Environmental Assessment for the Acceptance and Disposition of Spent Nuclear Fuel Containing U.S.-Origin Highly Enriched Uranium From the Federal Republic of Germany, 4023-4025 [2016-01371]
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Dated: January 20, 2016.
Aaron Siegel,
Alternate OSD Federal Register Liaison
Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2016–01330 Filed 1–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Environmental Assessment for the
Acceptance and Disposition of Spent
Nuclear Fuel Containing U.S.-Origin
Highly Enriched Uranium From the
Federal Republic of Germany
Department of Energy.
Notice of availability; public
meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) announces the availability
of its draft environmental assessment
(EA) (DOE/EA–1977) evaluating the
potential environmental impacts from a
proposed action to receive, store,
process and disposition spent nuclear
fuel (SNF) from the Federal Republic of
Germany at DOE’s Savannah River Site
(SRS) (Draft German Spent Nuclear Fuel
EA).1 This SNF is composed of kernels
containing thorium and U.S.-origin
highly enriched uranium (HEU)
embedded in small graphite spheres that
were irradiated in research reactors used
for experimental and/or demonstration
purposes. DOE invites public comments
on the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA and is announcing a public
meeting.
DATES: The 45-day public comment
period extends from the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register through March 11, 2016. DOE
will consider all comments received via
email by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time or postmarked by that date.
Comments submitted after that date and
time will be considered to the extent
practicable.
DOE will hold a public meeting to
receive comments on the Draft Spent
Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA. The
meeting will be held on:
• February 4, 2016, (7:00 p.m. to 9:00
p.m.) at the North Augusta Community
Center, 495 Brookside Drive, North
Augusta, South Carolina 29841.
ADDRESSES: This Draft Spent Nuclear
Fuel from Germany EA is available at
the following sites:
SUMMARY:
1 This
environmental assessment was announced
as the Environmental Assessment for the
Acceptance and Disposition of Used Nuclear Fuel
Containing U.S.-Origin Highly Enriched Uranium
from the Federal Republic of Germany in DOE’s
Notice of Intent (NOI) on June 4, 2014 (79 FR
32256). The title has been changed.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
4023
https://energy.gov/nepa/office-nepapolicy-and-compliance
https://www.srs.gov/sro/germanheup
roj.html
https://www.srs.gov/general/pubs/
envbul/nepa1.htm
To request a print copy of the Draft
Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA
please submit your request to Tracy
Williams, NEPA Compliance Officer,
U.S. Department of Energy, P.O. Box B,
Aiken, South Carolina 29802; or by
telephone at (803) 952–8278.
DOE invites Federal agencies, state
and local governments, Native
American tribes, industry, other
organizations, and members of the
general public to submit comments on
DOE’s Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA. Please direct written
comments on the Draft Spent Nuclear
Fuel from Germany EA to Tracy
Williams, NEPA Compliance Officer,
U.S. Department of Energy, P.O. Box B,
Aiken, South Carolina 29802.
Comments on the Draft Spent Nuclear
Fuel from Germany EA may also be
submitted by email to
GermanSpentNuclearFuelEA@
leidos.com. DOE will give equal weight
to written comments and oral comments
received at the public meeting. Requests
to be placed on the German Spent
Nuclear Fuel EA mailing list should be
directed to Tracy Williams at the postal
or email addresses above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To
request further information on SRS
spent nuclear fuel disposition activities
or background information on the
proposed project, please contact Tracy
Williams at the address as listed above.
For general information concerning
DOE’s NEPA process, contact: Ms. Carol
Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance (GG–54), U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585: (202) 586–4600,
or leave a message toll-free, at (800)
472–2756; fax (202) 586–7031; or send
an email to AskNEPA@hq.doe.gov.
This Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA is available on the DOE
NEPA Web site at https://
nepa.energy.gov, and also at the SRS
Web site at https://www.srs.gov/general/
pubs/envbul/nepa1.htm.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
DOE has prepared the Draft Spent
Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA in
accordance with Council on
Environmental Quality and DOE
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) implementing regulations at 40
CFR parts 1500 through 1508 and 10
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4024
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 15 / Monday, January 25, 2016 / Notices
CFR part 1021, respectively. The Draft
Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA
analyzes the potential environmental
impacts of receipt, storage, processing,
and disposition of SNF from Germany
containing, prior to irradiation,
approximately 900 kilograms (kg) of
U.S.-origin HEU. The SNF is composed
of kernels containing thorium and U.S.origin HEU embedded in small graphite
spheres.
The United States provided the HEU
to Germany between 1965 and 1988.
The spent fuel was irradiated at the
Arbeitsgemeinschaft Versuchsreaktor
(AVR) reactor, which operated from
1967 to 1988, and the Thorium High
Temperature Reactor (THTR)-300,
which operated from 1983 to 1989.
These reactors operated as part of
Germany’s research and development
program for pebble bed, hightemperature, gas-cooled reactor
technology.
In a February 2012 letter, the State
Secretary of the Federal Ministry of
Education and Research of the Federal
Republic of Germany requested DOE’s
Under Secretary for Nuclear Security to
consider accepting the SNF, and
collaboration on the request was
initiated in May 2012. In April 2014,
DOE, the Federal Ministry of Education
and Research of the Federal Republic of
Germany, and the Ministry for
Innovation, Science and Research of the
State of North Rhine-Westphalia on
behalf of the North Rhine-Westphalian
State Government, Germany, signed a
Statement of Intent 2 to cooperate in
conducting the preparatory work
necessary to support DOE’s
consideration of the request that it
accept the spent fuel from Germany and
to use SRS facilities for processing and
disposition of the spent fuel. The
preparatory work includes conducting
studies, technical and engineering work,
as well as preparation of this Draft
Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA.
The Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA and the engineering work
will allow DOE to reach an informed
decision on the proposed receipt,
acceptance, processing and disposition
of the spent nuclear fuel from Germany.
The Statement of Intent specifies that
Forschungszentrum Julich, an
interdisciplinary research center funded
primarily by the German government, is
bearing the cost of the preparatory
phase—feasibility studies and NEPA
analysis—and if there is a decision to
proceed with the project, would also
bear the costs associated with
acceptance, processing, and disposition
of the spent nuclear fuel.
2 The referenced Statement of Intent is provided
in the Draft EA as Appendix A.
3 CASTOR is the name given to a dry-storage cask
for storage and transport of radioactive material.
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Purpose and Need for Action
DOE’s purpose and need for the
receipt, storage, processing, and
disposition of the SNF from Germany is
to support the U.S. policy objective to
reduce, and eventually to eliminate,
HEU from civil commerce. This action
would further the U.S. HEU
minimization objective by returning
U.S.-origin HEU from Germany to the
United States for safe storage and
disposition in a form no longer usable
for an improvised nuclear device, a
radiological dispersal device, or other
radiological exposure device.
Proposed Action and Alternatives
In the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA, DOE considers a No
Action Alternative as required under
NEPA, and two action alternatives for
acceptance and disposition of the
graphite-based SNF currently stored in
Germany. Under the No Action
Alternative, the SNF would not be
transported to the United States for
management and disposition.
The two action alternatives differ in
processing technology and location at
SRS where the processing would occur.
Under both of the proposed action
alternatives, the SNF would be
transported from Germany and
processed at SRS for final disposition as
a proliferation-resistant waste form. The
proposed action alternatives are
identified by the respective SRS
processing location. The H-Area
Alternative (so named because most
activities would involve H-Area
facilities) includes three processing
options (Vitrification Option, LowEnriched Uranium Waste Option, and
Low-Enriched Uranium/Thorium Waste
Option) that use H-Canyon to differing
extents; the L-Area Alternative (so
named because the alternative would
involve mostly L-Area facilities) would
implement melt and dilute processing
in L-Area. Existing and planned SRS
infrastructure and facilities would be
used to process the spent nuclear fuel
from Germany.
The shipping campaign from
Germany would involve about 30
shipments over approximately a 3.5year period to transport 455 CASTOR 3
casks containing the SNF from Germany
aboard chartered ships across the
Atlantic Ocean to Joint Base CharlestonWeapons Station near Charleston, South
Carolina. From Joint Base CharlestonWeapons Station, the CASTOR casks
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
would be transported to SRS on
dedicated trains.
Processing steps would involve
separating the HEU kernels from their
graphite matrix, then processing the
kernels through either H-Canyon and
the SRS Liquid Nuclear Waste Facilities,
or through a new melt and dilute
process that would be installed in LArea. The HEU kernels are embedded in
a graphite (carbon) matrix which must
be removed for the HEU kernels to be
processed. Two methods for removing
the graphite surrounding the fuel
kernels (referred to as carbon digestion),
a molten salt digestion process and a
vapor digestion process, are evaluated
in this EA.
H-Area Alternative
Under the H-Area alternative, three
options for dissolving the kernels after
carbon digestion are evaluated:
• The vitrification option provides for
dissolution of the kernels in H-Canyon
with direct transfer of the entire
dissolver solution to the existing Liquid
Nuclear Waste Facilities. Under this
option, the high-activity fraction of the
dissolver solution would be
dispositioned as vitrified high-level
radioactive waste and the low-activity
fraction as low-level radioactive waste
saltstone.
• The low-enriched uranium waste
option provides for dissolution of the
kernels in H-Canyon followed by
solvent extraction in H-Canyon to
separate the uranium. The resulting
uranium solution would be down
blended and grouted (i.e., solidified by
mixing with cement) to meet acceptance
criteria for disposal as low-level
radioactive waste. The remainder of the
dissolver solution would be processed
through the Liquid Nuclear Waste
Facilities into high- and low-level
radioactive waste as indicated for the
vitrification option.
• The low-enriched uranium/thorium
waste option provides for dissolution of
the kernels in H-Canyon followed by
solvent extraction in H-Canyon for
separation of the uranium and thorium.
The resulting uranium/thorium solution
would be down blended and grouted to
meet acceptance criteria for disposal as
low-level radioactive waste. The
remainder of the dissolver solution
would be processed through the Liquid
Nuclear Waste Facilities into high- and
low-level radioactive waste as indicated
for the vitrification option.
L-Area Alternative
Under the L-Area Alternative, the
kernels would be down-blended and
converted to a uranium-aluminum alloy
in a melt and dilute process in L-Area.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 15 / Monday, January 25, 2016 / Notices
The resulting ingots would be stored in
concrete overpacks on a pad in L-Area.
Unlike the H-Area processing methods,
the kernels would not be dissolved prior
to final processing.
NEPA Process
All comments on the Draft Spent
Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA received
during the public comment period will
be considered and addressed in the
Final Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany
EA. DOE will address comments
submitted after the close of the public
comment period on the Draft EA to the
extent practicable. Following the public
comment period, and based on the EA
and consideration of all comments
received, DOE will either issue a
Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) or announce its intent to
prepare an environmental impact
statement (EIS). If DOE determines that
a FONSI is appropriate, both the Final
EA and FONSI will be made available
to the public.
If DOE determines that an EIS is
needed, either during preparation of the
Final Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany
EA or after completing the EA, DOE
would issue in the Federal Register a
Notice to prepare an EIS. In that case,
the June 2014 public comment process
would serve as the scoping process that
normally would follow a Notice of
Intent to prepare an EIS.
Issued in Washington, DC on January 15,
2016.
Edgardo DeLeon,
Director, Office of Nuclear Materials
Disposition.
[FR Doc. 2016–01371 Filed 1–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Quadrennial Energy Review; Notice of
Public Meeting
Office of Energy Policy and
Systems Analysis, Secretariat,
Quadrennial Energy Review Task Force,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
At the direction of the
President, the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE or Department), as the
Secretariat for the Quadrennial Energy
Review Task Force (QER Task Force),
will convene a public meeting to
introduce the topic of the second
installment of the Quadrennial Energy
Review, an integrated study of the U.S.
electricity system from generation
through end use. A mixture of panel
discussions and a public comment
period will frame multi-stakeholder
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SUMMARY:
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discourse around deliberative analytical
questions relating to the intersection of
electricity and its role in promoting
economic competitiveness, energy
security, and environmental
responsibility.
The public meeting will be held
on February 4, 2016, beginning at 9:00
a.m. Eastern Time. Written comments
are welcome, especially following the
public meeting, and should be
submitted within 60 days of the
meeting.
DATES:
The meeting will be held at
the United States Capitol Visitor Center
Congressional Auditorium, in
Washington, DC.
Starting on February 4, 2016, you may
submit written comments online at
https://energy.gov/qer or by U.S. mail to
the Office of Energy Policy and Systems
Analysis, EPSA–60, QER Meeting
Comments, U.S. Department of Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Richards, EPSA–60, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Energy Policy and
Systems Analysis, 1000 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585–
0121. Telephone: 202–586–0507 Email:
John.Richards@Hq.Doe.Gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
January 9, 2014, President Obama
issued a Presidential Memorandum—
Establishing a Quadrennial Energy
Review. To accomplish this review, the
Presidential Memorandum establishes a
Quadrennial Energy Review Task Force
to be co-chaired by the Director of the
Office of Science and Technology
Policy, and the Director of the Domestic
Policy Council. Under the Presidential
Memorandum, the Secretary of Energy
shall provide support to the Task Force,
including support for coordination
activities related to the preparation of
the Quadrennial Energy Review (QER)
Report, policy analysis and modeling,
and stakeholder engagement.
The Quadrennial Energy Review
process itself involves robust
engagement of federal agencies and
outside stakeholders, and further
enables the federal government to
translate policy goals into a set of
analytically based, integrated actions for
proposed investments over a four year
planning horizon. Unlike traditional
federal Quadrennial Review processes,
the QER is conducted in a multi-year
installment series to allow for more
focused analysis on particular subsectors of the energy system. The initial
focus for the Quadrennial Energy
Review was our Nation’s transmission,
storage and distribution infrastructures
ADDRESSES:
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that link energy supplies to intermediate
and end users, because these capitalintensive infrastructures tend to set
supply and end use patterns,
investments and practices in place for
decades. On April 21, 2015, the
Quadrennial Energy Review Task Force
released its first Quadrennial Energy
Review installment report entitled,
‘‘Energy Transmission, Storage, and
Distribution Infrastructure’’. Among the
issues highlighted by the analysis in the
first installment of the QER were the
growing dependencies of all critical
infrastructures and economic sectors on
electricity, as well as, the increasing
interdependence of the various energy
subsectors. In response to these
findings, and to provide an appropriate
consideration of an energy sector
undergoing significant technological
and regulatory change, the second
installment of the QER will conduct a
comprehensive review of the nation’s
electricity system, from generation to
end use, including a more
comprehensive look at electricity
transmission, storage, and distribution
infrastructure covered in installment
one. The electricity system encompasses
not just physical structures, but also a
range of actors and institutions. Under
this broad framing, the second
installment intends to consider the roles
and activities of all relevant actors,
industries, and institutions integral to
continuing to supply reliable and
affordable electricity at a time of
dramatic change in technology
development. Issues to be considered in
QER analyses include fuel choices,
distributed and centralized generation,
physical and cyber vulnerabilities,
federal, state, and local policy direction,
expectations of residential and
commercial consumers, and a review of
existing and evolving business models
for a range of entities throughout the
system.
Significant changes will be required
to meet the transformational
opportunities and challenges posed by
our evolving electricity system. The
Administration is seeking public input
on key questions relating to possible
federal actions that would address the
challenges and take full advantage of the
opportunities of this changing system to
meet the Nation’s objectives of reliable,
affordable and clean electricity. Over
the course of 2016, the Secretariat for
the Quadrennial Energy Review Task
Force will hold a series of public
meetings to discuss and receive
comments on the issues outlined above,
and well as, others, as they relate to the
second installment of the Quadrennial
Energy Review.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 15 (Monday, January 25, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 4023-4025]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-01371]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Environmental Assessment for the Acceptance and Disposition of
Spent Nuclear Fuel Containing U.S.-Origin Highly Enriched Uranium From
the Federal Republic of Germany
AGENCY: Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of availability; public meeting.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announces the availability
of its draft environmental assessment (EA) (DOE/EA-1977) evaluating the
potential environmental impacts from a proposed action to receive,
store, process and disposition spent nuclear fuel (SNF) from the
Federal Republic of Germany at DOE's Savannah River Site (SRS) (Draft
German Spent Nuclear Fuel EA).\1\ This SNF is composed of kernels
containing thorium and U.S.-origin highly enriched uranium (HEU)
embedded in small graphite spheres that were irradiated in research
reactors used for experimental and/or demonstration purposes. DOE
invites public comments on the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA
and is announcing a public meeting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This environmental assessment was announced as the
Environmental Assessment for the Acceptance and Disposition of Used
Nuclear Fuel Containing U.S.-Origin Highly Enriched Uranium from the
Federal Republic of Germany in DOE's Notice of Intent (NOI) on June
4, 2014 (79 FR 32256). The title has been changed.
DATES: The 45-day public comment period extends from the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal Register through March 11,
2016. DOE will consider all comments received via email by 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time or postmarked by that date. Comments submitted
after that date and time will be considered to the extent practicable.
DOE will hold a public meeting to receive comments on the Draft
Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA. The meeting will be held on:
February 4, 2016, (7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.) at the North
Augusta Community Center, 495 Brookside Drive, North Augusta, South
Carolina 29841.
ADDRESSES: This Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA is available
at the following sites:
https://energy.gov/nepa/office-nepa-policy-and-compliance
https://www.srs.gov/sro/germanheuproj.html
https://www.srs.gov/general/pubs/envbul/nepa1.htm
To request a print copy of the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA please submit your request to Tracy Williams, NEPA
Compliance Officer, U.S. Department of Energy, P.O. Box B, Aiken, South
Carolina 29802; or by telephone at (803) 952-8278.
DOE invites Federal agencies, state and local governments, Native
American tribes, industry, other organizations, and members of the
general public to submit comments on DOE's Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel
from Germany EA. Please direct written comments on the Draft Spent
Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA to Tracy Williams, NEPA Compliance
Officer, U.S. Department of Energy, P.O. Box B, Aiken, South Carolina
29802.
Comments on the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA may also
be submitted by email to GermanSpentNuclearFuelEA@leidos.com. DOE will
give equal weight to written comments and oral comments received at the
public meeting. Requests to be placed on the German Spent Nuclear Fuel
EA mailing list should be directed to Tracy Williams at the postal or
email addresses above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To request further information on SRS
spent nuclear fuel disposition activities or background information on
the proposed project, please contact Tracy Williams at the address as
listed above.
For general information concerning DOE's NEPA process, contact: Ms.
Carol Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance (GG-
54), U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585: (202) 586-4600, or leave a message toll-free, at
(800) 472-2756; fax (202) 586-7031; or send an email to
AskNEPA@hq.doe.gov.
This Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA is available on the
DOE NEPA Web site at https://nepa.energy.gov, and also at the SRS Web
site at https://www.srs.gov/general/pubs/envbul/nepa1.htm.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
DOE has prepared the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA in
accordance with Council on Environmental Quality and DOE National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) implementing regulations at 40 CFR
parts 1500 through 1508 and 10
[[Page 4024]]
CFR part 1021, respectively. The Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany
EA analyzes the potential environmental impacts of receipt, storage,
processing, and disposition of SNF from Germany containing, prior to
irradiation, approximately 900 kilograms (kg) of U.S.-origin HEU. The
SNF is composed of kernels containing thorium and U.S.-origin HEU
embedded in small graphite spheres.
The United States provided the HEU to Germany between 1965 and
1988. The spent fuel was irradiated at the Arbeitsgemeinschaft
Versuchsreaktor (AVR) reactor, which operated from 1967 to 1988, and
the Thorium High Temperature Reactor (THTR)-300, which operated from
1983 to 1989. These reactors operated as part of Germany's research and
development program for pebble bed, high-temperature, gas-cooled
reactor technology.
In a February 2012 letter, the State Secretary of the Federal
Ministry of Education and Research of the Federal Republic of Germany
requested DOE's Under Secretary for Nuclear Security to consider
accepting the SNF, and collaboration on the request was initiated in
May 2012. In April 2014, DOE, the Federal Ministry of Education and
Research of the Federal Republic of Germany, and the Ministry for
Innovation, Science and Research of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia
on behalf of the North Rhine-Westphalian State Government, Germany,
signed a Statement of Intent \2\ to cooperate in conducting the
preparatory work necessary to support DOE's consideration of the
request that it accept the spent fuel from Germany and to use SRS
facilities for processing and disposition of the spent fuel. The
preparatory work includes conducting studies, technical and engineering
work, as well as preparation of this Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from
Germany EA. The Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA and the
engineering work will allow DOE to reach an informed decision on the
proposed receipt, acceptance, processing and disposition of the spent
nuclear fuel from Germany. The Statement of Intent specifies that
Forschungszentrum Julich, an interdisciplinary research center funded
primarily by the German government, is bearing the cost of the
preparatory phase--feasibility studies and NEPA analysis--and if there
is a decision to proceed with the project, would also bear the costs
associated with acceptance, processing, and disposition of the spent
nuclear fuel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The referenced Statement of Intent is provided in the Draft
EA as Appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Purpose and Need for Action
DOE's purpose and need for the receipt, storage, processing, and
disposition of the SNF from Germany is to support the U.S. policy
objective to reduce, and eventually to eliminate, HEU from civil
commerce. This action would further the U.S. HEU minimization objective
by returning U.S.-origin HEU from Germany to the United States for safe
storage and disposition in a form no longer usable for an improvised
nuclear device, a radiological dispersal device, or other radiological
exposure device.
Proposed Action and Alternatives
In the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA, DOE considers a No
Action Alternative as required under NEPA, and two action alternatives
for acceptance and disposition of the graphite-based SNF currently
stored in Germany. Under the No Action Alternative, the SNF would not
be transported to the United States for management and disposition.
The two action alternatives differ in processing technology and
location at SRS where the processing would occur. Under both of the
proposed action alternatives, the SNF would be transported from Germany
and processed at SRS for final disposition as a proliferation-resistant
waste form. The proposed action alternatives are identified by the
respective SRS processing location. The H-Area Alternative (so named
because most activities would involve H-Area facilities) includes three
processing options (Vitrification Option, Low-Enriched Uranium Waste
Option, and Low-Enriched Uranium/Thorium Waste Option) that use H-
Canyon to differing extents; the L-Area Alternative (so named because
the alternative would involve mostly L-Area facilities) would implement
melt and dilute processing in L-Area. Existing and planned SRS
infrastructure and facilities would be used to process the spent
nuclear fuel from Germany.
The shipping campaign from Germany would involve about 30 shipments
over approximately a 3.5-year period to transport 455 CASTOR \3\ casks
containing the SNF from Germany aboard chartered ships across the
Atlantic Ocean to Joint Base Charleston-Weapons Station near
Charleston, South Carolina. From Joint Base Charleston-Weapons Station,
the CASTOR casks would be transported to SRS on dedicated trains.
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\3\ CASTOR is the name given to a dry-storage cask for storage
and transport of radioactive material.
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Processing steps would involve separating the HEU kernels from
their graphite matrix, then processing the kernels through either H-
Canyon and the SRS Liquid Nuclear Waste Facilities, or through a new
melt and dilute process that would be installed in L-Area. The HEU
kernels are embedded in a graphite (carbon) matrix which must be
removed for the HEU kernels to be processed. Two methods for removing
the graphite surrounding the fuel kernels (referred to as carbon
digestion), a molten salt digestion process and a vapor digestion
process, are evaluated in this EA.
H-Area Alternative
Under the H-Area alternative, three options for dissolving the
kernels after carbon digestion are evaluated:
The vitrification option provides for dissolution of the
kernels in H-Canyon with direct transfer of the entire dissolver
solution to the existing Liquid Nuclear Waste Facilities. Under this
option, the high-activity fraction of the dissolver solution would be
dispositioned as vitrified high-level radioactive waste and the low-
activity fraction as low-level radioactive waste saltstone.
The low-enriched uranium waste option provides for
dissolution of the kernels in H-Canyon followed by solvent extraction
in H-Canyon to separate the uranium. The resulting uranium solution
would be down blended and grouted (i.e., solidified by mixing with
cement) to meet acceptance criteria for disposal as low-level
radioactive waste. The remainder of the dissolver solution would be
processed through the Liquid Nuclear Waste Facilities into high- and
low-level radioactive waste as indicated for the vitrification option.
The low-enriched uranium/thorium waste option provides for
dissolution of the kernels in H-Canyon followed by solvent extraction
in H-Canyon for separation of the uranium and thorium. The resulting
uranium/thorium solution would be down blended and grouted to meet
acceptance criteria for disposal as low-level radioactive waste. The
remainder of the dissolver solution would be processed through the
Liquid Nuclear Waste Facilities into high- and low-level radioactive
waste as indicated for the vitrification option.
L-Area Alternative
Under the L-Area Alternative, the kernels would be down-blended and
converted to a uranium-aluminum alloy in a melt and dilute process in
L-Area.
[[Page 4025]]
The resulting ingots would be stored in concrete overpacks on a pad in
L-Area. Unlike the H-Area processing methods, the kernels would not be
dissolved prior to final processing.
NEPA Process
All comments on the Draft Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA
received during the public comment period will be considered and
addressed in the Final Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA. DOE will
address comments submitted after the close of the public comment period
on the Draft EA to the extent practicable. Following the public comment
period, and based on the EA and consideration of all comments received,
DOE will either issue a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) or
announce its intent to prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS).
If DOE determines that a FONSI is appropriate, both the Final EA and
FONSI will be made available to the public.
If DOE determines that an EIS is needed, either during preparation
of the Final Spent Nuclear Fuel from Germany EA or after completing the
EA, DOE would issue in the Federal Register a Notice to prepare an EIS.
In that case, the June 2014 public comment process would serve as the
scoping process that normally would follow a Notice of Intent to
prepare an EIS.
Issued in Washington, DC on January 15, 2016.
Edgardo DeLeon,
Director, Office of Nuclear Materials Disposition.
[FR Doc. 2016-01371 Filed 1-22-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P