Amended Record of Decision for the Site-Wide Environmental Impact Statement for the Continued Operation of Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, 54544-54548 [2020-19349]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 171 / Wednesday, September 2, 2020 / Notices
Dated: August 28, 2020.
Stephanie Valentine,
PRA Coordinator, Strategic Collections and
Clearance Governance and Strategy Division,
Office of Chief Data Officer, Office of
Planning, Evaluation and Policy
Development.
[FR Doc. 2020–19422 Filed 9–1–20; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Environmental Management SiteSpecific Advisory Board, Northern New
Mexico
Office of Environmental
Management, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of open virtual meeting.
AGENCY:
This notice announces an
online virtual meeting of the
Environmental Management SiteSpecific Advisory Board (EM SSAB),
Northern New Mexico. The Federal
Advisory Committee Act requires that
public notice of this conference call be
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DATES: Wednesday, September 23, 2020;
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Please contact Menice Santistevan by
email, Menice.Santistevan@em.doe.gov,
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Thursday, September 17, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Menice Santistevan, Northern New
Mexico Citizens’ Advisory Board
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Santa Fe, NM 87506. Phone (505) 995–
0393; Fax (505) 989–1752 or Email:
Menice.Santistevan@em.doe.gov.
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SUMMARY:
Tentative Agenda
• Call to Order
• Welcome and Introductions
• Roll Call
• Approval of Agenda
• Approval of July 22, 2020 Conference
Call Minutes
• Update from NNMCAB Deputy
Designated Federal Officer
• Old Business
Æ Report from NNMCAB Chair and
Vice Chair
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Æ Report from Committee Chairs
Æ Report from Nominating Committee
• New Business
Æ Election of Officers for Fiscal Year
2021
Æ Other Items
• Update from EM Los Alamos Field
Office
• Update from New Mexico
Environment Department
• Update on DP Road
• Public Comment Period
• Wrap-Up and Comments from
NNMCAB Members
• Adjourn
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Written statements may be filed with
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meeting-materials.
Signed in Washington, DC on August 28,
2020.
LaTanya Butler,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. 2020–19354 Filed 9–1–20; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Amended Record of Decision for the
Site-Wide Environmental Impact
Statement for the Continued Operation
of Los Alamos National Laboratory,
Los Alamos, NM
National Nuclear Security
Administration, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Amended record of decision.
AGENCY:
The National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA), a
semi-autonomous agency within the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), is
announcing this amendment to the
September 26, 2008 Record of Decision
(ROD) for the Site-Wide Environmental
Impact Statement (SWEIS) for the
Continued Operation of Los Alamos
National Laboratory (LANL), Los
Alamos, NM (2008 LANL SWEIS ROD).
In this Amended ROD, NNSA
announces its decision to implement
SUMMARY:
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elements of the 2008 LANL SWEIS
Expanded Operations Alternative
needed to produce a minimum of 30
war reserve pits per year during 2026 for
the national pit production mission and
to implement surge efforts to exceed 30
pits per year to meet Nuclear Posture
Review (NPR) and national policy.
NNSA has previously evaluated this
action at the programmatic level in the
Complex Transformation SPEIS and at
the site-specific level in the LANL
Sitewide Environmental Impact
Statement (SWEIS), and recently
completed a review of those prior
analyses in a separate Supplement
Analysis (SA) for each document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information on this Amended
ROD or the 2020 LANL SA, contact:
Kristen Dors, NEPA Compliance
Manager, U.S. Department of Energy,
National Nuclear Security
Administration, Los Alamos Field
Office, 3747 W. Jemez Road, Los
Alamos, NM 87544; phone: (505) 667–
5491; or via email at lanlsweissa@
nnsa.doe.gov. This Amended ROD, the
2020 LANL SA, and related NEPA
documents are available at https://
www.energy.gov/nnsa/nnsa-nepareading-room.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Pit production, at a level of 80 pits per
year at LANL, has been analyzed in two
programmatic environmental impact
statements (EISs) and two LANL sitewide EISs, including the 1999 Site-Wide
Environmental Impact Statement for the
Continued Operation of the Los Alamos
National Laboratory (1999 LANL
SWEIS) (DOE/EIS–0238), and the 2008
Final Site-Wide Environmental Impact
Statement for Continued Operation of
Los Alamos National Laboratory (2008
LANL SWEIS) (DOE/EIS–0380). As
national policy and national defense
needs have evolved, NNSA prepared a
supplement analysis (SA) to the 2008
LANL SWEIS (2020 LANL SA) (DOE/
EIS–380–SA–06). The 2020 LANL SA
re-evaluates the potential environmental
impacts of producing a minimum of 30
pits per year at LANL and of
implementing surge efforts to exceed 30
pits per year to determine if there have
been substantial changes to NNSA’s
proposed implementation of increased
pit production or significant new
circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns, within the
meaning of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA). After preparing and
considering the 2020 LANL SA, NNSA
has determined that no further NEPA
analysis is needed prior to issuing this
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Amended ROD. NNSA has a statutory
mission to maintain and enhance the
safety, reliability, and performance of
the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile
including the ability to design, produce,
and test, in order to meet national
security requirements. The purpose and
need for the continued operation of
LANL is to provide support for NNSA’s
core missions as directed by Congress
and the President (2008 LANL SWEIS).
Congress and the President have
directed that during 2026 LANL will
produce a minimum of 30 war reserve
pits per year for the national pit
production mission and implement
surge efforts to exceed 30 pits per year
to meet NPR and national policy (50
U.S.C. 2538a; Pub. L. 115–232, Section
3120). To meet this direction, NNSA
must now implement previously
analyzed elements of the Expanded
Operations Alternative from the 2008
LANL SWEIS.
The environmental impacts of pit
production at LANL have been analyzed
at a both programmatic and site-specific
level several times. The first
programmatic EIS in the post-Cold War
era was the 1996 Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement for
Stockpile Stewardship and Management
(SSM PEIS) (DOE/EIS–0236). The SSM
PEIS evaluates pit production of 80 pits
per year at LANL. In December 1996,
NNSA issued a ROD announcing a
decision setting pit production at LANL
at 20 pits per year (61 FR 68014;
December 26, 1996). Tiering from the
SSM PEIS, the site-specific 1999 LANL
SWEIS also evaluates pit production
levels of 80 pits per year at LANL. In the
1999 LANL ROD, NNSA confirmed its
decision for pit production at LANL at
20 pits per year (64 FR 50797; Sept 20,
1999).
In 2008, NNSA prepared the Complex
Transformation Supplemental
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement—Operations Involving
Plutonium, Uranium, and the Assembly
and Disassembly of Nuclear Weapons
(Complex Transformation SPEIS) (DOE/
EIS–0236–S4). The Complex
Transformation SPEIS evaluates, among
other things, alternatives for producing
10–200 pits per year at different site
alternatives, including LANL. In the
2008 Programmatic ROD, NNSA did not
make any new decisions related to pit
production capacity beyond 20 pits per
year at LANL (73 FR 77644 December
19, 2008). Tiering from the Complex
Transformation SPEIS, the 2008 LANL
SWEIS analyzed three alternatives: A
Reduced Operations Alternative, a No
Action Alternative (20 pits per year),
and an Expanded Operations
Alternative (80 pits per year). Under the
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Expanded Operations Alternative,
NNSA analyzed existing space at LANL
in the Plutonium Facility and other
infrastructure to support production of
up to 80 pits per year. In the 2008 LANL
SWEIS ROD and subsequent RODs,
NNSA selected a No Action Alternative
(continuation of existing operations)
with some elements of an Expanded
Operations Alternative, which
maintained NNSA’s decision for pit
production levels of 20 pits per year at
LANL (73 FR 55833 September 26,
2008; 74 FR 33232 July 10, 2009; and 76
FR 40352 July 8, 2011).
Both federal law and national security
policy now require pit production rates
of a minimum of 30 pits per year at
LANL during 2026, and not less than 80
pits per year nationally during 2030 (50
U.S.C. 2538a; Pub. L. 115–232). Because
operations involving SNM are complex,
implementing changes in operations
such as pit production take several
years. To these ends, NNSA is issuing
an Amended ROD to the Complex
Transformation SPEIS announcing its
programmatic decision to implement
elements of a Modified Distributed
Centers of Excellence (DCE) Alternative
whereby LANL will produce a
minimum of 30 war reserve pits per year
for the national pit production mission
during 2026 and implement surge
efforts to exceed 30 pits per year as
needed. Prior to issuing that Amended
ROD, NNSA prepared an SA of the
Complex Transformation SPEIS to
determine if the existing Complex
Transformation SPEIS should be
supplemented, a new EIS should be
prepared, or that no further NEPA
analysis would be required. Based on
the analysis presented in the 2019
SPEIS SA, NNSA determined that no
further NEPA analysis was needed at a
programmatic level.
NNSA is now issuing an Amended
ROD to the 2008 LANL SWEIS. Prior to
issuing this Amended ROD, NNSA
prepared the 2020 LANL SA to
determine if the existing 2008 LANL
SWEIS should be supplemented, a new
EIS should be prepared, or that no
further NEPA analysis would be
required. Based on the analysis
presented in the 2020 SA, NNSA
determined that no further NEPA
analysis was needed prior to issuing this
Amended ROD.
Changes Since Issuance of the 2008
LANL SWEIS RODs
NNSA has not implemented all
aspects of the 2008 LANL SWEIS
Expanded Operations Alternative that
were anticipated for producing more
than 20 pits per year. One primary
element that has changed is that a
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specific facility that NNSA previously
analyzed, the Chemistry and Metallurgy
Research Replacement Nuclear Facility
(CMRR–NF), was not constructed at
LANL. The CMRR–NF was a planned
support facility for pit production and
was not itself to be a pit production
facility. Many support operations for pit
production have been historically
located in the Chemistry and Metallurgy
Research (CMR) Facility, and CMRR–NF
had been thought necessary to replace
CMR. The support operations housed in
CMR have been or can be relocated to
other facilities at LANL, and a new
CMRR–NF is no longer required to meet
current mission needs. NNSA remains
committed to the closure of the CMR
Facility and has made upgrades to
existing plutonium facilities,
constructed new support facilities, and
made administrative changes that have
leveraged the use of existing LANL
facilities.
Another change since issuance of the
SWEIS RODs is that NNSA has made
substantial facility upgrades to address
previous technical and seismic concerns
related to LANL’s pit production
facility, the Plutonium Facility. In the
2009 Amended ROD to the 2008 LANL
SWEIS, NNSA issued a decision on
certain elements of an Expanded
Operations Alternative at LANL that
authorized upgrades to the Plutonium
Facility. Over the past ten years, NNSA
has been implementing these upgrade
projects. Separately, there was a threeyear operational pause in LANL’s
Plutonium Facility but operations have
resumed. The Plutonium Facility is
again operational and pit production
activities have resumed. The NNSA pit
production mission at LANL is
operating below the level of 20 pits per
year that was identified in previous
NNSA decisions.
The United States has emphasized the
need to eventually produce 80 pits per
year and while the drivers and the
requirement for pit production have
remained relatively unchanged there
have been specific changes in the law
and national policy regarding pit
production since issuance of the 2008
LANL SWEIS. Since 2014, federal law
has required the nuclear security
enterprise to produce not less than 30
war reserve plutonium pits during 2026.
Federal law now requires that the
nuclear security enterprise produce not
less than 80 war reserve plutonium pits
during 2030 (50 U.S.C. 2538a).
In addition, on January 27, 2017, the
President directed the Department of
Defense (DoD) to conduct an NPR which
was issued in 2018. The 2018 NPR
echoed the need for pit production and
articulated a national policy that is
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consistent with Congressional and
Presidential direction, stating that the
United States will pursue initiatives to
ensure the necessary capability,
capacity, and responsiveness of the
nuclear weapons infrastructure and the
needed skill of the workforce, including
providing the enduring capability and
capacity to produce plutonium pits at a
rate of no fewer than 80 pits per year
during 2030. The 2018 NPR also details
the evolving and uncertain nuclear
threat environment facing the United
States. Concurrent with the 2018 NPR,
DOE conducted an Analysis of
Alternatives (AoA) to identify and
assess alternatives across DOE sites that
could deliver the infrastructure to meet
the sustained plutonium pit
requirements of 80 pits per year. To
achieve the required annual pit
production rate, the AoA report
considered the construction of new
facilities and the refurbishment of
existing facilities and identifies SRS and
LANL as the two preferred alternatives
to meet pit production requirements.
In 2018, Congress and the President
also directed that LANL will produce a
minimum of 30 pits per year for the
national pit production mission and
directed it be capable of surge efforts to
exceed 30 pits per year to meet NPR and
national policy (Pub. L. 115–232,
Section 3120). To these ends, the DoD
Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment and the
NNSA Administrator issued a Joint
Statement on May 10, 2018, describing
NNSA’s recommended alternative to
pursue a two-prong approach—50 pits
per year produced at SRS and a
minimum of 30 pits per year produced
at LANL. In addition to improving the
resiliency, flexibility, and redundancy
of our Nuclear Security Enterprise by
reducing reliance on a single production
site, this approach enables the
capability to allow for enhanced
warhead safety and security to meet
DoD and NNSA requirements;
deliberate, methodical replacement of
older existing plutonium pits with
newly manufactured pits as risk
mitigation against plutonium aging; and
response to changes in deterrent
requirements driven by renewed great
power competition.
Before the recent Congressional and
Presidential direction concerning
specific pit production requirements at
LANL, NNSA prepared the 2018
Supplement Analysis of the 2008 SiteWide Environmental Impact Statement
for the Continued Operation of Los
Alamos National Laboratory (2018
LANL SWEIS SA) (DOE/EIS–0380–SA–
04). The 2018 LANL SWEIS SA
considered changes from 2008 through
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2017 to programs, projects, and
operations and it considered changes
from 2018 through 2022 to new/
modified plans, projects, and
operations. The 2018 LANL SWEIS SA
compared the projected environmental
impacts of ongoing operations, new/
modified projects, and site operation
modifications from 2018 through 2022
to the environmental impacts that were
analyzed in the 2008 LANL SWEIS. The
key areas considered include: Land
resources; visual environment; geology
and soils; water resources; air quality;
noise; ecological resources; human
health and worker health/safety;
cultural resources; socioeconomics;
infrastructure; waste management;
traffic and transportation;
environmental justice; environmental
remediation; facility accidents; climate
trends and greenhouse gases; forest
health and wildland fire preparedness;
and mitigations. Based on the 2018
LANL SWEIS SA, NNSA determined
ongoing operations, new/modified
projects, and site operation
modifications do not constitute a
substantial change in the actions
previously analyzed in the 2008 LANL
SWEIS, and that there are no significant
new circumstances or information
relevant to environmental concerns, and
that no further NEPA documentation
was required for the continued
operation of LANL.
NEPA Process for Amending the ROD
NNSA prepared this Amended ROD
to the 2008 LANL SWEIS pursuant to
the regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ) for
implementing NEPA (40 CFR parts
1500–1508) and DOE’s NEPA
implementing procedures (10 CFR part
1021). This Amended ROD is based on
federal law and NNSA’s mission,
information and analysis in the 1999
LANL SWEIS (DOE/EIS–0238) and
public comments received; the 2008
LANL SWEIS (DOE/EIS–0380) and
public comments received; the Complex
Transformation SPEIS (DOE/EIS–0236–
S4) and public comments received; the
2019 SPEIS SA (DOE/EIS–0236–SA–02)
and public comments received; the 2020
LANL SA (DOE/EIS–0380–SA–06) and
public comments received; other NEPA
analysis and public comments as noted
in the 2020 LANL SA.
The Draft 2008 LANL SWEIS
included a robust public participation
process. NNSA received comments from
Federal agencies; state, local, and tribal
governments; public and private
organizations; and individuals. In
addition, during the three public
meetings that NNSA held, in Santa Fe,
Espan˜ola and Los Alamos, on the Draft
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2008 LANL SWEIS, more than 100
speakers made oral comments and
nearly 2100 public comment documents
were received. NNSA reviewed and
considered all comments received on
the Draft 2008 LANL SWEIS, including
those received after the comment period
ended, before finalizing the 2008 LANL
SWEIS and issuing associated RODs.
On June 28, 2019, NNSA provided a
Notice of Availability of the Draft
Supplement Analysis of the Complex
Transformation Supplemental
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (Draft Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA) (84 FR
31055) and invited public comment.
NNSA prepared the Final Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA to determine
whether, prior to implementing a
Modified DCE Alternative for plutonium
operations to enable producing
plutonium pits at a rate of no fewer than
80 pits per year by 2030, the existing
Complex Transformation SPEIS should
be supplemented, a new environmental
impact statement be prepared, or that no
further NEPA analysis was required. On
January 9, 2020, after considering all
comments and modifying the draft
Complex Transformation SPEIS SA as
appropriate, NNSA provided a Notice of
Availability of the Final Complex
Transformation Supplemental
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (Final Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA) (DOE/EIS–
0236–SA–02) (85 FR 887). The Final
Complex Transformation SPEIS SA
included NNSA’s determination that no
further NEPA documentation at a
programmatic level was required, but
affirmed NNSA’s decision to prepare
site-specific documentation for the
proposal to authorize expanding pit
production beyond 20 pits per year at
LANL. Concurrent with this Amended
ROD, NNSA is issuing an Amended
ROD to the Complex Transformation
SPEIS, announcing the programmatic
decision to implement elements of a
Modified DCE Alternative that
authorizes LANL to produce not fewer
than 30 war reserve pits per year during
2026 for the national pit production
mission and implement surge efforts to
exceed 30 pits per year as needed.
At the site-specific level, NNSA
prepared the 2020 LANL SA (DOE/EIS–
0380–SA–06) to re-evaluate site-specific
environmental impacts. In March 2020,
NNSA posted the Draft Supplement
Analysis of the 2008 Site-Wide
Environmental Impact Statement for
Continued Operations of Los Alamos
National Laboratory to the online NNSA
NEPA Reading Room and noticed
interested parties via GovDelivery,
inviting public comment for a 45-day
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period which was extended for an
additional 15 days. Although pertinent
regulations do not require public review
and comment on an SA, NNSA decided
to invite public comment in the SA to
ensure fully informed decision-making.
NNSA received approximately 140
comment documents on the Draft 2020
LANL SA. Many comments received on
the Draft 2020 LANL SA were similar in
nature to the comments NNSA received
on the Draft 2019 Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA. In addition to
Draft 2020 LANL SA comments, NNSA
reviewed all comment documents
received during the public scoping
process for the site-specific Savanah
River Site (SRS) pit production EIS for
relevance to the 2020 LANL SA.
Comments received generally
centered on the following topic areas:
(1) Validity of the Draft 2020 LANL SA
determination; (2) the purpose and need
for NNSA’s project; (3) NEPA process/
requests for an extension to the
comment period; (4) the two-prong
approach to pit production; (5) new
information or changed circumstances
related to NNSA operations and/or
environmental conditions; (6) questions
about the technical aspects of the
impact analyses; (7) general opposition
to, or support for the proposal; and (8)
comments about nuclear weapon
policies or new weapon designs.
After considering all comments and
modifying the Draft 2020 LANL SA as
appropriate, NNSA completed the Final
Supplement Analysis of the 2008 SiteWide Environmental Impact Statement
for Continued Operations of Los Alamos
National Laboratory (Final 2020 LANL
SA). NNSA prepared the Final 2020
LANL SA to determine whether, prior to
implementing additional elements of
the Expanded Operations Alternative for
producing a minimum of 30 pits per
year at LANL and implementing surge
efforts to exceed 30 pits per year, the
2008 LANL SWEIS should be
supplemented, a new environmental
impact statement be prepared, or that no
further NEPA analysis was required.
The Final 2020 LANL SA included
NNSA’s determination that no further
NEPA documentation was required
before issuing an Amended ROD.
Summary of Impacts
NNSA has been directed by Congress
and the President to implement pit
production at LANL to meet NPR and
national policy, and NNSA determined
in its discretion to prepare an SA of the
2008 LANL SWEIS to re-evaluate
adopting the Expanded Operations
Alternative as needed. The 2020 LANL
SA analyzed the potential impacts of pit
production beyond 20 pits per year on
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land use, visual resources, geology and
soils, water resources, air quality, noise,
ecological resources, cultural resources,
infrastructure, facility accidents,
intentional destructive acts, human
health, socioeconomics, environmental
justice, waste management, and
transportation. Table 3–1 of the 2020
LANL SA presents information in a
comparative fashion for resource areas
considered to have minor or negligible
impacts. Environmental resource areas
that may have environmental impacts
related to pit production beyond 20 pits
per year or require additional analysis
or to address public concerns were
reviewed in more detail in Section 3.3
of the 2020 LANL SA and Section 4.0
analyzed the cumulative impacts.
NNSA’s conclusion based on the 2020
LANL SA was that the potential
environmental impacts of the proposed
action would not be different, or would
not be significantly different, than
impacts in existing NEPA analyses.
NNSA has determined that pit
production at LANL as planned
(previously analyzed limits), and that
meets NPR and national policy, does not
constitute a substantial change from
actions analyzed previously and that
while there are new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental
concerns these new circumstances and
information do not rise to a level of
significance within the meaning of
NEPA. As a result, NNSA has
determined that preparation of a
supplemental or new EIS is not
warranted at this time.
while allowing LANL to continue to
fulfill its national security missions.
Increasing operational levels and
performing various demolition activities
would use additional resources and
generate additional waste, but under the
Expanded Operations Alternative NNSA
would also undertake actions to
modernize and replace older facilities
with more energy efficient and
environmentally-protective facilities
and implement waste control and
environmental practices to minimize
impacts.
Environmentally Preferable Alternative
The analyses in the 2008 LANL
SWEIS of the environmental impacts
associated with operating LANL
identified only minor differences among
the three alternatives across natural and
cultural resource areas. Within each of
the alternatives there are actions that
could result in negative impacts, as well
as those that would produce positive
environmental effects. Considering the
many environmental facets of the
alternatives analyzed in the SWEIS, and
looking out over the long term, the
Expanded Operations Alternative is still
the environmentally preferred
alternative because that is the
alternative that includes projects that
support environmental remediation at
LANL. Facilitating the cleanup of the
site with new or expanded waste
management facilities, and replacing
older laboratory and production
facilities with new buildings that
incorporate modern safety, security, and
efficiency standards, would also
improve LANL’s ability to protect
human health and the environment
Basis for Decision
In making these decisions, NNSA
considered the 2020 LANL SA, the 2008
LANL SWEIS, the 2008 Complex
Transformation SPEIS, the 2019
Complex Transformation SPEIS SA, and
other referenced NEPA analyses, and its
statutory responsibilities to support the
nuclear weapons stockpile. Federal law
and national security policies continue
to require NNSA to maintain a safe,
secure, and reliable nuclear weapons
stockpile and to create a responsive
nuclear weapons infrastructure that are
cost-effective and have adequate
capacity to meet reasonably foreseeable
national security requirements. This
Amended ROD will enable NNSA to
continue meeting federal law and
national security requirements.
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Amended Decision
NNSA has decided to implement
elements of the Expanded Operations
Alternative in the 2008 LANL SWEIS, as
needed, to produce a minimum of 30
war reserve pits per year during 2026 for
the national pit production mission and
to implement surge efforts to exceed 30
pits per year up to the analyzed limit to
meet NPR and national policy. NNSA
will implement the following actions:
(1) Remove legacy equipment and
install new equipment; (2) hire and train
approximately 400 additional staff; (3)
upgrade existing support facilities and
construct new support facilities; (4)
repackage and dispose of mixed-oxide
fuel fabrication facility fuel rods; (5)
implement Replacement Office
Buildings Project; (6) implement
elements of the Security-Driven Traffic
Modifications Project; (7) management
and disposition of additional wastes
generated; and (8) transport additional
materials, parts, and waste.
Mitigation Measures
As described in the 2008 LANL
SWEIS (DOE/EIS–0380) and the 2008
LANL SWEIS ROD (74 FR 55833), LANL
operates in compliance with
environmental laws, regulations, and
policies within a framework of
E:\FR\FM\02SEN1.SGM
02SEN1
54548
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 171 / Wednesday, September 2, 2020 / Notices
contractual requirements; many of these
requirements mandate actions to control
and mitigate potential adverse
environmental effects. Examples of
mitigation measures include site
security and threat protection plans,
emergency plans, land use plans,
Integrated Safety Management Systems,
an Environmental Management System,
pollution prevention and waste
minimization programs, cultural
resource and protected species
management plans, and energy and
water conservation programs. NNSA
will continue to implement the
mitigation measures identified in the
2008 LANL SWEIS ROD.
Signing Authority
This document of the Department of
Energy was signed on August 24, 2020,
by Lisa E. Gordon-Hagerty, Under
Secretary for Nuclear Security and
Administrator, NNSA, pursuant to
delegated authority from the Secretary
of Energy. That document with the
original signature and date is
maintained by DOE. For administrative
purposes only, and in compliance with
requirements of the Office of the Federal
Register, the undersigned DOE Federal
Register Liaison Officer has been
authorized to sign and submit the
document in electronic format for
publication, as an official document of
the Department of Energy. This
administrative process in no way alters
the legal effect of this document upon
publication in the Federal Register.
Signed in Washington, DC on August 28,
2020.
Treena V. Garrett,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S.
Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2020–19349 Filed 9–1–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Agency Information Collection
Extension
U.S. Department of Energy.
Submission for Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) review;
comment request.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Energy
(DOE) has submitted an information
collection request to the OMB for
extension under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The
information collection requests a threeyear extension of its Energy Priorities
and Allocations System, OMB Control
Number 1910–5159. The proposed
collection will be used to allow persons
to request special priorities assistance
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:33 Sep 01, 2020
Jkt 250001
from DOE to fill a rated order issued in
accordance with the Defense Production
Act (DPA) and DOE’s implementing
regulations. DOE published a Federal
Register notice on May 4, 2020
soliciting 60 days of public comment.
DOE received one comment on that
notice.
DATES: Comments regarding this
collection must be received on or before
October 2, 2020. If you anticipate that
you will be submitting comments, but
find it difficult to do so within the
period of time allowed by this notice,
please advise the OMB Desk Officer of
your intention to make a submission as
soon as possible. The Desk Officer may
be telephoned at 202–395–4718.
ADDRESSES: Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public Comments’’ or by using the
search function.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection
instrument and instructions should be
directed to Christopher A. Lawrence,
U.S. Department of Energy, at
Christopher.Lawrence@hq.doe.gov or
202–586–5260.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
information collection request contains:
(1) OMB No.: 1910–5159; (2)
Information Collection Request Title:
Energy Priorities and Allocations
System; (3) Type of Request: Extension;
(4) Purpose: To meet requirements of
the Defense Production Act (DPA)
priorities and allocations authority
necessary or appropriate to promote the
national defense. Data supplied will be
used to evaluate applicants requesting
special priorities assistance to fill a
rated order issued in accordance with
the DPA and DOE’s implementing
regulations. Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the agency’s estimate
of the burden of the proposed collection
of information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
(c) ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
technology. This data will also be used
to conduct audits and for enforcement
purposes. This collection will only be
used if the Secretary of Energy
determines that his authority under the
DPA is necessary to prevent or address
an energy shortage or energy reliability
concern. The last collection by DOE
under this authority was in 2001; (5)
Annual Estimated Number of
Respondents: 10, as this collection is
addressed to a substantial majority of
the energy industry; (6) Annual
Estimated Number of Burden Hours: 32
minutes per response; (8) Annual
Estimated Reporting and Recordkeeping
Cost Burden: $381.57.
One comment was received on DOE’s
sixty-day notice (Kubitz, No 1). The
commenter requested that companies
provide information about current
production of oil, maximum available
oil production, and costs of incremental
energy production, in order to
information Defense Production Act
decisions or orders. Id. The commenter
stated that knowing the capacity of the
industry as a whole by aggregating
potential production from various
companies would aid in allocation and
prioritization of any necessary energy
production under the Defense
Production Act. Id. This information is
already being collected by the Energy
Information Administration within DOE
to track the nation’s petroleum supply.
EIA surveys collect data on petroleum
refinery operations, blending, biofuels
production, natural gas liquids
production, inventory levels, imports,
inter-regional movements, and storage
capacity for crude oil, petroleum,
products, and biofuels. Information
regarding EIA’s work on petroleum
supply can be found at https://
www.eia.gov/petroleum/. DOE can
review the information provided to EIA
through its surveys to evaluate
applicants submitting Form DOE F 544.
Therefore, to avoid duplication, DOE
will not be revising Form DOE F 544.
Statutory Authority: Defense Production
Act of 1950 as amended (50 U.S.C. 4501, et
seq.); Executive Order 13603.
Signing Authority
This document of the Department of
Energy was signed on August 27, 2020,
by Bruce J. Walker, Assistant Secretary,
Office of Electricity, pursuant to
delegated authority from the Secretary
of Energy. That document with the
original signature and date is
maintained by DOE. For administrative
purposes only, and in compliance with
requirements of the Office of the Federal
Register, the undersigned DOE Federal
Register Liaison Officer has been
authorized to sign and submit the
E:\FR\FM\02SEN1.SGM
02SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 171 (Wednesday, September 2, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 54544-54548]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-19349]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Amended Record of Decision for the Site-Wide Environmental Impact
Statement for the Continued Operation of Los Alamos National
Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
AGENCY: National Nuclear Security Administration, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Amended record of decision.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), a semi-
autonomous agency within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), is
announcing this amendment to the September 26, 2008 Record of Decision
(ROD) for the Site-Wide Environmental Impact Statement (SWEIS) for the
Continued Operation of Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), Los
Alamos, NM (2008 LANL SWEIS ROD). In this Amended ROD, NNSA announces
its decision to implement elements of the 2008 LANL SWEIS Expanded
Operations Alternative needed to produce a minimum of 30 war reserve
pits per year during 2026 for the national pit production mission and
to implement surge efforts to exceed 30 pits per year to meet Nuclear
Posture Review (NPR) and national policy. NNSA has previously evaluated
this action at the programmatic level in the Complex Transformation
SPEIS and at the site-specific level in the LANL Sitewide Environmental
Impact Statement (SWEIS), and recently completed a review of those
prior analyses in a separate Supplement Analysis (SA) for each
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information on this
Amended ROD or the 2020 LANL SA, contact: Kristen Dors, NEPA Compliance
Manager, U.S. Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security
Administration, Los Alamos Field Office, 3747 W. Jemez Road, Los
Alamos, NM 87544; phone: (505) 667-5491; or via email at
[email protected]. This Amended ROD, the 2020 LANL SA, and
related NEPA documents are available at https://www.energy.gov/nnsa/nnsa-nepa-reading-room.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Pit production, at a level of 80 pits per year at LANL, has been
analyzed in two programmatic environmental impact statements (EISs) and
two LANL site-wide EISs, including the 1999 Site-Wide Environmental
Impact Statement for the Continued Operation of the Los Alamos National
Laboratory (1999 LANL SWEIS) (DOE/EIS-0238), and the 2008 Final Site-
Wide Environmental Impact Statement for Continued Operation of Los
Alamos National Laboratory (2008 LANL SWEIS) (DOE/EIS-0380). As
national policy and national defense needs have evolved, NNSA prepared
a supplement analysis (SA) to the 2008 LANL SWEIS (2020 LANL SA) (DOE/
EIS-380-SA-06). The 2020 LANL SA re-evaluates the potential
environmental impacts of producing a minimum of 30 pits per year at
LANL and of implementing surge efforts to exceed 30 pits per year to
determine if there have been substantial changes to NNSA's proposed
implementation of increased pit production or significant new
circumstances or information relevant to environmental concerns, within
the meaning of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). After
preparing and considering the 2020 LANL SA, NNSA has determined that no
further NEPA analysis is needed prior to issuing this
[[Page 54545]]
Amended ROD. NNSA has a statutory mission to maintain and enhance the
safety, reliability, and performance of the U.S. nuclear weapons
stockpile including the ability to design, produce, and test, in order
to meet national security requirements. The purpose and need for the
continued operation of LANL is to provide support for NNSA's core
missions as directed by Congress and the President (2008 LANL SWEIS).
Congress and the President have directed that during 2026 LANL will
produce a minimum of 30 war reserve pits per year for the national pit
production mission and implement surge efforts to exceed 30 pits per
year to meet NPR and national policy (50 U.S.C. 2538a; Pub. L. 115-232,
Section 3120). To meet this direction, NNSA must now implement
previously analyzed elements of the Expanded Operations Alternative
from the 2008 LANL SWEIS.
The environmental impacts of pit production at LANL have been
analyzed at a both programmatic and site-specific level several times.
The first programmatic EIS in the post-Cold War era was the 1996
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Stockpile Stewardship
and Management (SSM PEIS) (DOE/EIS-0236). The SSM PEIS evaluates pit
production of 80 pits per year at LANL. In December 1996, NNSA issued a
ROD announcing a decision setting pit production at LANL at 20 pits per
year (61 FR 68014; December 26, 1996). Tiering from the SSM PEIS, the
site-specific 1999 LANL SWEIS also evaluates pit production levels of
80 pits per year at LANL. In the 1999 LANL ROD, NNSA confirmed its
decision for pit production at LANL at 20 pits per year (64 FR 50797;
Sept 20, 1999).
In 2008, NNSA prepared the Complex Transformation Supplemental
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement--Operations Involving
Plutonium, Uranium, and the Assembly and Disassembly of Nuclear Weapons
(Complex Transformation SPEIS) (DOE/EIS-0236-S4). The Complex
Transformation SPEIS evaluates, among other things, alternatives for
producing 10-200 pits per year at different site alternatives,
including LANL. In the 2008 Programmatic ROD, NNSA did not make any new
decisions related to pit production capacity beyond 20 pits per year at
LANL (73 FR 77644 December 19, 2008). Tiering from the Complex
Transformation SPEIS, the 2008 LANL SWEIS analyzed three alternatives:
A Reduced Operations Alternative, a No Action Alternative (20 pits per
year), and an Expanded Operations Alternative (80 pits per year). Under
the Expanded Operations Alternative, NNSA analyzed existing space at
LANL in the Plutonium Facility and other infrastructure to support
production of up to 80 pits per year. In the 2008 LANL SWEIS ROD and
subsequent RODs, NNSA selected a No Action Alternative (continuation of
existing operations) with some elements of an Expanded Operations
Alternative, which maintained NNSA's decision for pit production levels
of 20 pits per year at LANL (73 FR 55833 September 26, 2008; 74 FR
33232 July 10, 2009; and 76 FR 40352 July 8, 2011).
Both federal law and national security policy now require pit
production rates of a minimum of 30 pits per year at LANL during 2026,
and not less than 80 pits per year nationally during 2030 (50 U.S.C.
2538a; Pub. L. 115-232). Because operations involving SNM are complex,
implementing changes in operations such as pit production take several
years. To these ends, NNSA is issuing an Amended ROD to the Complex
Transformation SPEIS announcing its programmatic decision to implement
elements of a Modified Distributed Centers of Excellence (DCE)
Alternative whereby LANL will produce a minimum of 30 war reserve pits
per year for the national pit production mission during 2026 and
implement surge efforts to exceed 30 pits per year as needed. Prior to
issuing that Amended ROD, NNSA prepared an SA of the Complex
Transformation SPEIS to determine if the existing Complex
Transformation SPEIS should be supplemented, a new EIS should be
prepared, or that no further NEPA analysis would be required. Based on
the analysis presented in the 2019 SPEIS SA, NNSA determined that no
further NEPA analysis was needed at a programmatic level.
NNSA is now issuing an Amended ROD to the 2008 LANL SWEIS. Prior to
issuing this Amended ROD, NNSA prepared the 2020 LANL SA to determine
if the existing 2008 LANL SWEIS should be supplemented, a new EIS
should be prepared, or that no further NEPA analysis would be required.
Based on the analysis presented in the 2020 SA, NNSA determined that no
further NEPA analysis was needed prior to issuing this Amended ROD.
Changes Since Issuance of the 2008 LANL SWEIS RODs
NNSA has not implemented all aspects of the 2008 LANL SWEIS
Expanded Operations Alternative that were anticipated for producing
more than 20 pits per year. One primary element that has changed is
that a specific facility that NNSA previously analyzed, the Chemistry
and Metallurgy Research Replacement Nuclear Facility (CMRR-NF), was not
constructed at LANL. The CMRR-NF was a planned support facility for pit
production and was not itself to be a pit production facility. Many
support operations for pit production have been historically located in
the Chemistry and Metallurgy Research (CMR) Facility, and CMRR-NF had
been thought necessary to replace CMR. The support operations housed in
CMR have been or can be relocated to other facilities at LANL, and a
new CMRR-NF is no longer required to meet current mission needs. NNSA
remains committed to the closure of the CMR Facility and has made
upgrades to existing plutonium facilities, constructed new support
facilities, and made administrative changes that have leveraged the use
of existing LANL facilities.
Another change since issuance of the SWEIS RODs is that NNSA has
made substantial facility upgrades to address previous technical and
seismic concerns related to LANL's pit production facility, the
Plutonium Facility. In the 2009 Amended ROD to the 2008 LANL SWEIS,
NNSA issued a decision on certain elements of an Expanded Operations
Alternative at LANL that authorized upgrades to the Plutonium Facility.
Over the past ten years, NNSA has been implementing these upgrade
projects. Separately, there was a three-year operational pause in
LANL's Plutonium Facility but operations have resumed. The Plutonium
Facility is again operational and pit production activities have
resumed. The NNSA pit production mission at LANL is operating below the
level of 20 pits per year that was identified in previous NNSA
decisions.
The United States has emphasized the need to eventually produce 80
pits per year and while the drivers and the requirement for pit
production have remained relatively unchanged there have been specific
changes in the law and national policy regarding pit production since
issuance of the 2008 LANL SWEIS. Since 2014, federal law has required
the nuclear security enterprise to produce not less than 30 war reserve
plutonium pits during 2026. Federal law now requires that the nuclear
security enterprise produce not less than 80 war reserve plutonium pits
during 2030 (50 U.S.C. 2538a).
In addition, on January 27, 2017, the President directed the
Department of Defense (DoD) to conduct an NPR which was issued in 2018.
The 2018 NPR echoed the need for pit production and articulated a
national policy that is
[[Page 54546]]
consistent with Congressional and Presidential direction, stating that
the United States will pursue initiatives to ensure the necessary
capability, capacity, and responsiveness of the nuclear weapons
infrastructure and the needed skill of the workforce, including
providing the enduring capability and capacity to produce plutonium
pits at a rate of no fewer than 80 pits per year during 2030. The 2018
NPR also details the evolving and uncertain nuclear threat environment
facing the United States. Concurrent with the 2018 NPR, DOE conducted
an Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) to identify and assess alternatives
across DOE sites that could deliver the infrastructure to meet the
sustained plutonium pit requirements of 80 pits per year. To achieve
the required annual pit production rate, the AoA report considered the
construction of new facilities and the refurbishment of existing
facilities and identifies SRS and LANL as the two preferred
alternatives to meet pit production requirements.
In 2018, Congress and the President also directed that LANL will
produce a minimum of 30 pits per year for the national pit production
mission and directed it be capable of surge efforts to exceed 30 pits
per year to meet NPR and national policy (Pub. L. 115-232, Section
3120). To these ends, the DoD Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment and the NNSA Administrator issued a Joint
Statement on May 10, 2018, describing NNSA's recommended alternative to
pursue a two-prong approach--50 pits per year produced at SRS and a
minimum of 30 pits per year produced at LANL. In addition to improving
the resiliency, flexibility, and redundancy of our Nuclear Security
Enterprise by reducing reliance on a single production site, this
approach enables the capability to allow for enhanced warhead safety
and security to meet DoD and NNSA requirements; deliberate, methodical
replacement of older existing plutonium pits with newly manufactured
pits as risk mitigation against plutonium aging; and response to
changes in deterrent requirements driven by renewed great power
competition.
Before the recent Congressional and Presidential direction
concerning specific pit production requirements at LANL, NNSA prepared
the 2018 Supplement Analysis of the 2008 Site-Wide Environmental Impact
Statement for the Continued Operation of Los Alamos National Laboratory
(2018 LANL SWEIS SA) (DOE/EIS-0380-SA-04). The 2018 LANL SWEIS SA
considered changes from 2008 through 2017 to programs, projects, and
operations and it considered changes from 2018 through 2022 to new/
modified plans, projects, and operations. The 2018 LANL SWEIS SA
compared the projected environmental impacts of ongoing operations,
new/modified projects, and site operation modifications from 2018
through 2022 to the environmental impacts that were analyzed in the
2008 LANL SWEIS. The key areas considered include: Land resources;
visual environment; geology and soils; water resources; air quality;
noise; ecological resources; human health and worker health/safety;
cultural resources; socioeconomics; infrastructure; waste management;
traffic and transportation; environmental justice; environmental
remediation; facility accidents; climate trends and greenhouse gases;
forest health and wildland fire preparedness; and mitigations. Based on
the 2018 LANL SWEIS SA, NNSA determined ongoing operations, new/
modified projects, and site operation modifications do not constitute a
substantial change in the actions previously analyzed in the 2008 LANL
SWEIS, and that there are no significant new circumstances or
information relevant to environmental concerns, and that no further
NEPA documentation was required for the continued operation of LANL.
NEPA Process for Amending the ROD
NNSA prepared this Amended ROD to the 2008 LANL SWEIS pursuant to
the regulations of the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) for
implementing NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508) and DOE's NEPA implementing
procedures (10 CFR part 1021). This Amended ROD is based on federal law
and NNSA's mission, information and analysis in the 1999 LANL SWEIS
(DOE/EIS-0238) and public comments received; the 2008 LANL SWEIS (DOE/
EIS-0380) and public comments received; the Complex Transformation
SPEIS (DOE/EIS-0236-S4) and public comments received; the 2019 SPEIS SA
(DOE/EIS-0236-SA-02) and public comments received; the 2020 LANL SA
(DOE/EIS-0380-SA-06) and public comments received; other NEPA analysis
and public comments as noted in the 2020 LANL SA.
The Draft 2008 LANL SWEIS included a robust public participation
process. NNSA received comments from Federal agencies; state, local,
and tribal governments; public and private organizations; and
individuals. In addition, during the three public meetings that NNSA
held, in Santa Fe, Espa[ntilde]ola and Los Alamos, on the Draft 2008
LANL SWEIS, more than 100 speakers made oral comments and nearly 2100
public comment documents were received. NNSA reviewed and considered
all comments received on the Draft 2008 LANL SWEIS, including those
received after the comment period ended, before finalizing the 2008
LANL SWEIS and issuing associated RODs.
On June 28, 2019, NNSA provided a Notice of Availability of the
Draft Supplement Analysis of the Complex Transformation Supplemental
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (Draft Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA) (84 FR 31055) and invited public comment. NNSA
prepared the Final Complex Transformation SPEIS SA to determine
whether, prior to implementing a Modified DCE Alternative for plutonium
operations to enable producing plutonium pits at a rate of no fewer
than 80 pits per year by 2030, the existing Complex Transformation
SPEIS should be supplemented, a new environmental impact statement be
prepared, or that no further NEPA analysis was required. On January 9,
2020, after considering all comments and modifying the draft Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA as appropriate, NNSA provided a Notice of
Availability of the Final Complex Transformation Supplemental
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (Final Complex
Transformation SPEIS SA) (DOE/EIS-0236-SA-02) (85 FR 887). The Final
Complex Transformation SPEIS SA included NNSA's determination that no
further NEPA documentation at a programmatic level was required, but
affirmed NNSA's decision to prepare site-specific documentation for the
proposal to authorize expanding pit production beyond 20 pits per year
at LANL. Concurrent with this Amended ROD, NNSA is issuing an Amended
ROD to the Complex Transformation SPEIS, announcing the programmatic
decision to implement elements of a Modified DCE Alternative that
authorizes LANL to produce not fewer than 30 war reserve pits per year
during 2026 for the national pit production mission and implement surge
efforts to exceed 30 pits per year as needed.
At the site-specific level, NNSA prepared the 2020 LANL SA (DOE/
EIS-0380-SA-06) to re-evaluate site-specific environmental impacts. In
March 2020, NNSA posted the Draft Supplement Analysis of the 2008 Site-
Wide Environmental Impact Statement for Continued Operations of Los
Alamos National Laboratory to the online NNSA NEPA Reading Room and
noticed interested parties via GovDelivery, inviting public comment for
a 45-day
[[Page 54547]]
period which was extended for an additional 15 days. Although pertinent
regulations do not require public review and comment on an SA, NNSA
decided to invite public comment in the SA to ensure fully informed
decision-making. NNSA received approximately 140 comment documents on
the Draft 2020 LANL SA. Many comments received on the Draft 2020 LANL
SA were similar in nature to the comments NNSA received on the Draft
2019 Complex Transformation SPEIS SA. In addition to Draft 2020 LANL SA
comments, NNSA reviewed all comment documents received during the
public scoping process for the site-specific Savanah River Site (SRS)
pit production EIS for relevance to the 2020 LANL SA.
Comments received generally centered on the following topic areas:
(1) Validity of the Draft 2020 LANL SA determination; (2) the purpose
and need for NNSA's project; (3) NEPA process/requests for an extension
to the comment period; (4) the two-prong approach to pit production;
(5) new information or changed circumstances related to NNSA operations
and/or environmental conditions; (6) questions about the technical
aspects of the impact analyses; (7) general opposition to, or support
for the proposal; and (8) comments about nuclear weapon policies or new
weapon designs.
After considering all comments and modifying the Draft 2020 LANL SA
as appropriate, NNSA completed the Final Supplement Analysis of the
2008 Site-Wide Environmental Impact Statement for Continued Operations
of Los Alamos National Laboratory (Final 2020 LANL SA). NNSA prepared
the Final 2020 LANL SA to determine whether, prior to implementing
additional elements of the Expanded Operations Alternative for
producing a minimum of 30 pits per year at LANL and implementing surge
efforts to exceed 30 pits per year, the 2008 LANL SWEIS should be
supplemented, a new environmental impact statement be prepared, or that
no further NEPA analysis was required. The Final 2020 LANL SA included
NNSA's determination that no further NEPA documentation was required
before issuing an Amended ROD.
Summary of Impacts
NNSA has been directed by Congress and the President to implement
pit production at LANL to meet NPR and national policy, and NNSA
determined in its discretion to prepare an SA of the 2008 LANL SWEIS to
re-evaluate adopting the Expanded Operations Alternative as needed. The
2020 LANL SA analyzed the potential impacts of pit production beyond 20
pits per year on land use, visual resources, geology and soils, water
resources, air quality, noise, ecological resources, cultural
resources, infrastructure, facility accidents, intentional destructive
acts, human health, socioeconomics, environmental justice, waste
management, and transportation. Table 3-1 of the 2020 LANL SA presents
information in a comparative fashion for resource areas considered to
have minor or negligible impacts. Environmental resource areas that may
have environmental impacts related to pit production beyond 20 pits per
year or require additional analysis or to address public concerns were
reviewed in more detail in Section 3.3 of the 2020 LANL SA and Section
4.0 analyzed the cumulative impacts.
NNSA's conclusion based on the 2020 LANL SA was that the potential
environmental impacts of the proposed action would not be different, or
would not be significantly different, than impacts in existing NEPA
analyses. NNSA has determined that pit production at LANL as planned
(previously analyzed limits), and that meets NPR and national policy,
does not constitute a substantial change from actions analyzed
previously and that while there are new circumstances or information
relevant to environmental concerns these new circumstances and
information do not rise to a level of significance within the meaning
of NEPA. As a result, NNSA has determined that preparation of a
supplemental or new EIS is not warranted at this time.
Environmentally Preferable Alternative
The analyses in the 2008 LANL SWEIS of the environmental impacts
associated with operating LANL identified only minor differences among
the three alternatives across natural and cultural resource areas.
Within each of the alternatives there are actions that could result in
negative impacts, as well as those that would produce positive
environmental effects. Considering the many environmental facets of the
alternatives analyzed in the SWEIS, and looking out over the long term,
the Expanded Operations Alternative is still the environmentally
preferred alternative because that is the alternative that includes
projects that support environmental remediation at LANL. Facilitating
the cleanup of the site with new or expanded waste management
facilities, and replacing older laboratory and production facilities
with new buildings that incorporate modern safety, security, and
efficiency standards, would also improve LANL's ability to protect
human health and the environment while allowing LANL to continue to
fulfill its national security missions. Increasing operational levels
and performing various demolition activities would use additional
resources and generate additional waste, but under the Expanded
Operations Alternative NNSA would also undertake actions to modernize
and replace older facilities with more energy efficient and
environmentally-protective facilities and implement waste control and
environmental practices to minimize impacts.
Amended Decision
NNSA has decided to implement elements of the Expanded Operations
Alternative in the 2008 LANL SWEIS, as needed, to produce a minimum of
30 war reserve pits per year during 2026 for the national pit
production mission and to implement surge efforts to exceed 30 pits per
year up to the analyzed limit to meet NPR and national policy. NNSA
will implement the following actions: (1) Remove legacy equipment and
install new equipment; (2) hire and train approximately 400 additional
staff; (3) upgrade existing support facilities and construct new
support facilities; (4) repackage and dispose of mixed-oxide fuel
fabrication facility fuel rods; (5) implement Replacement Office
Buildings Project; (6) implement elements of the Security-Driven
Traffic Modifications Project; (7) management and disposition of
additional wastes generated; and (8) transport additional materials,
parts, and waste.
Basis for Decision
In making these decisions, NNSA considered the 2020 LANL SA, the
2008 LANL SWEIS, the 2008 Complex Transformation SPEIS, the 2019
Complex Transformation SPEIS SA, and other referenced NEPA analyses,
and its statutory responsibilities to support the nuclear weapons
stockpile. Federal law and national security policies continue to
require NNSA to maintain a safe, secure, and reliable nuclear weapons
stockpile and to create a responsive nuclear weapons infrastructure
that are cost-effective and have adequate capacity to meet reasonably
foreseeable national security requirements. This Amended ROD will
enable NNSA to continue meeting federal law and national security
requirements.
Mitigation Measures
As described in the 2008 LANL SWEIS (DOE/EIS-0380) and the 2008
LANL SWEIS ROD (74 FR 55833), LANL operates in compliance with
environmental laws, regulations, and policies within a framework of
[[Page 54548]]
contractual requirements; many of these requirements mandate actions to
control and mitigate potential adverse environmental effects. Examples
of mitigation measures include site security and threat protection
plans, emergency plans, land use plans, Integrated Safety Management
Systems, an Environmental Management System, pollution prevention and
waste minimization programs, cultural resource and protected species
management plans, and energy and water conservation programs. NNSA will
continue to implement the mitigation measures identified in the 2008
LANL SWEIS ROD.
Signing Authority
This document of the Department of Energy was signed on August 24,
2020, by Lisa E. Gordon-Hagerty, Under Secretary for Nuclear Security
and Administrator, NNSA, pursuant to delegated authority from the
Secretary of Energy. That document with the original signature and date
is maintained by DOE. For administrative purposes only, and in
compliance with requirements of the Office of the Federal Register, the
undersigned DOE Federal Register Liaison Officer has been authorized to
sign and submit the document in electronic format for publication, as
an official document of the Department of Energy. This administrative
process in no way alters the legal effect of this document upon
publication in the Federal Register.
Signed in Washington, DC on August 28, 2020.
Treena V. Garrett,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S. Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2020-19349 Filed 9-1-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P