Notice of Intent To Prepare a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the West Valley Demonstration Project and Western New York Nuclear Service Center, Notice of Floodplain and Wetlands Involvement, and Draft Scope, 7464-7468 [2018-03493]
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Issued in Washington, DC on February 14,
2018.
LaTanya R. Butler,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. 2018–03483 Filed 2–20–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Intent To Prepare a
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement for Decommissioning and/or
Long-Term Stewardship at the West
Valley Demonstration Project and
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center, Notice of Floodplain and
Wetlands Involvement, and Draft
Scope
New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of intent and draft scope.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) and the New York State
Energy Research and Development
Authority (NYSERDA) announce their
intent to jointly prepare a Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the West Valley
Demonstration Project and Western New
York Nuclear Service Center (DOE/EIS–
0226–S1), hereinafter referred to as the
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (SEIS) for the West Valley
Site, and to conduct a public scoping
process. The West Valley Site, for the
purposes of this SEIS and associated
documents, includes the DOE West
Valley Demonstration Project (WVDP) or
Project Premises, and the retained
premises, which includes the Western
New York Nuclear Service Center
(WNYNSC), and the State-Licensed
Disposal Area (SDA). In 2010, DOE and
NYSERDA decided to implement the
Phased Decision-making Alternative,
which was the preferred alternative in
the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for Decommissioning and/or
Long-Term Stewardship at the West
Valley Demonstration Project and
Western New York Nuclear Service
Center (DOE/EIS–0226) (2010 Final
EIS). With this Notice of intent and draft
scope, DOE and NYSERDA are initiating
the public scoping process for the SEIS
and requesting comments to help define
the environmental issues and the range
of reasonable alternatives to be
analyzed.
DATES: DOE and NYSERDA are inviting
public comments on the scope and
content of the SEIS for the West Valley
Site during a public scoping period
starting with the date of publication of
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this Notice and ending on April 23,
2018. Comments must be submitted
during this time period to ensure
consideration; late comments will be
considered to the extent practicable.
DOE and NYSERDA will hold public
scoping meetings on the SEIS in West
Valley, NY (March 19, 2018), in Buffalo,
NY (March 20, 2018), and in Irving, NY
(March 21, 2018). Further information
about the public scoping meetings is
contained under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on the
scope of the SEIS, requests to be placed
on the SEIS mailing list, and requests
for information may be submitted by
U.S. mail to the DOE Document
Manager, Mr. Martin Krentz, West
Valley Demonstration Project, U.S.
Department of Energy, 10282 Rock
Springs Road, AC–DOE, West Valley,
New York 14171–9799, by email to
SEISWestValleySite@emcbc.doe.gov, or
via the SEIS website at
www.SEISWestValleySite.com. Before
including your address, phone number,
email address, or other personal
identifying information in your
comment, please be advised that your
entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available. If you wish
for DOE to withhold your name and/or
other personally identifiable
information, please state this
prominently at the beginning of your
comment. You may also submit
comments anonymously. The ‘‘Public
Reading Room’’ section under
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION lists the
address of the reading room where
documents referenced herein are
available. Documents and information
about the SEIS process are also available
online at the SEIS website at
www.SEISWestValleySite.com.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information regarding the West Valley
Demonstration Project or the SEIS,
contact Mr. Martin Krentz at the address
given above; telephone: (716) 942–4007;
or email: martin.krentz@emcbc.doe.gov.
For general information on DOE’s NEPA
process, contact Mr. Brian Costner (GC–
54), Acting Director, Office of NEPA
Policy and Compliance, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20585; telephone: (202) 586–4600;
facsimile: (202) 586–7031; or leave a
message at 1–800–472–2756, toll-free.
Questions for NYSERDA should be
directed to Dr. Lee Gordon, New York
State Energy Research and Development
Authority, 9030–B Route 219, West
Valley, New York 14171; telephone:
(716) 942–9960, ext. 4963; facsimile:
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(716) 942–9961; or email: Lee.Gordon@
nyserda.ny.gov. Those seeking general
information on the SEQRA process
should contact Ms. Janice Dean, Deputy
Counsel, New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority,
17 Columbia Circle, Albany, New York
12203–6399; telephone: (518) 862–1090,
ext. 3117; facsimile: (518) 862–1091; or
email: Janice.Dean@nyserda.ny.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In 2010, DOE and NYSERDA decided
to implement the Phased Decisionmaking Alternative, which was the
preferred alternative in the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the West Valley
Demonstration Project and Western New
York Nuclear Service Center (DOE/EIS–
0226) (2010 Final EIS). The Phased
Decision-making Alternative is
described in the 2010 Final EIS, DOE’s
associated Record of Decision (ROD) (75
FR 20582; April 20, 2010), and
NYSERDA’s associated Findings
Statement (May 12, 2010). During
implementation of Phase 1 of the
Phased Decision-making Alternative,
which is ongoing, a number of highly
contaminated facilities at the West
Valley Site are being removed via
decontamination and demolition and
off-site disposal. The Phased Decisionmaking Alternative deferred decisions
(known as Phase 2 decisions) on several
facilities for 10 years (the expected time
frame to complete Phase 1
decommissioning activities) while DOE
and NYSERDA gather additional
information and perform additional
analyses (Phase 1 Studies) to foster
inter-agency consensus and inform the
decisions. DOE and NYSERDA intend to
make Phase 2 decisions in 2022 on the
disposition of the facilities and areas
that would remain after completion of
Phase 1 decommissioning. The
remaining facilities include the Waste
Tank Farm, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC)-Licensed Disposal
Area (NDA), non-source area of the
North Plateau Groundwater Plume,
Construction and Demolition Debris
Landfill, Cesium Prong, contaminated
stream sediments, balance of the
WNYNSC property, and SDA.
DOE and NYSERDA intend to jointly
prepare an SEIS to inform Phase 2
decision-making for the West Valley
Site. The SEIS process will be
structured to meet DOE and NYSERDA’s
respective environmental review
responsibilities under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA, 42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and the New York
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State Environmental Quality Review Act
(SEQRA, N.Y. Env. Conserv. Law § 8–
0101 et seq.), the West Valley
Demonstration Project Act of 1980 (Pub.
L. 96–368) (WVDP Act), the Atomic
Energy Act of 1954 (as amended) (AEA),
and other applicable Federal and state
requirements. The SEIS will be prepared
in accordance with regulations of the
Council on Environmental Quality for
implementing NEPA (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), DOE’s NEPA Implementing
Procedures (10 CFR part 1021), and
State of New York regulations for
implementing SEQRA (6 NYCRR Part
617).
The WNYNSC is a 1,351-hectare
(3,338-acre) site located 48 kilometers
(30 miles) south of Buffalo, NY, and
owned by NYSERDA. In 1962, Nuclear
Fuel Services, Inc. (‘‘NFS’’) entered into
Agreements with the Atomic Energy
Commission and New York State to
construct the first commercial
reprocessing plant of nuclear fuel in the
United States. NFS, a private company,
built and operated the fuel reprocessing
plant and burial grounds, processing
640 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel at
the WNYNSC from 1966 to 1972 under
an Atomic Energy Commission license.
Fuel reprocessing ended in 1972, when
the plant was shut down for
modifications. In 1976, in view of
increased costs and regulatory
requirements, NFS decided to exercise
its contractual right to yield
responsibility for the WNYNSC to the
State of New York. NFS withdrew
without removing any of the in-process
nuclear wastes. NYSERDA now holds
title to and manages the WNYNSC.
In 1980, Congress passed the WVDP
Act, Public Law 96–368. The WVDP Act
requires DOE to demonstrate that the
liquid high-level radioactive waste from
reprocessing could be safely managed
by solidifying it at the WNYNSC and
transporting it to a Federal repository
for permanent disposal. Specifically,
Section 2(a) of the WVDP Act directs
DOE to take the following actions:
1. Solidify, in a form suitable for
transportation and disposal, the highlevel radioactive waste at the WNYNSC;
2. Develop containers suitable for the
high-level radioactive waste’s
permanent disposal;
3. As soon as feasible, transport the
solidified waste to a Federal repository
for permanent disposal;
4. Dispose of low-level radioactive
waste and transuranic waste produced
by the solidification of the high-level
radioactive waste; and
5. Decontaminate and decommission
the tanks and other facilities used at the
WNYNSC in which the high-level
radioactive waste was solidified, the
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facilities used in the waste’s
solidification, and any material and
hardware used in connection with the
West Valley Demonstration Project.
Pursuant to the WVDP Act, on
October 1, 1980, DOE and NYSERDA
entered into a Cooperative Agreement
(amended September 18, 1981) that
established a framework for the
implementation of the WVDP. Under
the agreement, NYSERDA has made
available to DOE, without transfer of
title, a 68-hectare (167-acre) area known
as the Project Premises, which includes
the formerly operated spent nuclear fuel
reprocessing plant, spent nuclear fuel
receiving and storage area, underground
liquid high-level waste storage tanks,
and a liquid low-level waste treatment
facility with associated lagoons, as well
as other facilities. Most of the facilities
on the Project Premises were
radioactively contaminated from
reprocessing operations and are located
on a geographic area known as the
North Plateau. Among the other
facilities located within the Project
Premises is a radioactive waste disposal
area known as the NRC-licensed
disposal area (NDA). Adjacent to the
Project Premises is a radioactive waste
disposal area known as the StateLicensed Disposal Area (SDA), for
which NYSERDA has operational
responsibility. Both the NDA and SDA
are located on a geographic area known
as the South Plateau.
In 1982, DOE assumed control, but
not ownership, of the Project Premises
to conduct the WVDP, as required under
the WVDP Act. As part of the WVDP
Act, NRC was charged with developing
decommissioning criteria. In the
‘‘Decommissioning Criteria for the
WVDP at the West Valley Site; Final
Policy Statement’’ (NRC Policy
Statement) (67 FR 5003; February 1,
2002), NRC prescribed the requirements
for decommissioning the WVDP. NRC
prescribed its License Termination Rule
as the decommissioning goal for the
WVDP and all NRC-licensed portions of
the WNYNSC. The decommissioning
criteria define the conditions that would
allow the Project Premises to be used
with specified restrictions or without
restrictions on future use. If those
conditions cannot be met, the NRC
Policy Statement also defines the
circumstances under which sections of
the Project Premises could remain under
long-term management or stewardship.
NRC intends to use the SEIS to evaluate
the environmental impacts of the
various alternatives before deciding
whether to accept the preferred
alternative as meeting the criteria
permitted by the License Termination
Rule. NRC has placed the Technical
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Specifications of NYSERDA’s license
under the NRC regulations at Title 10 of
the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50
in abeyance during DOE’s fulfillment of
its WVDP Act requirements.
A 1987 Stipulation of Compromise
between the Coalition on West Valley
Nuclear Wastes and DOE specified that
a closure environmental impact
statement (EIS) be prepared that also
addresses the disposal of those Class B
and C low-level radioactive wastes
generated as a result of DOE’s activities
at the WVDP. In 1990, DOE and
NYSERDA entered into a supplemental
agreement to prepare an EIS to address
both the completion of the WVDP and
closure or long-term management of the
WNYNSC.
After issuance of a draft EIS in 1996,
DOE and NYSERDA in 2001 announced
a revised EIS strategy. Under the revised
strategy, DOE and NYSERDA, as co-lead
preparers, issued a draft EIS in 2008
and, in 2010, issued the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for
Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the West Valley
Demonstration Project and Western New
York Nuclear Service Center (DOE/EIS–
0226) (2010 FEIS). As described in
DOE’s 2010 ROD and NYSERDA’s 2010
Findings Statement, DOE and
NYSERDA decided to implement the
Phased Decision-making Alternative
based on information and analyses
contained in the 2010 FEIS. During
implementation of Phase 1 of the
Phased Decision-making Alternative,
which is ongoing, a number of highly
contaminated facilities at the West
Valley Site are being removed via
decontamination and demolition and
off-site disposal. The Phased Decisionmaking Alternative deferred decisions
(known as Phase 2 decisions) on several
facilities for up to 10 years (the expected
time frame to complete Phase 1
decommissioning activities) while DOE
and NYSERDA gather additional
information and perform additional
analyses (Phase 1 Studies) to foster
interagency consensus and better inform
the Phase 2 decisions. DOE and
NYSERDA plan to make Phase 2
decisions in 2022 on the disposition of
the facilities and areas that would
remain after completion of Phase 1
decommissioning. The remaining
facilities and areas include the Waste
Tank Farm, NDA, non-source area of the
North Plateau Groundwater Plume,
Construction and Demolition Debris
Landfill, Cesium Prong, contaminated
stream sediments, balance of the
WNYNSC property, and SDA.
DOE and NYSERDA have determined
that the preparation of an SEIS would
further the purposes of NEPA by
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including new information and changes
since issuance of the 2010 Final EIS,
and is consistent with the commitment
in the 2010 ROD and Findings
Statement to providing robust and
meaningful opportunities for public
participation during decommissioning.
Preparation of an SEIS for the West
Valley Site would also further the
purposes of SEQRA, the WVDP Act, the
AEA, and other applicable Federal and
state requirements. Phase 2 decisions
will be informed by the Phase 1 and
other scientific studies being performed
at the West Valley Site, a long-term
probabilistic performance assessment,
and an SEIS that will incorporate the
above analyses as part of the evaluation
of the potential environmental impacts
of the range of reasonable Phase 2
alternatives proposed for the West
Valley Site. The SEIS will ‘‘tier’’ (40
CFR 1502.20) from the 2010 FEIS, and,
where appropriate, information and
analyses from the 2010 Final EIS will be
summarized and incorporated by
reference in the SEIS. The SEIS will
contain new information and analyses
to ensure its adequacy for Phase 2
decision-making.
Following the 2010 FEIS, DOE and
NYSERDA established a process for
conducting scientific studies (the Phase
1 Studies) in order to facilitate
interagency consensus to complete
decommissioning of the remaining
facilities. Subject-matter expert working
groups were established and studies
conducted on topics such as erosion
modeling, the geomorphic history of the
site, geologic material properties, site
radiological inventory, and precedent
waste exhumation projects/
technologies. The new information
produced by these Phase 1 Studies will
inform the Phase 2 decisions.
Additionally, in order to further
evaluate and potentially reduce
uncertainty in the long-term
performance assessment, DOE and
NYSERDA decided to perform a longterm probabilistic performance
assessment (PPA) for the West Valley
Site. The PPA model is currently being
developed in the GoldSim probabilistic
modeling platform and will be
supported by several process-level
models, including a surface water/
sediment transport model, a threedimensional groundwater flow model,
and an erosion model. The PPA will be
used to evaluate the range of
alternatives in the SEIS. As such, the
new information developed by the PPA
and component models will inform the
Phase 2 decisions.
The Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement for the West Valley
Site (DOE/EIS–0226–S1) (SEIS) will
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further the purposes of NEPA by
incorporating the new information
produced by the Phase 1 Studies, other
scientific studies being performed at the
West Valley Site, and the PPA as part of
the evaluation of the potential
environmental impacts of the Phase 2
alternatives.
Purpose and Need for Agency Action
DOE is required by the WVDP Act to
decontaminate and decommission the
tanks and facilities used in the
solidification of the high-level waste,
and any material and hardware used in
connection with the WVDP, in
accordance with such requirements as
NRC may prescribe. NRC has prescribed
its License Termination Rule as the
decommissioning criteria for the WVDP.
Therefore, DOE needs to determine the
manner that facilities, materials, and
hardware for which the Department is
responsible are managed or
decommissioned, in accordance with
NRC’s License Termination Rule and
applicable Federal and state
requirements. To this end, DOE needs to
determine what, if any, material or
structures for which it is responsible
that were not addressed in Phase 1 (i.e.,
Phase 2 facilities) will remain on site,
and what, if any, institutional controls,
engineered barriers, or stewardship
provisions would be needed. That is,
DOE needs to determine what it needs
to do to complete the WVDP and return
the Project Premises to NYSERDA.
NYSERDA needs to determine the
manner that Phase 2 facilities and
property for which NYSERDA is
responsible, including the SDA, will be
managed or decommissioned, in
accordance with applicable Federal and
state requirements. To this end,
NYSERDA needs to determine what, if
any, material or structures for which it
is responsible will remain on site, and
what, if any, institutional controls,
engineered barriers, or stewardship
provisions would be needed. It is
NYSERDA’s intent to pursue
termination of the existing 10 CFR part
50 license for the WNYNSC upon DOE’s
completion of decontamination and
decommissioning under the WVDP Act
in accordance with criteria prescribed
by NRC. NYSERDA plans to use the
analysis of alternatives in the SEIS for
the West Valley Site to support any
necessary NRC or New York State
Department of Environmental
Conservation (NYSDEC) license or
permit applications.
Proposed Action
The Proposed Action is the WVDP’s
completion and the decommissioning
and/or long-term management or
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stewardship of the WNYNSC and SDA.
This includes the decontamination and
decommissioning of the facilities
remaining at the West Valley Site after
completion of Phase 1
decommissioning.
Alternatives
The SEIS will examine the range of
reasonable Phase 2 alternatives (i.e., the
alternatives that meet DOE’s and
NYSERDA’s respective purpose and
need for action) and their potential
environmental impacts. The SEIS will
also analyze the No Action Alternative,
as required by NEPA and SEQRA.
As specified in NRC’s Final Policy
Statement, DOE and NYSERDA intend
to use NRC’s License Termination Rule
as the framework to evaluate
alternatives for decommissioning and/or
long-term stewardship actions involving
West Valley Site facilities.
The range of reasonable alternatives
encompasses those involving release of
West Valley Site facilities and areas for
re-use under unrestricted and restricted
conditions as allowed under the License
Termination Rule. Accordingly, the
SEIS will evaluate whether the
alternatives would meet the NRC
decommissioning criteria and other
applicable requirements. This
evaluation will include analysis of the
long-term radiological dose impacts of
the Phase 2 alternatives for the facilities
and areas on the West Valley Site. DOE
and NYSERDA will consider this
information as it is being developed in
determining details of the alternatives to
be analyzed in the SEIS. This process
for alternatives development will help
ensure that the range of alternatives is
adequate and provides a sound basis for
informed decision-making.
Specific action alternatives proposed
for analysis in the SEIS include the
Sitewide Close-in-Place Alternative and
the Sitewide Removal Alternative
(described below). Conceptually, these
alternatives represent the ends of the
spectrum of action alternatives from the
perspective of onsite and offsite
management of facilities and
contaminants, and the associated
amount of area for which unrestricted
versus restricted future land use would
be appropriate. In developing these
primary alternatives, DOE and
NYSERDA will explore alternative ways
to implement them, which would be
presented under the primary
alternatives as implementing options. In
addition, DOE and NYSERDA will
explore mitigation measures to avoid or
reduce potential environmental impacts
of the alternatives and implementing
options. These mitigation measures
could include institutional controls,
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license and or permit terms/controls
and other administrative controls (e.g.
deed restrictions), robust engineered
closure controls (e.g. multi-layer caps,
grouts, etc.), robust erosion control
structures, and/or additional removal of
radiological inventory.
In addition to these primary
alternatives and their associated
implementing options, analysis of at
least two ‘‘hybrid’’ alternatives is
planned. Conceptually, the hybrid
alternatives would represent points
along the middle of the alternatives
spectrum between the Sitewide Closein-Place Alternative and the Sitewide
Removal Alternative, with elements of
each. To that end, DOE and NYSERDA
will consider preliminary information
from the PPA as it is developed to
inform the development of these
alternatives.
The alternatives and associated
environmental analyses will be
structured so that decisions based on
the SEIS need not be limited only to a
specific set of elements that happen to
define a particular alternative. Rather,
decision-makers could ultimately select
an alternative comprised of elements of
one or more of the primary (including
hybrid) alternatives and their associated
implementing options.
DOE and NYSERDA invite comments
on this approach. Comments are also
invited on the potential scope of the
hybrid alternatives, including the
specific elements, facilities, and areas
that should be included.
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Preliminary Description of Alternatives
Sitewide Close-in-Place Alternative
Under this alternative, most Phase 2
facilities would be closed in place.
Major facilities and sources of
contamination such as the Waste Tank
Farm, NDA, and SDA would be
managed at their current locations.
Residual radioactivity in facilities with
larger inventories of long-lived
radionuclides would be isolated by
specially engineered designed structures
and barriers. These structures and
barriers would be designed to meet
regulatory requirements to retain
hazardous and radioactive constituents
to ensure they would be resistant to
long-term degradation and include
features to discourage inadvertent
intrusion into the material left on site.
Structures that would interfere with the
construction of these barriers would be
removed (e.g., the Supernatant
Treatment System Support Building).
Facilities with lesser amounts of
contamination (e.g., the North Plateau
Groundwater Plume, the Cesium Prong)
would be allowed to naturally attenuate.
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This approach would allow large areas
of the WNYNSC to be released for
unrestricted use. Facilities that are
closed in place, and any buffer areas
around them, as well as facilities that
are allowed to naturally attenuate,
would require long-term stewardship.
Sitewide Removal Alternative
Under this alternative, site facilities,
contaminated soil, sediment, and
groundwater would be removed to meet
criteria that would allow unrestricted
release of the WNYNSC. Radioactive,
hazardous, and mixed waste would be
characterized, packaged, and shipped
off site for disposal. Immediate
implementation of this alternative
would require the disposition of waste
for which there is currently no offsite
disposal location (e.g., potential nondefense transuranic waste and GreaterThan-Class C low-level radioactive
waste). Any such ‘‘orphan waste’’ would
be stored on site until an appropriate
offsite facility is available. Completion
of these activities would allow
unrestricted use of the site (i.e., the site
could be made available for any public
or private use).
Hybrid Alternatives
Analysis of at least two hybrid
alternatives is planned. The hybrid
alternatives could contain elements of
any or all of the other alternatives. For
example, a hybrid alternative might
include complete or partial removal of
certain facilities and close-in-place for
the remaining facilities. Additionally,
these actions could occur immediately
or after a safe-storage period. The results
of the PPA will be used to determine
which facilities should be removed and
which to close-in-place. For example, if
the PPA shows that a particular
radionuclide from a particular facility
dominates the long-term dose/risk
estimate, then one hybrid alternative
might be the removal of the material
containing that radionuclide from that
facility and closure in place of the
remaining facilities. Depending on the
facility and the amount of material to be
removed, the approach for
implementing the partial removal of
material from a facility under the hybrid
alternative may differ from the approach
presented for the Sitewide Removal
Alternative.
No Action Alternative
Under the No Action Alternative,
Phase 1 decommissioning actions would
be completed, but no further actions
toward decommissioning the West
Valley Site would be taken. The No
Action Alternative would involve the
continued management and oversight of
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West Valley Site facilities. The site
would continue to be monitored and
maintained for the foreseeable future, as
required by Federal and state
regulations, to protect the health and
safety of workers, the public, and the
environment. Additionally, periodic
maintenance activities (e.g., replacing
permeable treatment wall media,
replacing landfill geomembranes) would
continue during an assumed period of
active institutional controls until, for
purposes of analysis only, controls are
assumed to become ineffective. The No
Action Alternative would not meet the
purpose and need for agency action, but
analysis of the No Action Alternative is
required under NEPA and SEQRA to
provide a baseline against which the
environmental impacts from the other
analyzed alternatives can be compared.
DOE and NYSERDA plan to identify
a preferred alternative in the Draft SEIS.
Potential Environmental Issues for
Analysis and Potentially Significant
Adverse Impacts
DOE and NYSERDA have tentatively
identified the following potential
environmental issues and potentially
significant adverse impacts that will be
analyzed in the SEIS. The list is
presented to facilitate early comment on
the scope of the SEIS. It is not intended
to be all-inclusive nor to predetermine
the alternatives to be analyzed or their
potential impacts.
Potential Environmental Issues for
Analysis
• Issues associated with long-term
site stewardship, including duration
and costs of stewardship, regulatory and
engineering considerations, institutional
controls, and land use restrictions,
including the need for buffer areas.
• Ability of alternatives to satisfy the
NRC LTR decommissioning criteria for
the WVDP.
• Ability of alternatives to meet the
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability
Act risk range.
• Compliance with applicable
Federal, state, and local requirements.
• Identification of Derived
Concentration Guideline Limits and
other relevant clean-up concentrations,
where appropriate.
• The influence of, and potential
interactions of, any wastes remaining at
the West Valley Site after
decommissioning.
• Long-term site stability, including
seismicity and erosion, based upon
available data on the likelihood of
future weather events.
• Issues associated with Waste
Incidental to Reprocessing.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 35 / Wednesday, February 21, 2018 / Notices
• Irretrievable and irreversible
commitment of resources.
Potentially Significant Adverse Impacts
• Impacts to the general population
and onsite workers from radiological
and non-radiological releases from
decommissioning and/or long-term
stewardship activities. Transportation
impacts from shipments of radioactive,
hazardous, mixed, and clean waste
generated during decommissioning
activities.
• Impacts to the general population
and onsite workers from radiological
and non-radiological releases at
radiological and non-radiological waste
disposal sites receiving waste generated
during site decommissioning and/or
long-term stewardship activities.
• Impacts from postulated accidents.
• Disproportionately high and
adverse effects on low-income and
minority populations (environmental
justice).
• Socioeconomic impacts to local
communities.
• Areas of concern to the Seneca
Nation of Indians related to culturallyspecific considerations.
• Short-term and long-term land use
impacts.
• Short-term and long-term
environmental impacts, including air
and water quality, from
decommissioning and/or long-term
stewardship activities.
• Impacts to floodplains and
wetlands (the SEIS will contain an
assessment of potential floodplain and
wetland impacts in accordance with
DOE requirements (10 CFR part 1022)).
• Impacts to groundwater quality.
• Impacts on threatened and
endangered species.
Other Agency Involvement
DOE and NYSERDA invite Federal,
state, and local agencies with
jurisdiction by law or special expertise
to participate in the SEIS as cooperating
or involved agencies. At this time, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), NRC, and NYSDEC will
participate as cooperating agencies
under NEPA. NYSDEC and NYSDOH
will also participate as involved
agencies under SEQRA with respect to
NYSERDA’s proposed actions.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Public Scoping Process
The purpose of scoping is to
encourage public involvement and to
solicit public comments on the
proposed scope of the SEIS. DOE and
NYSERDA invite interested parties to
participate in the scoping process to
help identify the range of reasonable
alternatives and the environmental
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:57 Feb 20, 2018
Jkt 244001
issues to be analyzed. Written
comments may be provided by any of
the means described under ADDRESSES,
or orally at public scoping meetings.
Both oral and written comments will be
considered and given equal weight by
DOE and NYSERDA regardless of how
submitted. Comments must be provided
by April 23, 2018, to ensure
consideration in preparation of the Draft
SEIS. DOE and NYSERDA will consider
late comments to the extent practicable.
DOE and NYSERDA will hold three
public scoping meetings on the West
Valley SEIS on the following dates:
• Monday, March 19, 2018, from 6:00
p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the West Valley
Volunteer Hose Company, Inc.,
Firemen’s Memorial Hall and Training,
9091 Route 240, West Valley, NY 14171,
in the Main Hall.
• Tuesday, March 20, 2018, from 6:00
p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at Erie Community
College, City Campus, Post Office
Building, 121 Ellicott Street, Buffalo,
NY 14203, in the Minnie Gillette
Auditorium.
• Wednesday, March 21, 2018, from
6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Cattaraugus
Council Chambers, 12837 Route 438,
Irving, NY 14081.
Further information about these
meetings is available on the SEIS
website at
www.SEISWestValleySite.com and will
be announced in the local media.
Requests to speak at the public
meeting should be made to the DOE
Document Manager (see ADDRESSES).
Speakers will be scheduled on a firstcome, first-served basis. Individuals
may sign up at the door to speak and
will be accommodated as time permits.
Written comments will also be accepted
at the meeting. Speakers are encouraged
to provide written versions of their oral
comments for the record.
The meetings will be facilitated by a
moderator. Time will be provided for
meeting attendees to ask clarifying
questions. Individuals requesting to
speak on behalf of an organization must
identify the organization. Each speaker
will be allowed five minutes to present
comments unless more time is requested
and available. Comments will be
recorded by a court reporter and will
become part of the scoping meeting
record.
SEIS Process and Schedule
DOE and NYSERDA will consider
comments received during the public
scoping period in defining the
alternatives and issues to be analyzed in
detail in the Draft SEIS, which is
planned for issuance by the end of 2020.
After the document is distributed to the
public, EPA will publish a notice of
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
availability of the Draft SEIS in the
Federal Register, and NYSERDA will
publish notice of availability in the
State Environmental Notice Bulletin,
which will begin a 6-month public
comment period. DOE and NYSERDA
will announce how to comment on the
Draft SEIS and will hold at least three
public hearings during the public
comment period, but no sooner than 15
days after EPA’s notice of availability
and NYSERDA’s notice are published.
In preparing the Final SEIS, which is
planned for issuance in 2022, DOE and
NYSERDA will respond to comments
received on the Draft SEIS. DOE may
issue its ROD no sooner than 30 days
after EPA publishes a notice of
availability of the Final SEIS. NYSERDA
Findings and Decisions can be made no
sooner than 10 days after the Notice of
Completion of the Final SEIS is
published. DOE and NYSERDA intend
to complete the SEIS process to inform
Phase 2 decisions in 2022.
Notice of Floodplain and Wetland
Involvement: Because the proposed
project may involve actions in
floodplains and wetlands, in accordance
with DOE’s 10 CFR part 1022, the Draft
SEIS will include a floodplain and
wetland assessment, and, as
appropriate, the Final SEIS or ROD will
include a floodplain statement of
findings.
Public Reading Room
Documents referenced in this Notice
of Intent and Draft Scope and related
information are available online at
www.SEISWestValleySite.com and at the
Ashford Community and Training
Center, 9377 NY–240, West Valley, New
York 14171, (716) 942–6016.
Signed in Washington, DC, this 14th day of
February, 2018.
James M. Owendoff,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Environmental
Management, Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2018–03493 Filed 2–20–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
DOE/NSF Nuclear Science Advisory
Committee
Office of Science, Department
of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
This notice announces a
meeting of the DOE/NSF Nuclear
Science Advisory Committee (NSAC).
The Federal Advisory Committee Act
requires that public notice of these
meetings be announced in the Federal
Register.
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 35 (Wednesday, February 21, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 7464-7468]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-03493]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement for Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the West
Valley Demonstration Project and Western New York Nuclear Service
Center, Notice of Floodplain and Wetlands Involvement, and Draft Scope
AGENCY: New York State Energy Research and Development Authority,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of intent and draft scope.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the New York State
Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) announce their
intent to jointly prepare a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement
for Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the West Valley
Demonstration Project and Western New York Nuclear Service Center (DOE/
EIS-0226-S1), hereinafter referred to as the Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement (SEIS) for the West Valley Site, and to conduct a
public scoping process. The West Valley Site, for the purposes of this
SEIS and associated documents, includes the DOE West Valley
Demonstration Project (WVDP) or Project Premises, and the retained
premises, which includes the Western New York Nuclear Service Center
(WNYNSC), and the State-Licensed Disposal Area (SDA). In 2010, DOE and
NYSERDA decided to implement the Phased Decision-making Alternative,
which was the preferred alternative in the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for Decommissioning and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the West
Valley Demonstration Project and Western New York Nuclear Service
Center (DOE/EIS-0226) (2010 Final EIS). With this Notice of intent and
draft scope, DOE and NYSERDA are initiating the public scoping process
for the SEIS and requesting comments to help define the environmental
issues and the range of reasonable alternatives to be analyzed.
DATES: DOE and NYSERDA are inviting public comments on the scope and
content of the SEIS for the West Valley Site during a public scoping
period starting with the date of publication of this Notice and ending
on April 23, 2018. Comments must be submitted during this time period
to ensure consideration; late comments will be considered to the extent
practicable. DOE and NYSERDA will hold public scoping meetings on the
SEIS in West Valley, NY (March 19, 2018), in Buffalo, NY (March 20,
2018), and in Irving, NY (March 21, 2018). Further information about
the public scoping meetings is contained under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on the scope of the SEIS, requests to be
placed on the SEIS mailing list, and requests for information may be
submitted by U.S. mail to the DOE Document Manager, Mr. Martin Krentz,
West Valley Demonstration Project, U.S. Department of Energy, 10282
Rock Springs Road, AC-DOE, West Valley, New York 14171-9799, by email
to [email protected], or via the SEIS website at
www.SEISWestValleySite.com. Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other personal identifying information in
your comment, please be advised that your entire comment--including
your personal identifying information--may be made publicly available.
If you wish for DOE to withhold your name and/or other personally
identifiable information, please state this prominently at the
beginning of your comment. You may also submit comments anonymously.
The ``Public Reading Room'' section under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
lists the address of the reading room where documents referenced herein
are available. Documents and information about the SEIS process are
also available online at the SEIS website at
www.SEISWestValleySite.com.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information regarding the West
Valley Demonstration Project or the SEIS, contact Mr. Martin Krentz at
the address given above; telephone: (716) 942-4007; or email:
[email protected]. For general information on DOE's NEPA
process, contact Mr. Brian Costner (GC-54), Acting Director, Office of
NEPA Policy and Compliance, U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20585; telephone: (202) 586-
4600; facsimile: (202) 586-7031; or leave a message at 1-800-472-2756,
toll-free. Questions for NYSERDA should be directed to Dr. Lee Gordon,
New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, 9030-B Route
219, West Valley, New York 14171; telephone: (716) 942-9960, ext. 4963;
facsimile: (716) 942-9961; or email: [email protected]. Those
seeking general information on the SEQRA process should contact Ms.
Janice Dean, Deputy Counsel, New York State Energy Research and
Development Authority, 17 Columbia Circle, Albany, New York 12203-6399;
telephone: (518) 862-1090, ext. 3117; facsimile: (518) 862-1091; or
email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In 2010, DOE and NYSERDA decided to implement the Phased Decision-
making Alternative, which was the preferred alternative in the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for Decommissioning and/or Long-Term
Stewardship at the West Valley Demonstration Project and Western New
York Nuclear Service Center (DOE/EIS-0226) (2010 Final EIS). The Phased
Decision-making Alternative is described in the 2010 Final EIS, DOE's
associated Record of Decision (ROD) (75 FR 20582; April 20, 2010), and
NYSERDA's associated Findings Statement (May 12, 2010). During
implementation of Phase 1 of the Phased Decision-making Alternative,
which is ongoing, a number of highly contaminated facilities at the
West Valley Site are being removed via decontamination and demolition
and off-site disposal. The Phased Decision-making Alternative deferred
decisions (known as Phase 2 decisions) on several facilities for 10
years (the expected time frame to complete Phase 1 decommissioning
activities) while DOE and NYSERDA gather additional information and
perform additional analyses (Phase 1 Studies) to foster inter-agency
consensus and inform the decisions. DOE and NYSERDA intend to make
Phase 2 decisions in 2022 on the disposition of the facilities and
areas that would remain after completion of Phase 1 decommissioning.
The remaining facilities include the Waste Tank Farm, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC)-Licensed Disposal Area (NDA), non-source
area of the North Plateau Groundwater Plume, Construction and
Demolition Debris Landfill, Cesium Prong, contaminated stream
sediments, balance of the WNYNSC property, and SDA.
DOE and NYSERDA intend to jointly prepare an SEIS to inform Phase 2
decision-making for the West Valley Site. The SEIS process will be
structured to meet DOE and NYSERDA's respective environmental review
responsibilities under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA, 42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and the New York
[[Page 7465]]
State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA, N.Y. Env. Conserv. Law
Sec. 8-0101 et seq.), the West Valley Demonstration Project Act of
1980 (Pub. L. 96-368) (WVDP Act), the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (as
amended) (AEA), and other applicable Federal and state requirements.
The SEIS will be prepared in accordance with regulations of the Council
on Environmental Quality for implementing NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-
1508), DOE's NEPA Implementing Procedures (10 CFR part 1021), and State
of New York regulations for implementing SEQRA (6 NYCRR Part 617).
The WNYNSC is a 1,351-hectare (3,338-acre) site located 48
kilometers (30 miles) south of Buffalo, NY, and owned by NYSERDA. In
1962, Nuclear Fuel Services, Inc. (``NFS'') entered into Agreements
with the Atomic Energy Commission and New York State to construct the
first commercial reprocessing plant of nuclear fuel in the United
States. NFS, a private company, built and operated the fuel
reprocessing plant and burial grounds, processing 640 metric tons of
spent nuclear fuel at the WNYNSC from 1966 to 1972 under an Atomic
Energy Commission license. Fuel reprocessing ended in 1972, when the
plant was shut down for modifications. In 1976, in view of increased
costs and regulatory requirements, NFS decided to exercise its
contractual right to yield responsibility for the WNYNSC to the State
of New York. NFS withdrew without removing any of the in-process
nuclear wastes. NYSERDA now holds title to and manages the WNYNSC.
In 1980, Congress passed the WVDP Act, Public Law 96-368. The WVDP
Act requires DOE to demonstrate that the liquid high-level radioactive
waste from reprocessing could be safely managed by solidifying it at
the WNYNSC and transporting it to a Federal repository for permanent
disposal. Specifically, Section 2(a) of the WVDP Act directs DOE to
take the following actions:
1. Solidify, in a form suitable for transportation and disposal,
the high-level radioactive waste at the WNYNSC;
2. Develop containers suitable for the high-level radioactive
waste's permanent disposal;
3. As soon as feasible, transport the solidified waste to a Federal
repository for permanent disposal;
4. Dispose of low-level radioactive waste and transuranic waste
produced by the solidification of the high-level radioactive waste; and
5. Decontaminate and decommission the tanks and other facilities
used at the WNYNSC in which the high-level radioactive waste was
solidified, the facilities used in the waste's solidification, and any
material and hardware used in connection with the West Valley
Demonstration Project.
Pursuant to the WVDP Act, on October 1, 1980, DOE and NYSERDA
entered into a Cooperative Agreement (amended September 18, 1981) that
established a framework for the implementation of the WVDP. Under the
agreement, NYSERDA has made available to DOE, without transfer of
title, a 68-hectare (167-acre) area known as the Project Premises,
which includes the formerly operated spent nuclear fuel reprocessing
plant, spent nuclear fuel receiving and storage area, underground
liquid high-level waste storage tanks, and a liquid low-level waste
treatment facility with associated lagoons, as well as other
facilities. Most of the facilities on the Project Premises were
radioactively contaminated from reprocessing operations and are located
on a geographic area known as the North Plateau. Among the other
facilities located within the Project Premises is a radioactive waste
disposal area known as the NRC-licensed disposal area (NDA). Adjacent
to the Project Premises is a radioactive waste disposal area known as
the State-Licensed Disposal Area (SDA), for which NYSERDA has
operational responsibility. Both the NDA and SDA are located on a
geographic area known as the South Plateau.
In 1982, DOE assumed control, but not ownership, of the Project
Premises to conduct the WVDP, as required under the WVDP Act. As part
of the WVDP Act, NRC was charged with developing decommissioning
criteria. In the ``Decommissioning Criteria for the WVDP at the West
Valley Site; Final Policy Statement'' (NRC Policy Statement) (67 FR
5003; February 1, 2002), NRC prescribed the requirements for
decommissioning the WVDP. NRC prescribed its License Termination Rule
as the decommissioning goal for the WVDP and all NRC-licensed portions
of the WNYNSC. The decommissioning criteria define the conditions that
would allow the Project Premises to be used with specified restrictions
or without restrictions on future use. If those conditions cannot be
met, the NRC Policy Statement also defines the circumstances under
which sections of the Project Premises could remain under long-term
management or stewardship. NRC intends to use the SEIS to evaluate the
environmental impacts of the various alternatives before deciding
whether to accept the preferred alternative as meeting the criteria
permitted by the License Termination Rule. NRC has placed the Technical
Specifications of NYSERDA's license under the NRC regulations at Title
10 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50 in abeyance during DOE's
fulfillment of its WVDP Act requirements.
A 1987 Stipulation of Compromise between the Coalition on West
Valley Nuclear Wastes and DOE specified that a closure environmental
impact statement (EIS) be prepared that also addresses the disposal of
those Class B and C low-level radioactive wastes generated as a result
of DOE's activities at the WVDP. In 1990, DOE and NYSERDA entered into
a supplemental agreement to prepare an EIS to address both the
completion of the WVDP and closure or long-term management of the
WNYNSC.
After issuance of a draft EIS in 1996, DOE and NYSERDA in 2001
announced a revised EIS strategy. Under the revised strategy, DOE and
NYSERDA, as co-lead preparers, issued a draft EIS in 2008 and, in 2010,
issued the Final Environmental Impact Statement for Decommissioning
and/or Long-Term Stewardship at the West Valley Demonstration Project
and Western New York Nuclear Service Center (DOE/EIS-0226) (2010 FEIS).
As described in DOE's 2010 ROD and NYSERDA's 2010 Findings Statement,
DOE and NYSERDA decided to implement the Phased Decision-making
Alternative based on information and analyses contained in the 2010
FEIS. During implementation of Phase 1 of the Phased Decision-making
Alternative, which is ongoing, a number of highly contaminated
facilities at the West Valley Site are being removed via
decontamination and demolition and off-site disposal. The Phased
Decision-making Alternative deferred decisions (known as Phase 2
decisions) on several facilities for up to 10 years (the expected time
frame to complete Phase 1 decommissioning activities) while DOE and
NYSERDA gather additional information and perform additional analyses
(Phase 1 Studies) to foster interagency consensus and better inform the
Phase 2 decisions. DOE and NYSERDA plan to make Phase 2 decisions in
2022 on the disposition of the facilities and areas that would remain
after completion of Phase 1 decommissioning. The remaining facilities
and areas include the Waste Tank Farm, NDA, non-source area of the
North Plateau Groundwater Plume, Construction and Demolition Debris
Landfill, Cesium Prong, contaminated stream sediments, balance of the
WNYNSC property, and SDA.
DOE and NYSERDA have determined that the preparation of an SEIS
would further the purposes of NEPA by
[[Page 7466]]
including new information and changes since issuance of the 2010 Final
EIS, and is consistent with the commitment in the 2010 ROD and Findings
Statement to providing robust and meaningful opportunities for public
participation during decommissioning. Preparation of an SEIS for the
West Valley Site would also further the purposes of SEQRA, the WVDP
Act, the AEA, and other applicable Federal and state requirements.
Phase 2 decisions will be informed by the Phase 1 and other scientific
studies being performed at the West Valley Site, a long-term
probabilistic performance assessment, and an SEIS that will incorporate
the above analyses as part of the evaluation of the potential
environmental impacts of the range of reasonable Phase 2 alternatives
proposed for the West Valley Site. The SEIS will ``tier'' (40 CFR
1502.20) from the 2010 FEIS, and, where appropriate, information and
analyses from the 2010 Final EIS will be summarized and incorporated by
reference in the SEIS. The SEIS will contain new information and
analyses to ensure its adequacy for Phase 2 decision-making.
Following the 2010 FEIS, DOE and NYSERDA established a process for
conducting scientific studies (the Phase 1 Studies) in order to
facilitate interagency consensus to complete decommissioning of the
remaining facilities. Subject-matter expert working groups were
established and studies conducted on topics such as erosion modeling,
the geomorphic history of the site, geologic material properties, site
radiological inventory, and precedent waste exhumation projects/
technologies. The new information produced by these Phase 1 Studies
will inform the Phase 2 decisions.
Additionally, in order to further evaluate and potentially reduce
uncertainty in the long-term performance assessment, DOE and NYSERDA
decided to perform a long-term probabilistic performance assessment
(PPA) for the West Valley Site. The PPA model is currently being
developed in the GoldSim probabilistic modeling platform and will be
supported by several process-level models, including a surface water/
sediment transport model, a three-dimensional groundwater flow model,
and an erosion model. The PPA will be used to evaluate the range of
alternatives in the SEIS. As such, the new information developed by the
PPA and component models will inform the Phase 2 decisions.
The Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the West Valley
Site (DOE/EIS-0226-S1) (SEIS) will further the purposes of NEPA by
incorporating the new information produced by the Phase 1 Studies,
other scientific studies being performed at the West Valley Site, and
the PPA as part of the evaluation of the potential environmental
impacts of the Phase 2 alternatives.
Purpose and Need for Agency Action
DOE is required by the WVDP Act to decontaminate and decommission
the tanks and facilities used in the solidification of the high-level
waste, and any material and hardware used in connection with the WVDP,
in accordance with such requirements as NRC may prescribe. NRC has
prescribed its License Termination Rule as the decommissioning criteria
for the WVDP. Therefore, DOE needs to determine the manner that
facilities, materials, and hardware for which the Department is
responsible are managed or decommissioned, in accordance with NRC's
License Termination Rule and applicable Federal and state requirements.
To this end, DOE needs to determine what, if any, material or
structures for which it is responsible that were not addressed in Phase
1 (i.e., Phase 2 facilities) will remain on site, and what, if any,
institutional controls, engineered barriers, or stewardship provisions
would be needed. That is, DOE needs to determine what it needs to do to
complete the WVDP and return the Project Premises to NYSERDA.
NYSERDA needs to determine the manner that Phase 2 facilities and
property for which NYSERDA is responsible, including the SDA, will be
managed or decommissioned, in accordance with applicable Federal and
state requirements. To this end, NYSERDA needs to determine what, if
any, material or structures for which it is responsible will remain on
site, and what, if any, institutional controls, engineered barriers, or
stewardship provisions would be needed. It is NYSERDA's intent to
pursue termination of the existing 10 CFR part 50 license for the
WNYNSC upon DOE's completion of decontamination and decommissioning
under the WVDP Act in accordance with criteria prescribed by NRC.
NYSERDA plans to use the analysis of alternatives in the SEIS for the
West Valley Site to support any necessary NRC or New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) license or permit
applications.
Proposed Action
The Proposed Action is the WVDP's completion and the
decommissioning and/or long-term management or stewardship of the
WNYNSC and SDA. This includes the decontamination and decommissioning
of the facilities remaining at the West Valley Site after completion of
Phase 1 decommissioning.
Alternatives
The SEIS will examine the range of reasonable Phase 2 alternatives
(i.e., the alternatives that meet DOE's and NYSERDA's respective
purpose and need for action) and their potential environmental impacts.
The SEIS will also analyze the No Action Alternative, as required by
NEPA and SEQRA.
As specified in NRC's Final Policy Statement, DOE and NYSERDA
intend to use NRC's License Termination Rule as the framework to
evaluate alternatives for decommissioning and/or long-term stewardship
actions involving West Valley Site facilities.
The range of reasonable alternatives encompasses those involving
release of West Valley Site facilities and areas for re-use under
unrestricted and restricted conditions as allowed under the License
Termination Rule. Accordingly, the SEIS will evaluate whether the
alternatives would meet the NRC decommissioning criteria and other
applicable requirements. This evaluation will include analysis of the
long-term radiological dose impacts of the Phase 2 alternatives for the
facilities and areas on the West Valley Site. DOE and NYSERDA will
consider this information as it is being developed in determining
details of the alternatives to be analyzed in the SEIS. This process
for alternatives development will help ensure that the range of
alternatives is adequate and provides a sound basis for informed
decision-making.
Specific action alternatives proposed for analysis in the SEIS
include the Sitewide Close-in-Place Alternative and the Sitewide
Removal Alternative (described below). Conceptually, these alternatives
represent the ends of the spectrum of action alternatives from the
perspective of onsite and offsite management of facilities and
contaminants, and the associated amount of area for which unrestricted
versus restricted future land use would be appropriate. In developing
these primary alternatives, DOE and NYSERDA will explore alternative
ways to implement them, which would be presented under the primary
alternatives as implementing options. In addition, DOE and NYSERDA will
explore mitigation measures to avoid or reduce potential environmental
impacts of the alternatives and implementing options. These mitigation
measures could include institutional controls,
[[Page 7467]]
license and or permit terms/controls and other administrative controls
(e.g. deed restrictions), robust engineered closure controls (e.g.
multi-layer caps, grouts, etc.), robust erosion control structures,
and/or additional removal of radiological inventory.
In addition to these primary alternatives and their associated
implementing options, analysis of at least two ``hybrid'' alternatives
is planned. Conceptually, the hybrid alternatives would represent
points along the middle of the alternatives spectrum between the
Sitewide Close-in-Place Alternative and the Sitewide Removal
Alternative, with elements of each. To that end, DOE and NYSERDA will
consider preliminary information from the PPA as it is developed to
inform the development of these alternatives.
The alternatives and associated environmental analyses will be
structured so that decisions based on the SEIS need not be limited only
to a specific set of elements that happen to define a particular
alternative. Rather, decision-makers could ultimately select an
alternative comprised of elements of one or more of the primary
(including hybrid) alternatives and their associated implementing
options.
DOE and NYSERDA invite comments on this approach. Comments are also
invited on the potential scope of the hybrid alternatives, including
the specific elements, facilities, and areas that should be included.
Preliminary Description of Alternatives
Sitewide Close-in-Place Alternative
Under this alternative, most Phase 2 facilities would be closed in
place. Major facilities and sources of contamination such as the Waste
Tank Farm, NDA, and SDA would be managed at their current locations.
Residual radioactivity in facilities with larger inventories of long-
lived radionuclides would be isolated by specially engineered designed
structures and barriers. These structures and barriers would be
designed to meet regulatory requirements to retain hazardous and
radioactive constituents to ensure they would be resistant to long-term
degradation and include features to discourage inadvertent intrusion
into the material left on site. Structures that would interfere with
the construction of these barriers would be removed (e.g., the
Supernatant Treatment System Support Building). Facilities with lesser
amounts of contamination (e.g., the North Plateau Groundwater Plume,
the Cesium Prong) would be allowed to naturally attenuate. This
approach would allow large areas of the WNYNSC to be released for
unrestricted use. Facilities that are closed in place, and any buffer
areas around them, as well as facilities that are allowed to naturally
attenuate, would require long-term stewardship.
Sitewide Removal Alternative
Under this alternative, site facilities, contaminated soil,
sediment, and groundwater would be removed to meet criteria that would
allow unrestricted release of the WNYNSC. Radioactive, hazardous, and
mixed waste would be characterized, packaged, and shipped off site for
disposal. Immediate implementation of this alternative would require
the disposition of waste for which there is currently no offsite
disposal location (e.g., potential non-defense transuranic waste and
Greater-Than-Class C low-level radioactive waste). Any such ``orphan
waste'' would be stored on site until an appropriate offsite facility
is available. Completion of these activities would allow unrestricted
use of the site (i.e., the site could be made available for any public
or private use).
Hybrid Alternatives
Analysis of at least two hybrid alternatives is planned. The hybrid
alternatives could contain elements of any or all of the other
alternatives. For example, a hybrid alternative might include complete
or partial removal of certain facilities and close-in-place for the
remaining facilities. Additionally, these actions could occur
immediately or after a safe-storage period. The results of the PPA will
be used to determine which facilities should be removed and which to
close-in-place. For example, if the PPA shows that a particular
radionuclide from a particular facility dominates the long-term dose/
risk estimate, then one hybrid alternative might be the removal of the
material containing that radionuclide from that facility and closure in
place of the remaining facilities. Depending on the facility and the
amount of material to be removed, the approach for implementing the
partial removal of material from a facility under the hybrid
alternative may differ from the approach presented for the Sitewide
Removal Alternative.
No Action Alternative
Under the No Action Alternative, Phase 1 decommissioning actions
would be completed, but no further actions toward decommissioning the
West Valley Site would be taken. The No Action Alternative would
involve the continued management and oversight of West Valley Site
facilities. The site would continue to be monitored and maintained for
the foreseeable future, as required by Federal and state regulations,
to protect the health and safety of workers, the public, and the
environment. Additionally, periodic maintenance activities (e.g.,
replacing permeable treatment wall media, replacing landfill
geomembranes) would continue during an assumed period of active
institutional controls until, for purposes of analysis only, controls
are assumed to become ineffective. The No Action Alternative would not
meet the purpose and need for agency action, but analysis of the No
Action Alternative is required under NEPA and SEQRA to provide a
baseline against which the environmental impacts from the other
analyzed alternatives can be compared.
DOE and NYSERDA plan to identify a preferred alternative in the
Draft SEIS.
Potential Environmental Issues for Analysis and Potentially Significant
Adverse Impacts
DOE and NYSERDA have tentatively identified the following potential
environmental issues and potentially significant adverse impacts that
will be analyzed in the SEIS. The list is presented to facilitate early
comment on the scope of the SEIS. It is not intended to be all-
inclusive nor to predetermine the alternatives to be analyzed or their
potential impacts.
Potential Environmental Issues for Analysis
Issues associated with long-term site stewardship,
including duration and costs of stewardship, regulatory and engineering
considerations, institutional controls, and land use restrictions,
including the need for buffer areas.
Ability of alternatives to satisfy the NRC LTR
decommissioning criteria for the WVDP.
Ability of alternatives to meet the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act risk range.
Compliance with applicable Federal, state, and local
requirements.
Identification of Derived Concentration Guideline Limits
and other relevant clean-up concentrations, where appropriate.
The influence of, and potential interactions of, any
wastes remaining at the West Valley Site after decommissioning.
Long-term site stability, including seismicity and
erosion, based upon available data on the likelihood of future weather
events.
Issues associated with Waste Incidental to Reprocessing.
[[Page 7468]]
Irretrievable and irreversible commitment of resources.
Potentially Significant Adverse Impacts
Impacts to the general population and onsite workers from
radiological and non-radiological releases from decommissioning and/or
long-term stewardship activities. Transportation impacts from shipments
of radioactive, hazardous, mixed, and clean waste generated during
decommissioning activities.
Impacts to the general population and onsite workers from
radiological and non-radiological releases at radiological and non-
radiological waste disposal sites receiving waste generated during site
decommissioning and/or long-term stewardship activities.
Impacts from postulated accidents.
Disproportionately high and adverse effects on low-income
and minority populations (environmental justice).
Socioeconomic impacts to local communities.
Areas of concern to the Seneca Nation of Indians related
to culturally-specific considerations.
Short-term and long-term land use impacts.
Short-term and long-term environmental impacts, including
air and water quality, from decommissioning and/or long-term
stewardship activities.
Impacts to floodplains and wetlands (the SEIS will contain
an assessment of potential floodplain and wetland impacts in accordance
with DOE requirements (10 CFR part 1022)).
Impacts to groundwater quality.
Impacts on threatened and endangered species.
Other Agency Involvement
DOE and NYSERDA invite Federal, state, and local agencies with
jurisdiction by law or special expertise to participate in the SEIS as
cooperating or involved agencies. At this time, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA), NRC, and NYSDEC will participate as
cooperating agencies under NEPA. NYSDEC and NYSDOH will also
participate as involved agencies under SEQRA with respect to NYSERDA's
proposed actions.
Public Scoping Process
The purpose of scoping is to encourage public involvement and to
solicit public comments on the proposed scope of the SEIS. DOE and
NYSERDA invite interested parties to participate in the scoping process
to help identify the range of reasonable alternatives and the
environmental issues to be analyzed. Written comments may be provided
by any of the means described under ADDRESSES, or orally at public
scoping meetings. Both oral and written comments will be considered and
given equal weight by DOE and NYSERDA regardless of how submitted.
Comments must be provided by April 23, 2018, to ensure consideration in
preparation of the Draft SEIS. DOE and NYSERDA will consider late
comments to the extent practicable.
DOE and NYSERDA will hold three public scoping meetings on the West
Valley SEIS on the following dates:
Monday, March 19, 2018, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the
West Valley Volunteer Hose Company, Inc., Firemen's Memorial Hall and
Training, 9091 Route 240, West Valley, NY 14171, in the Main Hall.
Tuesday, March 20, 2018, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at
Erie Community College, City Campus, Post Office Building, 121 Ellicott
Street, Buffalo, NY 14203, in the Minnie Gillette Auditorium.
Wednesday, March 21, 2018, from 6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at
the Cattaraugus Council Chambers, 12837 Route 438, Irving, NY 14081.
Further information about these meetings is available on the SEIS
website at www.SEISWestValleySite.com and will be announced in the
local media.
Requests to speak at the public meeting should be made to the DOE
Document Manager (see ADDRESSES).
Speakers will be scheduled on a first-come, first-served basis.
Individuals may sign up at the door to speak and will be accommodated
as time permits. Written comments will also be accepted at the meeting.
Speakers are encouraged to provide written versions of their oral
comments for the record.
The meetings will be facilitated by a moderator. Time will be
provided for meeting attendees to ask clarifying questions. Individuals
requesting to speak on behalf of an organization must identify the
organization. Each speaker will be allowed five minutes to present
comments unless more time is requested and available. Comments will be
recorded by a court reporter and will become part of the scoping
meeting record.
SEIS Process and Schedule
DOE and NYSERDA will consider comments received during the public
scoping period in defining the alternatives and issues to be analyzed
in detail in the Draft SEIS, which is planned for issuance by the end
of 2020. After the document is distributed to the public, EPA will
publish a notice of availability of the Draft SEIS in the Federal
Register, and NYSERDA will publish notice of availability in the State
Environmental Notice Bulletin, which will begin a 6-month public
comment period. DOE and NYSERDA will announce how to comment on the
Draft SEIS and will hold at least three public hearings during the
public comment period, but no sooner than 15 days after EPA's notice of
availability and NYSERDA's notice are published. In preparing the Final
SEIS, which is planned for issuance in 2022, DOE and NYSERDA will
respond to comments received on the Draft SEIS. DOE may issue its ROD
no sooner than 30 days after EPA publishes a notice of availability of
the Final SEIS. NYSERDA Findings and Decisions can be made no sooner
than 10 days after the Notice of Completion of the Final SEIS is
published. DOE and NYSERDA intend to complete the SEIS process to
inform Phase 2 decisions in 2022.
Notice of Floodplain and Wetland Involvement: Because the proposed
project may involve actions in floodplains and wetlands, in accordance
with DOE's 10 CFR part 1022, the Draft SEIS will include a floodplain
and wetland assessment, and, as appropriate, the Final SEIS or ROD will
include a floodplain statement of findings.
Public Reading Room
Documents referenced in this Notice of Intent and Draft Scope and
related information are available online at www.SEISWestValleySite.com
and at the Ashford Community and Training Center, 9377 NY-240, West
Valley, New York 14171, (716) 942-6016.
Signed in Washington, DC, this 14th day of February, 2018.
James M. Owendoff,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management, Department of
Energy.
[FR Doc. 2018-03493 Filed 2-20-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P