basis accidents involves a
complete loss of SFP water inventory,
where cooling of the spent fuel would
be primarily accomplished by natural
circulation of air through the uncovered
spent fuel assemblies. The licensee’s
analysis of this accident shows that by
October 30, 2014, air-cooling of the
spent fuel assemblies will be sufficient
to keep the fuel within a safe
temperature range indefinitely without
fuel damage or offsite radiological
release. This is important because the
Commission has previously authorized
a lesser amount of liability insurance
coverage, based on an analysis of the
zirconium fire risk. In SECY–93–127,
‘‘Financial Protection Required of
Licensees of Large Nuclear Power Plants
During Decommissioning,’’ dated May
10, 1993 (ADAMS Accession No.
ML12257A628), the staff outlined a
policy for reducing required liability
insurance coverage for
decommissioning reactors. The
discussions in SECY–93–127 centered
primarily on the public health and
safety risks associated with storing fuel
in spent fuel pools. In its Staff
Requirements Memorandum dated July
13, 1993, the Commission approved a
policy that would permit reductions in
commercial liability insurance coverage,
when a licensee was able to demonstrate
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
24MRN1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
15640
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 56 / Tuesday, March 24, 2015 / Notices
that the spent fuel could be air-cooled
if the SFP was drained of water. Upon
demonstration of this technical
criterion, the Commission policy
allowed decommissioning licensees to
withdraw from participation in the
secondary insurance protection layer,
and permitted reductions in the
required amount of commercial liability
insurance coverage to $100 million. The
staff has used this technical criterion to
grant similar exemptions to other
decommissioning reactor licensees (e.g.,
Maine Yankee Atomic Power Station,
published in the Federal Register on
January 19, 1999 (64 FR 2920); and Zion
Nuclear Power Station, published in the
Federal Register on December 28, 1999
(64 FR 72700)). Additional discussions
of other decommissioning reactor
licensees that have received exemptions
to reduce their primary insurance level
to $100 million is provided in SECY–
96–256, ‘‘Changes to Financial
Protection Requirements for
Permanently Shutdown Nuclear Power
Reactors, 10 CFR 50.54(w)(1) and 10
CFR 140.11,’’ dated December 17, 1996
(ADAMS Accession No. ML15062A483).
These prior exemptions were based on
the licensee demonstrating that the SFP
could be air-cooled, consistent with the
technical criterion discussed above.
In SECY–00–0145, ‘‘Integrated
Rulemaking Plan for Nuclear Power
Plant Decommissioning,’’ dated June 28,
2000, and SECY–01–0100, ‘‘Policy
Issues Related to Safeguards, Insurance,
and Emergency Preparedness
Regulations at Decommissioning
Nuclear Power Plants Storing Fuel in
the Spent Fuel Pool,’’ dated June 4, 2001
(ADAMS Accession Nos. ML003721626
and ML011450420, respectively), the
staff discussed additional information
concerning SFP zirconium fire risks at
decommissioning reactors and
associated implications for offsite
insurance. Analyzing when the spent
fuel stored in the SFP is capable of aircooling is one measure that
demonstrates when the probability of a
zirconium fire would be exceedingly
low. However, the staff has more
recently used an additional analysis that
would bound an incomplete drain down
of the SFP water, or some other
catastrophic event (such as a complete
drainage of the SFP with rearrangement
of spent fuel rack geometry and/or the
addition of rubble to the SFP). The
analysis postulates that decay heat
transfer from the spent fuel via
conduction, convection, or radiation
would be impeded. This analysis is
often referred to as an adiabatic heat-up.
The licensee’s analyses referenced in
its exemption request demonstrates that
under conditions where the SFP water
VerDate Sep<11>2014
01:09 Mar 24, 2015
Jkt 235001
inventory has drained and only aircooling of the stored irradiated fuel is
available, there is reasonable assurance
that after October 2014, the KPS spent
fuel will remain at temperatures far
below those associated with a
significant radiological release. In
addition, the licensee’s adiabatic heatup analyses demonstrate that as of
October 21, 2014, there would be at
least 10 hours after the loss of all means
of cooling (both air and/or water), before
the spent fuel cladding would reach a
temperature where the potential for a
significant offsite radiological release
could occur. The licensee states that for
this loss of all cooling scenario, 10
hours is sufficient time for personnel to
respond with additional resources,
equipment, and capability to restore
cooling to the SFP, even after a noncredible, catastrophic event. As
provided in DEK’s letter dated January
10, 2014 (ADAMS Accession No.
ML14016A078), the licensee furnished
information concerning its makeup
strategies, in the event of a loss of SFP
coolant inventory. The multiple
strategies for providing makeup to the
SFP include: Using existing plant
systems for inventory makeup;
supplying water through hoses to a
spool piece connection to the existing
SFP piping; or using a diesel-driven
portable pump to take suction from Lake
Michigan and provide makeup or spray
to the SFP. These strategies will be
maintained by a license condition. The
licensee states that the equipment
needed to perform these actions are
located onsite, and that the external
makeup strategy (using a diesel driven
portable pump) is capable of being
deployed within 2 hours. The licensee
also stated that, considering the very
low-probability of beyond design-basis
accidents affecting the SFP, these
diverse strategies provide defense-indepth and time to mitigate and prevent
a zirconium fire, using makeup or spray
into the SFP before the onset of
zirconium cladding rapid oxidation.
In the safety evaluation of the
licensee’s request for exemptions from
certain emergency planning
requirements dated October 27, 2014
(ADAMS Accession No. ML14261A223),
the NRC staff assessed the DEK accident
analyses associated with the
radiological risks from a zirconium fire
at the permanently shutdown and
defueled KPS site. The NRC staff has
confirmed that under conditions where
cooling air flow can develop, suitably
conservative calculations indicate that
by the end of October 2014, the fuel
would remain at temperatures where the
cladding would be undamaged for an
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
unlimited period. For the very unlikely
beyond design-basis accident scenario,
where the SFP coolant inventory is lost
in such a manner that all methods of
heat removal from the spent fuel are no
longer available, there will be a
minimum of 10 hours from the
initiation of the accident until the
cladding reaches a temperature where
offsite radiological release might occur.
The staff finds that 10 hours is sufficient
time to support deployment of
mitigation equipment, consistent with
plant conditions, to prevent the
zirconium cladding from reaching a
point of rapid oxidation.
The NRC staff has determined that the
licensee’s proposed reduction in
primary offsite liability coverage to a
level of $100 million, and the licensee’s
proposed withdrawal from participation
in the secondary insurance pool for
offsite financial protection, are
consistent with the policy established in
SECY–93–127 and subsequent
insurance considerations, resulting from
additional zirconium fire risks, as
discussed in SECY–00–0145 and SECY–
01–0100. In addition, the NRC staff
noted that there is a well-established
precedent of granting a similar
exemption to other permanently
shutdown and defueled power reactors,
upon demonstration that the criterion of
the zirconium fire risks from the
irradiated fuel stored in the SFP is of
negligible concern.
A. Authorized by Law
In accordance with 10 CFR 140.8, the
Commission may grant exemptions from
the regulations in 10 CFR part 140, as
the Commission determines are
authorized by law. The NRC staff has
determined that granting of the
licensee’s proposed exemption will not
result in a violation of the Atomic
Energy Act of 1954, Section 170, or
other laws, as amended, which require
licensees to maintain adequate financial
protection. Therefore, the exemption is
authorized by law.
B. Is Otherwise in the Public Interest
The financial protection limits of 10
CFR 140.11 were established to require
licensees to maintain sufficient offsite
liability insurance to ensure adequate
funding for offsite liability claims,
following an accident at an operating
reactor. However, the regulation does
not consider the reduced potential for
and consequence of nuclear incidents at
permanently shutdown and
decommissioning reactors.
SECY–93–127, SECY–00–0145, and
SECY–01–0100 provide a basis for
allowing licensees of decommissioning
plants to reduce their primary offsite
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
24MRN1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 56 / Tuesday, March 24, 2015 / Notices
liability insurance and to withdraw
from participation in the retrospective
rating pool for deferred premium
charges. As discussed in these
documents, once the zirconium fire
concern is determined to be negligible,
possible accident scenario risks at
permanently shutdown and defueled
reactors are greatly reduced, when
compared to operating reactors, and the
associated potential for offsite financial
liabilities from an accident are
commensurately less. The licensee has
analyzed and the staff has confirmed
that the possible accidents that could
result in an offsite radiological risk are
minimal, thereby justifying the
proposed reductions in offsite liability
insurance and withdrawal from
participation in the secondary
retrospective rating pool for deferred
premium charges.
Additionally, participation in the
secondary retrospective rating pool
could be problematic for DEK because
the licensee would incur financial
liability, if an extraordinary nuclear
incident occurred at another nuclear
power plant. Because KPS is
permanently shut down, it does not
produce revenue from electricity
generation sales to cover such a liability.
Therefore, such liability, if incurred,
could significantly affect the financial
resources available to the facility to
conduct and complete radiological
decontamination and decommissioning
activities. Furthermore, the shared
financial risk exposure to DEK is greatly
disproportionate to the radiological risk
posed by KPS, when compared to
operating reactors.
The reduced overall risk to the public
at decommissioning power plants does
not warrant DEK to carry full operating
reactor insurance coverage, after the
requisite spent fuel cooling period has
elapsed, following final reactor
shutdown. The licensee’s proposed
financial protection limits will maintain
a level of liability insurance coverage
commensurate with the risk to the
public. These changes are consistent
with previous NRC policy and
exemptions approved for other
decommissioning reactors. Thus, the
underlying purpose of the regulations
will not be adversely affected by the
reductions in insurance coverage.
Accordingly, the NRC staff concludes
that granting the exemption from 10
CFR 140.11(a)(4) is in the public
interest.
C. Environmental Considerations
The NRC approval of the exemption
to insurance or indemnity requirements
belongs to a category of actions that the
Commission, by rule or regulation, has
VerDate Sep<11>2014
01:09 Mar 24, 2015
Jkt 235001
declared to be a categorical exclusion,
after first finding that the category of
actions does not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment. Specifically,
the exemption is categorically excluded
from further analysis in accordance with
10 CFR 51.22(c)(25).
Under 10 CFR 51.22(c)(25), granting
of an exemption from the requirements
of any regulation of Chapter I to 10 CFR
is a categorical exclusion provided that
(i) there is no significant hazards
consideration; (ii) there is no significant
change in the types or significant
increase in the amounts of any effluents
that may be released offsite; (iii) there is
no significant increase in individual or
cumulative public or occupational
radiation exposure; (iv) there is no
significant construction impact; (v)
there is no significant increase in the
potential for or consequences from
radiological accidents; and (vi) the
requirements from which an exemption
is sought involve: surety, insurance, or
indemnity requirements.
The Director, Division of Operating
Reactor Licensing, Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation, has determined that
approval of the exemption request
involves no significant hazards
consideration because reducing a
licensee’s offsite liability requirements
at KPS does not (1) involve a significant
increase in the probability or
consequences of an accident previously
evaluated; (2) create the possibility of a
new or different kind of accident from
any accident previously evaluated; or
(3) involve a significant reduction in a
margin of safety. The exempted
financial protection regulation is
unrelated to the operation of KPS.
Accordingly, there is no significant
change in the types or significant
increase in the amounts of any effluents
that may be released offsite, and no
significant increase in individual or
cumulative public or occupational
radiation exposure. The exempted
regulation is not associated with
construction, so there is no significant
construction impact. The exempted
regulation does not concern the source
term (i.e., potential amount of radiation
in an accident), nor mitigation.
Therefore, there is no significant
increase in the potential for, or
consequences of, a radiological
accident. In addition, there would be no
significant impacts to biota, water
resources, historic properties, cultural
resources, or socioeconomic conditions
in the region. The requirement for
offsite liability insurance may be viewed
as involving surety, insurance, or
indemnity matters.
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
15641
Therefore, pursuant to 10 CFR
51.22(b) and 51.22(c)(25), no
environmental impact statement or
environmental assessment need be
prepared in connection with the
approval of this exemption request.
IV. Conclusions
Accordingly, the Commission has
determined that, pursuant to 10 CFR
140.8, the exemption is authorized by
law, and is otherwise in the public
interest. Therefore, the Commission
hereby grants DEK exemption from the
requirement of 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4) to
permit the licensee to reduce primary
offsite liability insurance to $100
million, accompanied by withdrawal
from participation in the secondary
insurance pool for offsite liability
insurance.
The exemption is effective upon
issuance.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 13th day
of March, 2015.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Michele G. Evans,
Director, Division of Operating Reactor
Licensing, Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation.
[FR Doc. 2015–06730 Filed 3–23–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
OFFICE OF NATIONAL DRUG
CONTROL POLICY
Paperwork Reduction Act; Proposed
Collection; Comment Request
Office of National Drug Control
Policy.
ACTION: Notice of Submission to OMB
and 30-Day Public Comment Period.
Reinstatement with Change of
Previously Approved Collection: DrugFree Communities Support Program
National Evaluation.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub.
L. 104–13, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), the
Office of National Drug Control Policy
(ONDCP) announces it will submit to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) an
information collection request for
processing under 5 CFR 1320.10. The
purpose of this notice is to allow for an
additional 30 days of public comment.
DATES: Public comments will be
accepted until April 23, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the collection title by name or OMB
Control Number, and should be sent to:
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\24MRN1.SGM
24MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 56 (Tuesday, March 24, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15638-15641]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06730]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket No. 50-305; NRC-2015-0068]
Dominion Energy Kewaunee, Inc.; Kewaunee Power Station
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Exemption; issuance.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing an
exemption from certain power reactor liability insurance requirements
in response to a request from Dominion Energy Kewaunee, Inc. (DEK or
the licensee) dated March 20, 2014. This exemption would permit the
licensee to reduce its primary offsite liability insurance and withdraw
from participation in the secondary retrospective rating pool for
deferred premium charges.
DATES: March 24, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Please refer to Docket ID NRC-2015-0068 when contacting the
NRC about the availability of information regarding this document. You
may obtain publicly-available information related to this document
using any of the following methods:
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID NRC-2015-0068. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher; telephone: 301-415-
3463; email: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov. For technical questions, contact
the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document.
NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publicly-available documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. To begin the search, select ``ADAMS Public Documents'' and
then select ``Begin Web-based ADAMS Search.'' For problems with ADAMS,
please contact the NRC's Public Document Room (PDR) reference staff at
1-800-397-4209, 301-415-4737, or by email to pdr.resource@nrc.gov. The
ADAMS accession number for each document referenced (if it available in
ADAMS) is provided the first time that a document is referenced.
NRC's PDR: You may examine and purchase copies of public
documents at the NRC's PDR, Room O1-F21, One White Flint North, 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William Huffman, Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC
20555-0001; telephone: 301-415-2046; email: William.Huffman@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Kewaunee Power Station (KPS) facility is a decommissioning
power reactor located on approximately 900 acres in Carlton (Kewaunee
County), Wisconsin, 27 miles southeast of Green Bay, Wisconsin. The
licensee, DEK, is the holder of the KPS Renewed Facility Operating
License No. DPR-43. The license provides, among other things, that the
facility is subject to all rules,
[[Page 15639]]
regulations, and orders of the NRC now or hereafter in effect.
By letter dated February 25, 2013 (ADAMS Accession No.
ML13058A065), DEK submitted a certification to the NRC indicating it
would permanently cease power operations at KPS on May 7, 2013. On May
7, 2013, DEK permanently shut down the KPS reactor. On May 14, 2013,
DEK certified that it had permanently defueled the KPS reactor vessel
(ADAMS Accession No. ML13135A209). As a permanently shutdown and
defueled facility, and in accordance with Sec. 50.82(a)(2) of Title 10
of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR), KPS is no longer
authorized to operate the reactor or emplace nuclear fuel into the
reactor vessel. The licensee is still authorized to possess and store
irradiated nuclear fuel. Irradiated fuel is currently being stored
onsite in a spent fuel pool (SFP) and in independent spent fuel storage
installation dry casks.
II. Request/Action
Pursuant to 10 CFR 140.8, ``Specific exemptions,'' DEK has
requested an exemption from 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4), by letter dated March
20, 2014 (ADAMS Accession No. ML14090A112). The exemption from 10 CFR
140.11(a)(4) would permit the licensee to reduce the required level of
primary offsite liability insurance from $375 million to $100 million,
and would allow DEK to withdraw from participation in the secondary
financial protection (also known as the secondary retrospective rating
pool for deferred premium charges).
The regulation in 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4) requires each licensee to
have and maintain financial protection. For a single unit reactor site,
which has a rated capacity of 100,000 kilowatts electric or more, 10
CFR 140.11(a)(4) requires the licensee to maintain $375 million in
primary financial protection. In addition, the licensee is required to
participate in a secondary retrospective rating pool (secondary
financial protection) that commits each licensee to additional
indemnification for damages that may exceed primary insurance coverage.
Participation in the secondary retrospective rating pool could
potentially subject DEK to deferred premium charges up to a maximum
total deferred premium of $121,255,000 with respect to any nuclear
incident at any operating nuclear power plant, and up to a maximum
annual deferred premium of $18,963,000 per incident.
The licensee states that the risk of an offsite radiological
release is significantly lower at a nuclear power reactor that has
permanently shut down and defueled, when compared to an operating power
reactor. Similarly, the associated risk of offsite liability damages
that require insurance indemnification is commensurately lower.
Therefore, DEK is requesting an exemption from 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4), to
permit a reduction in primary offsite liability insurance and to
withdraw from participation in the secondary financial protection pool.
III. Discussion
Pursuant to 10 CFR 140.8, the Commission may, upon application by
any interested person or upon its own initiative, grant exemptions from
the requirements of 10 CFR part 140, when the exemptions are authorized
by law and are otherwise in the public interest.
The financial protection limits of 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4) were
established to require a licensee to maintain sufficient insurance to
satisfy liability claims by members of the public for personal injury,
property damage, or the legal cost associated with lawsuits, as the
result of a nuclear accident. The insurance levels established by this
regulation were derived from the risks and potential consequences of an
accident at an operating reactor with a rated capacity of 100,000
kilowatts electric (or greater). During normal power reactor
operations, the forced flow of water through the reactor coolant system
(RCS) removes heat generated by the reactor. The RCS, operating at high
temperatures and pressures, transfers this heat through the steam
generator tubes converting non-radioactive feedwater to steam, which
then flows to the main turbine generator to produce electricity. Many
of the accident scenarios postulated for operating power reactors
involve failures or malfunctions of systems that could affect the fuel
in the reactor core, which in the most severe postulated accidents,
would involve the release of large quantities of fission products. With
the permanent cessation of reactor operations at KPS and the permanent
removal of the fuel from the reactor core, such accidents are no longer
possible. The reactor, RCS, and supporting systems no longer operate
and have no function related to the storage of the irradiated fuel.
Therefore, postulated accidents involving failure or malfunction of the
reactor, RCS, or supporting systems are no longer applicable.
During reactor decommissioning, the principal radiological risks
are associated with the storage of spent fuel onsite. In its March 20,
2014, exemption request, DEK discusses both design-basis and beyond
design-basis events involving irradiated fuel stored in the SFP. The
licensee states that there are no possible design-basis events at KPS
that could result in an offsite radiological release exceeding the
limits established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's early-
phase Protective Action Guidelines of 1 rem (roentgen equivalent man)
at the exclusion area boundary. The only accident that might lead to a
significant radiological release at a decommissioning reactor is a
zirconium fire. The zirconium fire scenario is a postulated, but highly
unlikely, beyond design-basis accident scenario that involves loss of
water inventory from the SFP, resulting in a significant heat-up of the
spent fuel, and culminating in substantial zirconium cladding oxidation
and fuel damage. The probability of a zirconium fire scenario is
related to the decay heat of the irradiated fuel stored in the SFP.
Therefore, the risks from a zirconium fire scenario continue to
decrease as a function of the time that KPS has been permanently shut
down.
The licensee provided a detailed analysis of the events that could
result in an offsite radiological release at KPS in its January 16,
2014, submittal to the NRC (ADAMS Accession No. ML14029A076). One of
these beyond design-basis accidents involves a complete loss of SFP
water inventory, where cooling of the spent fuel would be primarily
accomplished by natural circulation of air through the uncovered spent
fuel assemblies. The licensee's analysis of this accident shows that by
October 30, 2014, air-cooling of the spent fuel assemblies will be
sufficient to keep the fuel within a safe temperature range
indefinitely without fuel damage or offsite radiological release. This
is important because the Commission has previously authorized a lesser
amount of liability insurance coverage, based on an analysis of the
zirconium fire risk. In SECY-93-127, ``Financial Protection Required of
Licensees of Large Nuclear Power Plants During Decommissioning,'' dated
May 10, 1993 (ADAMS Accession No. ML12257A628), the staff outlined a
policy for reducing required liability insurance coverage for
decommissioning reactors. The discussions in SECY-93-127 centered
primarily on the public health and safety risks associated with storing
fuel in spent fuel pools. In its Staff Requirements Memorandum dated
July 13, 1993, the Commission approved a policy that would permit
reductions in commercial liability insurance coverage, when a licensee
was able to demonstrate
[[Page 15640]]
that the spent fuel could be air-cooled if the SFP was drained of
water. Upon demonstration of this technical criterion, the Commission
policy allowed decommissioning licensees to withdraw from participation
in the secondary insurance protection layer, and permitted reductions
in the required amount of commercial liability insurance coverage to
$100 million. The staff has used this technical criterion to grant
similar exemptions to other decommissioning reactor licensees (e.g.,
Maine Yankee Atomic Power Station, published in the Federal Register on
January 19, 1999 (64 FR 2920); and Zion Nuclear Power Station,
published in the Federal Register on December 28, 1999 (64 FR 72700)).
Additional discussions of other decommissioning reactor licensees that
have received exemptions to reduce their primary insurance level to
$100 million is provided in SECY-96-256, ``Changes to Financial
Protection Requirements for Permanently Shutdown Nuclear Power
Reactors, 10 CFR 50.54(w)(1) and 10 CFR 140.11,'' dated December 17,
1996 (ADAMS Accession No. ML15062A483). These prior exemptions were
based on the licensee demonstrating that the SFP could be air-cooled,
consistent with the technical criterion discussed above.
In SECY-00-0145, ``Integrated Rulemaking Plan for Nuclear Power
Plant Decommissioning,'' dated June 28, 2000, and SECY-01-0100,
``Policy Issues Related to Safeguards, Insurance, and Emergency
Preparedness Regulations at Decommissioning Nuclear Power Plants
Storing Fuel in the Spent Fuel Pool,'' dated June 4, 2001 (ADAMS
Accession Nos. ML003721626 and ML011450420, respectively), the staff
discussed additional information concerning SFP zirconium fire risks at
decommissioning reactors and associated implications for offsite
insurance. Analyzing when the spent fuel stored in the SFP is capable
of air-cooling is one measure that demonstrates when the probability of
a zirconium fire would be exceedingly low. However, the staff has more
recently used an additional analysis that would bound an incomplete
drain down of the SFP water, or some other catastrophic event (such as
a complete drainage of the SFP with rearrangement of spent fuel rack
geometry and/or the addition of rubble to the SFP). The analysis
postulates that decay heat transfer from the spent fuel via conduction,
convection, or radiation would be impeded. This analysis is often
referred to as an adiabatic heat-up.
The licensee's analyses referenced in its exemption request
demonstrates that under conditions where the SFP water inventory has
drained and only air-cooling of the stored irradiated fuel is
available, there is reasonable assurance that after October 2014, the
KPS spent fuel will remain at temperatures far below those associated
with a significant radiological release. In addition, the licensee's
adiabatic heat-up analyses demonstrate that as of October 21, 2014,
there would be at least 10 hours after the loss of all means of cooling
(both air and/or water), before the spent fuel cladding would reach a
temperature where the potential for a significant offsite radiological
release could occur. The licensee states that for this loss of all
cooling scenario, 10 hours is sufficient time for personnel to respond
with additional resources, equipment, and capability to restore cooling
to the SFP, even after a non-credible, catastrophic event. As provided
in DEK's letter dated January 10, 2014 (ADAMS Accession No.
ML14016A078), the licensee furnished information concerning its makeup
strategies, in the event of a loss of SFP coolant inventory. The
multiple strategies for providing makeup to the SFP include: Using
existing plant systems for inventory makeup; supplying water through
hoses to a spool piece connection to the existing SFP piping; or using
a diesel-driven portable pump to take suction from Lake Michigan and
provide makeup or spray to the SFP. These strategies will be maintained
by a license condition. The licensee states that the equipment needed
to perform these actions are located onsite, and that the external
makeup strategy (using a diesel driven portable pump) is capable of
being deployed within 2 hours. The licensee also stated that,
considering the very low-probability of beyond design-basis accidents
affecting the SFP, these diverse strategies provide defense-in-depth
and time to mitigate and prevent a zirconium fire, using makeup or
spray into the SFP before the onset of zirconium cladding rapid
oxidation.
In the safety evaluation of the licensee's request for exemptions
from certain emergency planning requirements dated October 27, 2014
(ADAMS Accession No. ML14261A223), the NRC staff assessed the DEK
accident analyses associated with the radiological risks from a
zirconium fire at the permanently shutdown and defueled KPS site. The
NRC staff has confirmed that under conditions where cooling air flow
can develop, suitably conservative calculations indicate that by the
end of October 2014, the fuel would remain at temperatures where the
cladding would be undamaged for an unlimited period. For the very
unlikely beyond design-basis accident scenario, where the SFP coolant
inventory is lost in such a manner that all methods of heat removal
from the spent fuel are no longer available, there will be a minimum of
10 hours from the initiation of the accident until the cladding reaches
a temperature where offsite radiological release might occur. The staff
finds that 10 hours is sufficient time to support deployment of
mitigation equipment, consistent with plant conditions, to prevent the
zirconium cladding from reaching a point of rapid oxidation.
The NRC staff has determined that the licensee's proposed reduction
in primary offsite liability coverage to a level of $100 million, and
the licensee's proposed withdrawal from participation in the secondary
insurance pool for offsite financial protection, are consistent with
the policy established in SECY-93-127 and subsequent insurance
considerations, resulting from additional zirconium fire risks, as
discussed in SECY-00-0145 and SECY-01-0100. In addition, the NRC staff
noted that there is a well-established precedent of granting a similar
exemption to other permanently shutdown and defueled power reactors,
upon demonstration that the criterion of the zirconium fire risks from
the irradiated fuel stored in the SFP is of negligible concern.
A. Authorized by Law
In accordance with 10 CFR 140.8, the Commission may grant
exemptions from the regulations in 10 CFR part 140, as the Commission
determines are authorized by law. The NRC staff has determined that
granting of the licensee's proposed exemption will not result in a
violation of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, Section 170, or other laws,
as amended, which require licensees to maintain adequate financial
protection. Therefore, the exemption is authorized by law.
B. Is Otherwise in the Public Interest
The financial protection limits of 10 CFR 140.11 were established
to require licensees to maintain sufficient offsite liability insurance
to ensure adequate funding for offsite liability claims, following an
accident at an operating reactor. However, the regulation does not
consider the reduced potential for and consequence of nuclear incidents
at permanently shutdown and decommissioning reactors.
SECY-93-127, SECY-00-0145, and SECY-01-0100 provide a basis for
allowing licensees of decommissioning plants to reduce their primary
offsite
[[Page 15641]]
liability insurance and to withdraw from participation in the
retrospective rating pool for deferred premium charges. As discussed in
these documents, once the zirconium fire concern is determined to be
negligible, possible accident scenario risks at permanently shutdown
and defueled reactors are greatly reduced, when compared to operating
reactors, and the associated potential for offsite financial
liabilities from an accident are commensurately less. The licensee has
analyzed and the staff has confirmed that the possible accidents that
could result in an offsite radiological risk are minimal, thereby
justifying the proposed reductions in offsite liability insurance and
withdrawal from participation in the secondary retrospective rating
pool for deferred premium charges.
Additionally, participation in the secondary retrospective rating
pool could be problematic for DEK because the licensee would incur
financial liability, if an extraordinary nuclear incident occurred at
another nuclear power plant. Because KPS is permanently shut down, it
does not produce revenue from electricity generation sales to cover
such a liability. Therefore, such liability, if incurred, could
significantly affect the financial resources available to the facility
to conduct and complete radiological decontamination and
decommissioning activities. Furthermore, the shared financial risk
exposure to DEK is greatly disproportionate to the radiological risk
posed by KPS, when compared to operating reactors.
The reduced overall risk to the public at decommissioning power
plants does not warrant DEK to carry full operating reactor insurance
coverage, after the requisite spent fuel cooling period has elapsed,
following final reactor shutdown. The licensee's proposed financial
protection limits will maintain a level of liability insurance coverage
commensurate with the risk to the public. These changes are consistent
with previous NRC policy and exemptions approved for other
decommissioning reactors. Thus, the underlying purpose of the
regulations will not be adversely affected by the reductions in
insurance coverage.
Accordingly, the NRC staff concludes that granting the exemption
from 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4) is in the public interest.
C. Environmental Considerations
The NRC approval of the exemption to insurance or indemnity
requirements belongs to a category of actions that the Commission, by
rule or regulation, has declared to be a categorical exclusion, after
first finding that the category of actions does not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment.
Specifically, the exemption is categorically excluded from further
analysis in accordance with 10 CFR 51.22(c)(25).
Under 10 CFR 51.22(c)(25), granting of an exemption from the
requirements of any regulation of Chapter I to 10 CFR is a categorical
exclusion provided that (i) there is no significant hazards
consideration; (ii) there is no significant change in the types or
significant increase in the amounts of any effluents that may be
released offsite; (iii) there is no significant increase in individual
or cumulative public or occupational radiation exposure; (iv) there is
no significant construction impact; (v) there is no significant
increase in the potential for or consequences from radiological
accidents; and (vi) the requirements from which an exemption is sought
involve: surety, insurance, or indemnity requirements.
The Director, Division of Operating Reactor Licensing, Office of
Nuclear Reactor Regulation, has determined that approval of the
exemption request involves no significant hazards consideration because
reducing a licensee's offsite liability requirements at KPS does not
(1) involve a significant increase in the probability or consequences
of an accident previously evaluated; (2) create the possibility of a
new or different kind of accident from any accident previously
evaluated; or (3) involve a significant reduction in a margin of
safety. The exempted financial protection regulation is unrelated to
the operation of KPS. Accordingly, there is no significant change in
the types or significant increase in the amounts of any effluents that
may be released offsite, and no significant increase in individual or
cumulative public or occupational radiation exposure. The exempted
regulation is not associated with construction, so there is no
significant construction impact. The exempted regulation does not
concern the source term (i.e., potential amount of radiation in an
accident), nor mitigation. Therefore, there is no significant increase
in the potential for, or consequences of, a radiological accident. In
addition, there would be no significant impacts to biota, water
resources, historic properties, cultural resources, or socioeconomic
conditions in the region. The requirement for offsite liability
insurance may be viewed as involving surety, insurance, or indemnity
matters.
Therefore, pursuant to 10 CFR 51.22(b) and 51.22(c)(25), no
environmental impact statement or environmental assessment need be
prepared in connection with the approval of this exemption request.
IV. Conclusions
Accordingly, the Commission has determined that, pursuant to 10 CFR
140.8, the exemption is authorized by law, and is otherwise in the
public interest. Therefore, the Commission hereby grants DEK exemption
from the requirement of 10 CFR 140.11(a)(4) to permit the licensee to
reduce primary offsite liability insurance to $100 million, accompanied
by withdrawal from participation in the secondary insurance pool for
offsite liability insurance.
The exemption is effective upon issuance.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 13th day of March, 2015.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Michele G. Evans,
Director, Division of Operating Reactor Licensing, Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation.
[FR Doc. 2015-06730 Filed 3-23-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P