List of Approved Spent Fuel Storage Casks: NAC International NAC-UMS® Universal Storage System, Certificate of Compliance No. 1015, Amendment No. 8, 42751-42753 [2021-16703]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 148 / Thursday, August 5, 2021 / Proposed Rules
the grade, size, quality, and maturity
requirements imposed under that order.
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PART 959—[REMOVED]
■
1. Part 959 is removed.
PART 980—VEGETABLES; IMPORT
REGULATIONS
Erin Morris,
Associate Administrator, Agricultural
Marketing Service.
2. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 980 continues to read as follows:
[FR Doc. 2021–16495 Filed 8–4–21; 8:45 am]
■
BILLING CODE P
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–674.
3. In § 980.117, revise paragraphs (a)
and (b) to read as follows:
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
§ 980.117
10 CFR Part 72
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■
Import regulations; onions.
(a) Findings and determinations with
respect to onions.
(1) Under section 8e of the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act
of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601–674),
it is hereby found that:
(i) Grade, size, quality, and maturity
regulations have been issued regularly
under Marketing Order No. 958, as
amended;
(ii) The marketing of onions can be
reasonably distinguished by the
seasonal categories, i.e., late summer
and early spring. The bulk of the late
summer crop is harvested and placed in
storage in late summer and early fall
and marketed over a period of several
months extending into the following
spring. But the onions harvested from
the early spring crop are generally
marketed as soon as the onions are
harvested. The marketing seasons for
these crops overlap;
(iii) Concurrent grade, size, quality,
and maturity regulations under the
marketing order are expected in future
seasons, as in the past.
(2) Therefore, it is hereby determined
that: Imports of onions during the June
5 through March 9 period, and the
entire year for imports of pearl and
cipolline varieties of onions, are in most
direct competition with the marketing of
onions produced in designated counties
of Idaho and Malheur County, Oregon,
covered by Marketing Order No. 958, as
amended (7 CFR part 958).
(b) Grade, size, quality, and maturity
requirements. On and after the effective
date hereof no person may import
onions as defined herein unless they are
inspected and meet the following
requirements: During the period June 5
through March 9 of each marketing year,
and the entire year for pearl and
cipolline onions, whenever onions
grown in designated counties in Idaho
and Malheur County, Oregon, are
regulated under Marketing Order No.
958, imported onions shall comply with
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I. Obtaining Information and Submitting
Comments
II. Rulemaking Procedure
III. Background
IV. Plain Writing
V. Availability of Documents
RIN 3150–AK63
List of Approved Spent Fuel Storage
Casks: NAC International NAC–UMS®
Universal Storage System, Certificate
of Compliance No. 1015, Amendment
No. 8
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is proposing to
amend its spent fuel storage regulations
by revising the NAC International NAC–
UMS® Universal Storage System listing
within the ‘‘List of approved spent fuel
storage casks’’ to include Amendment
No. 8 to Certificate of Compliance No.
1015. Amendment No. 8 revises the
certificate of compliance to add the
storage of damaged boiling-water reactor
spent fuel, including higher enrichment
and higher burnup spent fuel; change
the allowable fuel burnup range; expand
the boiling-water reactor class 5 fuel
inventory that could be stored in the
cask; and revise definitions in the
technical specifications.
DATES: Submit comments by September
7, 2021. Comments received after this
date will be considered if it is practical
to do so, but the NRC is able to ensure
consideration only for comments
received on or before this date.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID NRC–2021–
0052, at https://www.regulations.gov. If
your material cannot be submitted using
https://www.regulations.gov, call or
email the individuals listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document for alternate instructions.
For additional direction on obtaining
information and submitting comments,
see ‘‘Obtaining Information and
Submitting Comments’’ in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bernard White, Office of Nuclear
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Material Safety and Safeguards;
telephone: 301–415–6577; email:
Bernard.White@nrc.gov or James Firth,
Office of Nuclear Material Safety and
Safeguards; telephone: 301–415–6628,
email: James.Firth@nrc.gov. Both are
staff of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents:
[NRC–2021–0052]
SUMMARY:
42751
I. Obtaining Information and
Submitting Comments
A. Obtaining Information
Please refer to Docket ID NRC–2021–
0052 when contacting the NRC about
the availability of information for this
action. You may obtain publicly
available information related to this
action by any of the following methods:
• Federal Rulemaking Website: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2021–0052. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Dawn
Forder, telephone: 301–415–3407,
email: Dawn.Forder@nrc.gov. For
technical questions contact the
individuals listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document.
• NRC’s Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publicly
available documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. To begin the search, select
‘‘Begin Web-based ADAMS Search.’’ For
problems with ADAMS, please contact
the NRC’s Public Document Room (PDR)
reference staff at 1–800–397–4209, 301–
415–4737, or by email to pdr.resource@
nrc.gov. For the convenience of the
reader, instructions about obtaining
materials referenced in this document
are provided in the ‘‘Availability of
Documents’’ section.
• Attention: The PDR, where you may
examine and order copies of public
documents, is currently closed. You
may submit your request to the PDR via
email at pdr.resource@nrc.gov or call 1–
800–397–4209 between 8:00 a.m. and
4:00 p.m. (EST), Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
B. Submitting Comments
Please include Docket ID NRC–2021–
0052 in your comment submission. The
NRC requests that you submit comments
through the Federal rulemaking website
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42752
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 148 / Thursday, August 5, 2021 / Proposed Rules
at https://www.regulations.gov. If your
material cannot be submitted using
https://www.regulations.gov, call or
email the individuals listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document for alternate instructions.
The NRC cautions you not to include
identifying or contact information that
you do not want to be publicly
disclosed in your comment submission.
The NRC will post all comment
submissions at https://
www.regulations.gov as well as enter the
comment submissions into ADAMS.
The NRC does not routinely edit
comment submissions to remove
identifying or contact information.
If you are requesting or aggregating
comments from other persons for
submission to the NRC, then you should
inform those persons not to include
identifying or contact information that
they do not want to be publicly
disclosed in their comment submission.
Your request should state that the NRC
does not routinely edit comment
submissions to remove such information
before making the comment
submissions available to the public or
entering the comment into ADAMS.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
II. Rulemaking Procedure
Because the NRC considers this action
to be non-controversial, the NRC is
publishing this proposed rule
concurrently with a direct final rule in
the Rules and Regulations section of this
issue of the Federal Register. The direct
final rule will become effective on
October 19, 2021. However, if the NRC
receives any significant adverse
comment by September 7, 2021, then
the NRC will publish a document that
withdraws the direct final rule. If the
direct final rule is withdrawn, the NRC
will address the comments in a
subsequent final rule. Absent significant
modifications to the proposed revisions
requiring republication, the NRC will
not initiate a second comment period on
this action in the event the direct final
rule is withdrawn.
A significant adverse comment is a
comment where the commenter
explains why the rule would be
inappropriate, including challenges to
the rule’s underlying premise or
approach, or would be ineffective or
unacceptable without a change. A
comment is adverse and significant if:
(1) The comment opposes the rule and
provides a reason sufficient to require a
substantive response in a notice-andcomment process. For example, a
substantive response is required when:
(a) The comment causes the NRC to
reevaluate (or reconsider) its position or
conduct additional analysis;
(b) The comment raises an issue
serious enough to warrant a substantive
response to clarify or complete the
record; or
(c) The comment raises a relevant
issue that was not previously addressed
or considered by the NRC.
(2) The comment proposes a change
or an addition to the rule, and it is
apparent that the rule would be
ineffective or unacceptable without
incorporation of the change or addition.
(3) The comment causes the NRC to
make a change (other than editorial) to
the rule, certificate of compliance, or
technical specifications.
For a more detailed discussion of the
proposed rule changes and associated
analyses, see the direct final rule
published in the Rules and Regulations
section of this issue of the Federal
Register.
III. Background
Section 218(a) of the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act of 1982, as amended,
requires that ‘‘[t]he Secretary [of the
Department of Energy] shall establish a
demonstration program, in cooperation
with the private sector, for the dry
storage of spent nuclear fuel at civilian
nuclear power reactor sites, with the
objective of establishing one or more
technologies that the [Nuclear
Regulatory] Commission may, by rule,
approve for use at the sites of civilian
nuclear power reactors without, to the
maximum extent practicable, the need
for additional site-specific approvals by
the Commission.’’ Section 133 of the
Nuclear Waste Policy Act states, in part,
that ‘‘[t]he Commission shall, by rule,
establish procedures for the licensing of
any technology approved by the
Commission under section 219(a) [sic:
218(a)] for use at the site of any civilian
nuclear power reactor.’’
To implement this mandate, the
Commission approved dry storage of
spent nuclear fuel in NRC-approved
casks under a general license by
publishing a final rule that added a new
subpart K in part 72 of title 10 of the
Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR)
entitled ‘‘General License for Storage of
Spent Fuel at Power Reactor Sites’’ (55
FR 29181; July 18, 1990). This rule also
established a new subpart L in 10 CFR
part 72 entitled ‘‘Approval of Spent Fuel
Storage Casks,’’ which contains
procedures and criteria for obtaining
NRC approval of spent fuel storage cask
designs. The casks approved for use
under the terms, conditions, and
specifications of their certificate of
compliance or an amended certificate of
compliance pursuant to this general
license are listed in § 72.214. The NRC
subsequently issued a final rule on
October 19, 2000 (65 FR 62581), that
approved the NAC International NAC–
UMS® Universal Storage System and
added it to the list of NRC-approved
cask designs in § 72.214 as Certificate of
Compliance No. 1015.
The NAC International NAC–UMS®
Universal Storage System consists of the
following components: (1)
Transportable storage canister (TSC),
which contains the spent fuel; (2)
vertical concrete cask, which contains
the TSC during storage; and (3) a
transfer cask, which contains the TSC
during loading, unloading, and transfer
operations. Amendment No. 8 revises
the certificate of compliance to (1) add
the storage of damaged boiling-water
reactor spent fuel, including higher
enrichment and higher burnup spent
fuel; (2) change the allowable fuel
burnup range; and (3) expand the
boiling-water reactor class 5 fuel
inventory that could be stored in the
cask; and (4) change definitions in the
technical specifications that are
associated with the contents of the spent
nuclear fuel stored in the cask (e.g., high
burnup fuel and initial peak planaraverage enrichment).
IV. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub.
L. 111–274) requires Federal agencies to
write documents in a clear, concise, and
well-organized manner. The NRC has
written this document to be consistent
with the Plain Writing Act as well as the
Presidential Memorandum, ‘‘Plain
Language in Government Writing,’’
published June 10, 1998 (63 FR 31885).
The NRC requests comment on the
proposed rule with respect to clarity
and effectiveness of the language used.
V. Availability of Documents
The documents identified in the
following table are available to
interested persons, as indicated.
Document
ADAMS
Accession No.
Submission of a Request to Amend the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 for the NACUMS Cask System, December 18, 2019.
Application for Amendment No. 8 to the Model No. NAC-UMS Storage Cask—Acceptance Letter, March 17, 2020 .....................
ML20006D749
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 148 / Thursday, August 5, 2021 / Proposed Rules
Document
ADAMS
Accession No.
NAC International, Submittal of Supplement to Amend the NRC Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 for the NAC–UMS Cask
System, April 24, 2020.
Application for Amendment No. 8 to the Model No. NAC–UMS Storage Cask—Request for Additional Information, June 25,
2020.
Submission of Responses to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Request for Additional Information for Certificate of
Compliance No. 1015 for the NAC–UMS Cask System, August 7, 2020.
Memorandum to J. Cai re: User Need for Rulemaking for Amendment No. 8 Request, February 23, 2021 ....................................
Proposed Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 Amendment No. 8, Technical Specifications, Appendix A .......................................
Proposed Certificate of Compliance No. 1015, Amendment No. 8, Technical Specifications Appendix B .......................................
Draft Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 Amendment No. 8 ............................................................................................................
Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 Amendment No. 8, Preliminary Safety Evaluation Report ........................................................
ML20122A201
The NRC may post materials related
to this document, including public
comments, on the Federal Rulemaking
website at https://www.regulations.gov
under Docket ID NRC–2021–0052.
Dated: July 26, 2021.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Margaret M. Doane,
Executive Director for Operations.
[FR Doc. 2021–16703 Filed 8–4–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Parts 104 and 109
[Notice 2021–11]
Rulemaking Petition: Subvendor
Reporting
Federal Election Commission.
Rulemaking Petition:
Notification of availability.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
On June 29, 2021, the Federal
Election Commission received a Petition
for rulemaking asking the Commission
to amend its existing regulations
regarding reporting expenditures and
certain other disbursements. The
proposed amendments would require
political committees and persons who
make independent expenditures and
electioneering communications to
itemize certain payments made by
vendors to others on behalf of the
reporting entities.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before October 4, 2021.
ADDRESSES: All comments must be in
writing. Commenters may submit
comments electronically via the
Commission’s website at https://
sers.fec.gov/fosers/, reference REG
2021–02.
Each commenter must provide, at a
minimum, his or her first name, last
name, city, and state. All properly
submitted comments, including
attachments, will become part of the
public record, and the Commission will
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SUMMARY:
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make comments available for public
viewing on the Commission’s website
and in the Commission’s Public Records
Office. Accordingly, commenters should
not provide in their comments any
information that they do not wish to
make public, such as a home street
address, personal email address, date of
birth, phone number, social security
number, or driver’s license number, or
any information that is restricted from
disclosure, such as trade secrets or
commercial or financial information
that is privileged or confidential.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Robert M. Knop, Assistant General
Counsel, or Ms. Joanna S.
Waldstreicher, Attorney, Office of the
General Counsel, at
subvendorreporting@fec.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June
29, 2021, the Commission received a
Petition for Rulemaking from the
Campaign Legal Center and the Center
on Science & Technology Policy at Duke
University (‘‘Petition’’). The Petition
asks the Commission to amend its
regulations at 11 CFR 104.3(b),
109.10(e), and 104.20(c), to require that
persons filing reports under those
sections itemize all expenditures or
disbursements made on behalf of or for
the benefit of the political committee or
other reporting person, including those
made by an agent, independent
contractor, vendor, or subvendor.
The Federal Election Campaign Act
(the ‘‘Act’’) and Commission regulations
require that political committees
disclose the name and address of each
person to whom expenditures or certain
other disbursements aggregating over
$200 are made, as well as certain
information about each expenditure or
disbursement. 52 U.S.C. 30104(b)(5)(A),
(b)(6)(B)(v); 11 CFR 104.3(b)(3)(i),
(b)(4)(i). The Act and Commission
regulations also require that
disbursements aggregating over $200 for
independent expenditures and
electioneering communications
similarly be disclosed. 52 U.S.C.
30104(b)(6)(B)(iii), (c)(2)(A); 11 CFR
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109.10(e)(1)(ii–iii) (independent
expenditures); 52 U.S.C. 30104(f)(2)(C);
11 CFR 104.20(c)(4) (electioneering
communications).
The Petition notes that ‘‘if a disclosed
vendor subcontracts with a third party,
the payment to the subcontractor might
not be disclosed,’’ Petition at 1, and
asserts that ‘‘a substantial portion of
FEC-reported political spending now
consists of large payments to a small
number of consulting firms that disguise
where political money is ultimately
going.’’ Petition at 3. The Petition
asserts that this lack of disclosure about
the ultimate recipients and purposes of
political spending has a number of
negative consequences: it ‘‘deprives
voters of information they use to assess
candidates and cast informed votes,’’
Petition at 4; it ‘‘becomes nearly
impossible for researchers and
academics to monitor digital political ad
practices,’’ id.; it allows reporting
entities to ‘‘disguise FECA violations,
such as violations of the personal use
ban’’ and ‘‘evidence of common vendor
coordination between an authorized
committee and a super PAC,’’ Petition at
5; and it can ‘‘provide further cover for
so-called ‘scam PACs,’’’ Petition at 6.
The Petition asks the Commission to
amend 11 CFR 104.3(b) to require
additional disclosure by political
committees, by adding a new
subparagraph (5) that reads:
(5)(i) Any person reporting expenditures or
disbursements under this section must report
expenditures or disbursements made by an
agent or independent contractor, including
any vendor or subvendor, on behalf of or for
the benefit of the reporting person.
(ii) An agent or contractor, including a
vendor or subvendor, who makes an
expenditure or disbursement on behalf of or
for the benefit of a reporting committee or
person that is required to be reported under
this section shall promptly make known to
the reporting committee or person all the
information required for reporting the
expenditure or disbursement.
Petition at 6–7.
The Petition also asks the
Commission to amend sections
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 148 (Thursday, August 5, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 42751-42753]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-16703]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
10 CFR Part 72
[NRC-2021-0052]
RIN 3150-AK63
List of Approved Spent Fuel Storage Casks: NAC International NAC-
UMS[supreg] Universal Storage System, Certificate of Compliance No.
1015, Amendment No. 8
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is proposing to
amend its spent fuel storage regulations by revising the NAC
International NAC-UMS[supreg] Universal Storage System listing within
the ``List of approved spent fuel storage casks'' to include Amendment
No. 8 to Certificate of Compliance No. 1015. Amendment No. 8 revises
the certificate of compliance to add the storage of damaged boiling-
water reactor spent fuel, including higher enrichment and higher burnup
spent fuel; change the allowable fuel burnup range; expand the boiling-
water reactor class 5 fuel inventory that could be stored in the cask;
and revise definitions in the technical specifications.
DATES: Submit comments by September 7, 2021. Comments received after
this date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but the NRC
is able to ensure consideration only for comments received on or before
this date.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID NRC-2021-0052,
at https://www.regulations.gov. If your material cannot be submitted
using https://www.regulations.gov, call or email the individuals listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this document for
alternate instructions.
For additional direction on obtaining information and submitting
comments, see ``Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments'' in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bernard White, Office of Nuclear
Material Safety and Safeguards; telephone: 301-415-6577; email:
[email protected] or James Firth, Office of Nuclear Material Safety
and Safeguards; telephone: 301-415-6628, email: [email protected].
Both are staff of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555-0001.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents:
I. Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments
II. Rulemaking Procedure
III. Background
IV. Plain Writing
V. Availability of Documents
I. Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments
A. Obtaining Information
Please refer to Docket ID NRC-2021-0052 when contacting the NRC
about the availability of information for this action. You may obtain
publicly available information related to this action by any of the
following methods:
Federal Rulemaking Website: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID NRC-2021-0052. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Dawn Forder, telephone: 301-415-3407,
email: [email protected]. For technical questions contact the
individuals listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document.
NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publicly available documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. To begin the search, select ``Begin Web-based ADAMS
Search.'' For problems with ADAMS, please contact the NRC's Public
Document Room (PDR) reference staff at 1-800-397-4209, 301-415-4737, or
by email to [email protected]. For the convenience of the reader,
instructions about obtaining materials referenced in this document are
provided in the ``Availability of Documents'' section.
Attention: The PDR, where you may examine and order copies
of public documents, is currently closed. You may submit your request
to the PDR via email at [email protected] or call 1-800-397-4209
between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. (EST), Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
B. Submitting Comments
Please include Docket ID NRC-2021-0052 in your comment submission.
The NRC requests that you submit comments through the Federal
rulemaking website
[[Page 42752]]
at https://www.regulations.gov. If your material cannot be submitted
using https://www.regulations.gov, call or email the individuals listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this document for
alternate instructions.
The NRC cautions you not to include identifying or contact
information that you do not want to be publicly disclosed in your
comment submission. The NRC will post all comment submissions at
https://www.regulations.gov as well as enter the comment submissions
into ADAMS. The NRC does not routinely edit comment submissions to
remove identifying or contact information.
If you are requesting or aggregating comments from other persons
for submission to the NRC, then you should inform those persons not to
include identifying or contact information that they do not want to be
publicly disclosed in their comment submission. Your request should
state that the NRC does not routinely edit comment submissions to
remove such information before making the comment submissions available
to the public or entering the comment into ADAMS.
II. Rulemaking Procedure
Because the NRC considers this action to be non-controversial, the
NRC is publishing this proposed rule concurrently with a direct final
rule in the Rules and Regulations section of this issue of the Federal
Register. The direct final rule will become effective on October 19,
2021. However, if the NRC receives any significant adverse comment by
September 7, 2021, then the NRC will publish a document that withdraws
the direct final rule. If the direct final rule is withdrawn, the NRC
will address the comments in a subsequent final rule. Absent
significant modifications to the proposed revisions requiring
republication, the NRC will not initiate a second comment period on
this action in the event the direct final rule is withdrawn.
A significant adverse comment is a comment where the commenter
explains why the rule would be inappropriate, including challenges to
the rule's underlying premise or approach, or would be ineffective or
unacceptable without a change. A comment is adverse and significant if:
(1) The comment opposes the rule and provides a reason sufficient
to require a substantive response in a notice-and-comment process. For
example, a substantive response is required when:
(a) The comment causes the NRC to reevaluate (or reconsider) its
position or conduct additional analysis;
(b) The comment raises an issue serious enough to warrant a
substantive response to clarify or complete the record; or
(c) The comment raises a relevant issue that was not previously
addressed or considered by the NRC.
(2) The comment proposes a change or an addition to the rule, and
it is apparent that the rule would be ineffective or unacceptable
without incorporation of the change or addition.
(3) The comment causes the NRC to make a change (other than
editorial) to the rule, certificate of compliance, or technical
specifications.
For a more detailed discussion of the proposed rule changes and
associated analyses, see the direct final rule published in the Rules
and Regulations section of this issue of the Federal Register.
III. Background
Section 218(a) of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as amended,
requires that ``[t]he Secretary [of the Department of Energy] shall
establish a demonstration program, in cooperation with the private
sector, for the dry storage of spent nuclear fuel at civilian nuclear
power reactor sites, with the objective of establishing one or more
technologies that the [Nuclear Regulatory] Commission may, by rule,
approve for use at the sites of civilian nuclear power reactors
without, to the maximum extent practicable, the need for additional
site-specific approvals by the Commission.'' Section 133 of the Nuclear
Waste Policy Act states, in part, that ``[t]he Commission shall, by
rule, establish procedures for the licensing of any technology approved
by the Commission under section 219(a) [sic: 218(a)] for use at the
site of any civilian nuclear power reactor.''
To implement this mandate, the Commission approved dry storage of
spent nuclear fuel in NRC-approved casks under a general license by
publishing a final rule that added a new subpart K in part 72 of title
10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) entitled ``General
License for Storage of Spent Fuel at Power Reactor Sites'' (55 FR
29181; July 18, 1990). This rule also established a new subpart L in 10
CFR part 72 entitled ``Approval of Spent Fuel Storage Casks,'' which
contains procedures and criteria for obtaining NRC approval of spent
fuel storage cask designs. The casks approved for use under the terms,
conditions, and specifications of their certificate of compliance or an
amended certificate of compliance pursuant to this general license are
listed in Sec. 72.214. The NRC subsequently issued a final rule on
October 19, 2000 (65 FR 62581), that approved the NAC International
NAC-UMS[supreg] Universal Storage System and added it to the list of
NRC-approved cask designs in Sec. 72.214 as Certificate of Compliance
No. 1015.
The NAC International NAC-UMS[supreg] Universal Storage System
consists of the following components: (1) Transportable storage
canister (TSC), which contains the spent fuel; (2) vertical concrete
cask, which contains the TSC during storage; and (3) a transfer cask,
which contains the TSC during loading, unloading, and transfer
operations. Amendment No. 8 revises the certificate of compliance to
(1) add the storage of damaged boiling-water reactor spent fuel,
including higher enrichment and higher burnup spent fuel; (2) change
the allowable fuel burnup range; and (3) expand the boiling-water
reactor class 5 fuel inventory that could be stored in the cask; and
(4) change definitions in the technical specifications that are
associated with the contents of the spent nuclear fuel stored in the
cask (e.g., high burnup fuel and initial peak planar-average
enrichment).
IV. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-274) requires Federal
agencies to write documents in a clear, concise, and well-organized
manner. The NRC has written this document to be consistent with the
Plain Writing Act as well as the Presidential Memorandum, ``Plain
Language in Government Writing,'' published June 10, 1998 (63 FR
31885). The NRC requests comment on the proposed rule with respect to
clarity and effectiveness of the language used.
V. Availability of Documents
The documents identified in the following table are available to
interested persons, as indicated.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Document ADAMS Accession No.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Submission of a Request to Amend the U.S. ML20006D749
Nuclear Regulatory Commission Certificate of
Compliance No. 1015 for the NAC-UMS Cask
System, December 18, 2019.
Application for Amendment No. 8 to the Model ML20076A546
No. NAC-UMS Storage Cask--Acceptance Letter,
March 17, 2020.
[[Page 42753]]
NAC International, Submittal of Supplement to ML20122A201
Amend the NRC Certificate of Compliance No.
1015 for the NAC-UMS Cask System, April 24,
2020.
Application for Amendment No. 8 to the Model ML20170A800
No. NAC-UMS Storage Cask--Request for
Additional Information, June 25, 2020.
Submission of Responses to the U.S. Nuclear ML20227A066
Regulatory Commission Request for Additional
Information for Certificate of Compliance No.
1015 for the NAC-UMS Cask System, August 7,
2020.
Memorandum to J. Cai re: User Need for ML20358A255
Rulemaking for Amendment No. 8 Request,
February 23, 2021.
Proposed Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 ML20358A257
Amendment No. 8, Technical Specifications,
Appendix A.
Proposed Certificate of Compliance No. 1015, ML20358A258
Amendment No. 8, Technical Specifications
Appendix B.
Draft Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 ML20358A256
Amendment No. 8.
Certificate of Compliance No. 1015 Amendment ML20358A259
No. 8, Preliminary Safety Evaluation Report.
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The NRC may post materials related to this document, including
public comments, on the Federal Rulemaking website at https://www.regulations.gov under Docket ID NRC-2021-0052.
Dated: July 26, 2021.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Margaret M. Doane,
Executive Director for Operations.
[FR Doc. 2021-16703 Filed 8-4-21; 8:45 am]
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