Notice of Adoption of Nuclear Regulatory Commission National Environmental Policy Act Documentation for the Operation of Diablo Canyon Power Plant and Republication as a Final DOE Environmental Impact Statement for Award of Credits to Pacific Gas and Electric Company Under the Civil Nuclear Credit Program, 51798-51800 [2023-16448]
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51798
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 149 / Friday, August 4, 2023 / Notices
Signing Authority: This document of
the Department of Energy was signed on
July 28, 2023, by Dr. Geraldine
Richmond, Undersecretary for Science
and Innovation 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 July 31,
2023.
Treena V. Garrett,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S.
Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2023–16611 Filed 8–3–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Adoption of Nuclear
Regulatory Commission National
Environmental Policy Act
Documentation for the Operation of
Diablo Canyon Power Plant and
Republication as a Final DOE
Environmental Impact Statement for
Award of Credits to Pacific Gas and
Electric Company Under the Civil
Nuclear Credit Program
Grid Deployment Office,
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of adoption of National
Environmental Policy Act
documentation.
AGENCY:
The Department of Energy
(DOE) is adopting the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
documentation (including that of the
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), the
NRC’s predecessor agency), for
operation of the Diablo Canyon Power
Plant (DCPP) under DCPP’s operating
licenses from the NRC. DOE determined
these documents adequate to satisfy
DOE NEPA obligations related to its
award of credits to Pacific Gas and
Electric Company (PG&E), pursuant to
the Civil Nuclear Credit (CNC) Program,
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
14 https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/
2022-02/Wind%20Supply%20
Chain%20Report%20-%20Final%202.25.22.pdf.
15 https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/
2022-02/Solar%20Energy%20Supply
%20Chain%20Report%20-%20Final.pdf.
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for the continued operation of the DCPP
under DCPP’s current operating licenses
issued by the NRC. Because the actions
covered by this NRC NEPA
documentation and the proposed action
are substantially the same, DOE is
republishing and adopting those NEPA
documents as a final DOE
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
DATES: DOE will execute a Record of
Decision no sooner than 30 days
following publication by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
of its Notice of Availability of DOE’s
adoption of the NRC NEPA documents
(EPA Notice) in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Copies of this Notice of
Adoption may be obtained by contacting
Mr. Jason Anderson, Document
Manager, by mail at U.S. Department of
Energy, Idaho Operations Office, 1955
Fremont Avenue, Idaho Falls, Idaho
83415; or by email to cnc_program_
mailbox@hq.doe.gov. This Notice of
Adoption, as well as other general
information concerning the DOE NEPA
process, are available for viewing or
download at: https://www.energy.gov/
gdo/cnc-cycle-1-diablo-canyonconditional-award-nepadocumentation. For general information
on the CNC Program, visit
www.energy.gov/gdo/civil-nuclearcredit-program.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Theodore Taylor, cnc_program_
mailbox@hq.doe.gov, (202) 586–4316.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Part of the
DOE mission is to ensure America’s
security and prosperity by addressing its
energy, environmental, and nuclear
challenges through transformative
science and technology solutions. As
described at www.energy.gov/gdo/civilnuclear-credit-program, the CNC
Program was established on November
15, 2021, when President Biden signed
the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs
Act (IIJA) (Pub. L. 117–58), also known
as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law,
into law. Section 40323 of the IIJA (42
U.S.C. 18753) provides $6 billion to
establish a program to award civil
nuclear credits. The CNC Program is a
strategic investment to help preserve the
existing U.S. commercial power reactor
fleet and save thousands of high-paying
jobs across the country.
Under the CNC Program, owners or
operators of U.S. commercial power
reactors can apply for certification to
bid on credits to support the nuclear
reactor’s continued operation. An
application must demonstrate that the
nuclear reactor is projected to close for
economic reasons and that closure will
lead to a rise in air pollutants and
carbon emissions, among other
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
conditions. An owner or operator of a
certified nuclear reactor whose bid for
credits is selected by DOE is then
eligible to receive payments from the
Federal government in the amount of
the credits awarded to the owner or
operator, provided it continues to
operate the nuclear reactor for the fouryear award period (2023 to 2026) and
subject to its satisfaction of other
specified payment terms. PG&E
submitted its application for
certification and its bid for credits under
the CNC Program on September 9, 2022.
DOE made a conditional award of
credits to PG&E on November 21, 2022.
NEPA requires Federal agencies to
evaluate the environmental impacts of
proposals for major Federal actions with
the potential to significantly affect the
quality of the human environment.
Awarding credits for continued
operation of a commercial nuclear
power reactor under the CNC Program is
subject to NEPA. Therefore, to award
credits to DCPP, an existing commercial
nuclear power plant, DOE conducted a
review of the existing NEPA
documentation for continued operation
of the reactor in accordance with the
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) and DOE NEPA regulations, 40
CFR 1506.3 and 10 CFR 1021.200(d),
respectively. DOE also considered nonNEPA documents, such as available
licensing basis documents, the 2021
Safety Analysis Report, Federal and
State permits, site reports and
documents, and relevant public
information to satisfy its obligations
under NEPA.
Proposed Action
DOE proposes to award credits to
PG&E under the CNC Program for the
continued operation of DCPP under
DCPP’s current NRC operating licenses.
While DCPP’s current NRC operating
licenses are valid until November 2,
2024 (Unit 1) and until August 26, 2025
(Unit 2), they may remain in effect by
operation of law beyond those dates in
accordance with NRC rules and 5 U.S.C.
558(c). DOE’s review and adoption of
the NRC NEPA documents covers DOE’s
proposed action, which occurs during
the period that DCPP’s current NRC
operating licenses remain in effect. The
issuance or payment of credits awarded
to PG&E beyond the period that DCPP’s
current NRC operating licenses remain
in effect would be dependent on PG&E’s
compliance with NRC requirements
applicable to license renewal. DOE
would consider the need for further
NEPA review prior to deciding whether
to issue any credits or make any
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 149 / Friday, August 4, 2023 / Notices
payments during the period of operation
under an NRC license renewal.1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
NEPA Document Review
Because DOE did not participate as a
cooperating agency in the preparation of
the NRC NEPA documents,2 in
accordance with 10 CFR 1021.200(d),
DOE conducted a review to determine if
the NRC documentation ‘‘meets the
standards for an adequate statement,
assessment, or determination’’ under the
CEQ NEPA regulations and an
evaluation of whether ‘‘the actions
covered by the original environmental
impact statement and the proposed
action are substantially the same.’’ 40
CFR 1506.3. DOE reviewed the
following NRC NEPA documents:
• U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
Final Environmental Statement related
to the Nuclear Generating Station Diablo
Canyon Units 1 & 2 (AEC 1973);
• U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission Addendum to the Final
Environmental Statement for the
Operation of the Diablo Canyon Nuclear
Power Plant Units 1 & 2 (NRC 1976);
• U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission Pacific Gas and Electric
Company Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power
Plant, Units 1 and 2 Notice of Issuance
of Environmental Assessment and
Finding of No Significant Impact (NRC
1993);
• U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission Environmental Assessment
Related to the Construction and
Operation of the Diablo Canyon
Independent Spent Fuel Storage
Installation (NRC 2003); and
• U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission Supplement to the
Environmental Assessment and Final
Finding of No Significant Impact
Related to the Construction and
Operation of the Diablo Canyon
Independent Spent Fuel Storage
Installation (NRC 2007).
1 The NRC has granted PG&E a one-time
exemption for DCPP from 10 CFR 2.109(b) to allow
PG&E to submit a license renewal application for
DCPP less than 5 years prior to expiration of the
current operating licenses, but no later than
December 31, 2023. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Pacific Gas and Electric Company
Diablo Canyon Power Plant, Units 1 and 2
Exemption, ADAMS Accession No. ML 23026A109
(NRC 2023). As the NRC explained, ‘‘[t]he decision
to issue PG&E an exemption from 10 CFR 2.109(b)
does not constitute approval of the license renewal
application PG&E intends to submit by December
31, 2023. Rather, this exemption provides that if
PG&E submits an application by December 31,
2023, and the application is sufficient for docketing,
the licensee will receive timely renewal protection
under 10 CFR 2.109(b) while the NRC evaluates that
application.’’
2 For ease of reference, documents prepared by
either the AEC or the NRC are referred to as ‘‘NRC
documents’’ or the ‘‘NRC NEPA documents,’’ unless
a specific AEC document is identified.
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18:51 Aug 03, 2023
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DOE’s review of the DCPP NRC NEPA
documents was guided by the NRC’s
2013 Generic Environmental Impact
Statement (GEIS) (NUREG 1437,
Revision 1). The 2013 GEIS examines
the possible environmental impacts that
could occur as a result of renewing
licenses of individual nuclear power
plants under 10 CFR part 54. The GEIS,
to the extent possible, establishes the
bounds and significance of these
potential impacts. While DOE’s
proposed action does not cover license
renewal of DCPP beyond the current
licenses in effect, the analyses in the
GEIS encompass all operating lightwater nuclear power reactors in the
United States and provide a reasonable
analytical structure for DOE’s review of
its proposed action to provide financial
support for continued operation of
existing NRC licensed light-water
nuclear power reactors.
In 1967 and 1968, PG&E submitted
license applications for the construction
and operation of DCPP to the AEC. In
1973, the AEC issued a final
Environmental Statement (ES) related to
construction and operation of DCPP.
The NRC updated some of the analyses
and issued an addendum to the ES in
1976. The NRC documents analyzed the
potential environmental impacts
associated with construction and
operation of DCPP. In 1981, the Atomic
Safety and Licensing Board Panel, an
independent adjudicatory body of the
NRC, authorized the issuance to PG&E
of two NRC licenses, DPR–80 and DPR–
82, for operation of DCPP. Based on its
review of the NRC NEPA documents,
and subsequent documents as
referenced in the DOE EIS (including
available licensing basis documents,
Federal and State permits, site reports
and documents, and relevant public
information), DOE has determined that
the documents meet the standards for an
adequate statement, assessment, or
determination under CEQ NEPA
regulations and the actions covered by
the NRC NEPA documents are
substantially the same as the actions
proposed to be undertaken with respect
to the award of credits described herein.
In this instance, DOE’s action is
proposed financial support for the
continuing operation of DCPP, and NRC
has permitting (licensing) authority over
the same project. DOE took a hard look
at the environmental effects of the
planned action, including the analysis
in prior NRC NEPA documents and
other environmental documents. DOE
concluded that the NEPA
documentation is adequate for
continued operation during the period
that DCPP’s current operating licenses
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Fmt 4703
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51799
remain in effect. Therefore, DOE has
adopted the NRC NEPA documents as a
single DOE EIS (DOE/EIS–0555).
While the NRC NEPA documents
themselves are the basis of this
adequacy review, it is permissible to use
non-NEPA documents, such as available
licensing basis documents, Federal and
State permits, site reports and
documents, and relevant public
information in DOE’s analysis. Further,
as a condition of the Environmental
Protection Plan (EPP) which is part of
the NRC licenses for operation of DCPP,
PG&E is required to report ‘‘unreviewed
environmental questions’’ which ‘‘may
result in a significant increase in any
adverse environmental impact
previously evaluated in the final
environmental statement.’’
Implementation of such changes are
subject to prior approval by the NRC in
the form of a license amendment
incorporating the appropriate revision
into the EPP. PG&E is required to submit
an annual report identifying if any of
these events occurred. For example,
PG&E’s most recent report to the NRC
with respect to DCPP, dated May 1,
2023, reported that there were no EPP
noncompliances nor changes in plant
design or operation, tests, or
experiments involving an unreviewed
environmental question during 2022.
These documents were included in
DOE’s review and are consistent with
the NRC NEPA documents.
DOE determined that the project
analyzed in the NEPA documents is
substantially the same project for which
DOE is considering awarding credits as
part of the CNC Program, namely the
continued operation of DCPP under its
NRC operating licenses, and that the
NEPA documents meet the standards for
an adequate statement, assessment, or
determination under the CEQ NEPA
regulations. Additional details on that
review are summarized below.
Potential Environmental Impacts
The existing NEPA documents as well
as available public documents were
reviewed by DOE to satisfy DOE’s
obligations under NEPA. The NEPA
resource areas reviewed by DOE
included land use and visual resources,
meteorology and air quality, noise,
geologic environment, biological
resources, water resources, ecological
resources, historic and cultural
resources, socioeconomics, human
health, environmental justice, waste
management, transportation, intentional
destructive acts, and cumulative
impacts.
The NRC’s 1996 GEIS (NUREG 1437)
examines the possible environmental
impacts that could occur because of
E:\FR\FM\04AUN1.SGM
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
51800
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 149 / Friday, August 4, 2023 / Notices
renewing licenses of individual nuclear
power plants under 10 CFR part 54. The
GEIS, to the extent possible, establishes
the bounds and significance of these
potential impacts. The analyses in the
GEIS encompass all operating lightwater power plants. As part of the
review, DOE considered the resource
areas analyzed in the 2013 GEIS and
listed above.
DOE’s review of the NRC NEPA
documents and other available
information for DCPP indicates the
impact findings in the existing NEPA
documentation remains adequate
through the current operating licenses
and that the impacts of continued DCPP
operation would be consistent with the
impacts of current and historic
operations.
DOE found that there was sufficient
information in the documents reviewed
by DOE to complete DOE’s analysis and
to determine that the NEPA documents
remain adequate, despite the age of
many of these documents. In its review,
DOE did not identify significant new
circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns and bearing on
the proposed award of credits or the
impact of the award of credits and
therefore, no supplemental EIS is
required. In addition, DCPP complies
with Federal, State, and local
environmental regulations,
requirements, and agreements, and it
operates using best management
practices. Further, DOE determined that
the proposed action is substantially the
same as the proposed action analyzed in
the existing NEPA documents: both the
NRC’s issuance of an operating license
to DCPP pursuant to the NEPA
documents and DOE’s award of credits
under the CNC Program for DCPP have
the purpose and effect of allowing for
the continued operation of DCPP. DOE’s
award of credits under the CNC Program
for the period that DCPP’s current NRC
license remains in effect does not
change the existing location, design,
construction, size, fuel usage,
production of electricity, or
environmental impacts of DCPP as
evaluated by the NEPA documents and
for which the NRC has issued an
operating license. In light of the
foregoing, DOE finds the NEPA
documentation is adequate for
continued operation through the period
that DCPP’s current NRC operating
licenses remain in effect. Therefore,
DOE is adopting and republishing the
NRC NEPA documents as a single final
EIS (DOE/EIS–0555).
Signing Authority
This document of the DOE was signed
on July 28, 2023, by Maria D. Robinson,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:51 Aug 03, 2023
Jkt 259001
Director, Grid Deployment Office,
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 July 28,
2023.
Treena V. Garrett,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S.
Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2023–16448 Filed 8–3–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Project No. 2459–280]
Lake Lynn Generation, LLC; Notice of
Application Accepted for Filing and
Soliciting Comments, Motions To
Intervene, and Protests
Take notice that the following
hydroelectric application has been filed
with the Commission and is available
for public inspection.
a. Application Type: Temporary
Variance from Reservoir Elevation.
b. Project No.: 2459–280.
c. Date Filed: July 14, 2023.
d. Applicant: Lake Lynn Generation,
LLC.
e. Name of Project: Lake Lynn
Hydroelectric Project.
f. Location: The Lake Lynn
Hydroelectric Project is located on the
Cheat River in Monongalia County,
West Virginia, and Fayette County,
Pennsylvania.
g. Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power
Act, 16 U.S.C. 791 (a)–825(r).
h. Applicant Contact: Ben Lenz,
Licensing and Compliance Manager,
7315 Wisconsin Avenue, Ste. 1100W,
Bethesda, MD 20814, (203) 240–3664.
i. FERC Contact: Zeena Aljibury, (202)
502–6065, zeena.aljibury@ferc.gov.
j. Deadline for filing comments,
motions to intervene, and protests: 20
days from the issuance date of this
notice by the Commission.
The Commission strongly encourages
electronic filing. Please file comments,
motions to intervene, and protests using
the Commission’s eFiling system at
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/
efiling.asp. Commenters can submit
brief comments up to 6,000 characters,
without prior registration, using the
eComment system at https://
www.ferc.gov/doc-sfiling/
ecomment.asp. You must include your
name and contact information at the end
of your comments. For assistance,
please contact FERC Online Support at
FERCOnlineSupport@ferc.gov, (866)
208–3676 (toll free), or (202) 502–8659
(TTY). In lieu of electronic filing, you
may submit a paper copy. Submissions
sent via the U.S. Postal Service must be
addressed to: Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street NE, Room
1A, Washington, DC 20426.
Submissions sent via any other carrier
must be addressed to: Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 12225 Wilkins Avenue,
Rockville, Maryland 20852. The first
page of any filing should include the
docket number P–2459–280. Comments
emailed to Commission staff are not
considered part of the Commission
record.
The Commission’s Rules of Practice
and Procedure require all intervenors
filing documents with the Commission
to serve a copy of that document on
each person whose name appears on the
official service list for the project.
Further, if an intervenor files comments
or documents with the Commission
relating to the merits of an issue that
may affect the responsibilities of a
particular resource agency, they must
also serve a copy of the document on
that resource agency.
k. Description of Request: The
applicant requests Commission
approval for a temporary variance from
the reservoir elevation requirements at
Lake Lynn. Due to lack of precipitation
and low reservoir inflows, the applicant
requests to reduce the seasonal
minimum allowable reservoir elevation
from 868 feet to 865 feet to increase
spillway discharge in order to mitigate
low tailrace dissolved oxygen levels
(DO). When inflow to the reservoir is
not equal to the discharge needed to
maintain DO concentration in the
project tailwater at the minimum
standard (5.0 milligrams per liter), the
applicant would increase project
discharge in 25 cubic feet per second
increments and subsequently lower the
reservoir elevation below 868 feet but
no less than 865 feet. If necessary to
minimize the impact of lower reservoir
elevations, the applicant proposes to
open the winter boat launch at Cheat
Lake Park, which allows boat access at
lower reservoir elevations. Additionally,
the applicant proposes to contact local
E:\FR\FM\04AUN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 149 (Friday, August 4, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51798-51800]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-16448]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Notice of Adoption of Nuclear Regulatory Commission National
Environmental Policy Act Documentation for the Operation of Diablo
Canyon Power Plant and Republication as a Final DOE Environmental
Impact Statement for Award of Credits to Pacific Gas and Electric
Company Under the Civil Nuclear Credit Program
AGENCY: Grid Deployment Office, Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of adoption of National Environmental Policy Act
documentation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE) is adopting the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
documentation (including that of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC),
the NRC's predecessor agency), for operation of the Diablo Canyon Power
Plant (DCPP) under DCPP's operating licenses from the NRC. DOE
determined these documents adequate to satisfy DOE NEPA obligations
related to its award of credits to Pacific Gas and Electric Company
(PG&E), pursuant to the Civil Nuclear Credit (CNC) Program, for the
continued operation of the DCPP under DCPP's current operating licenses
issued by the NRC. Because the actions covered by this NRC NEPA
documentation and the proposed action are substantially the same, DOE
is republishing and adopting those NEPA documents as a final DOE
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
DATES: DOE will execute a Record of Decision no sooner than 30 days
following publication by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) of
its Notice of Availability of DOE's adoption of the NRC NEPA documents
(EPA Notice) in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Copies of this Notice of Adoption may be obtained by
contacting Mr. Jason Anderson, Document Manager, by mail at U.S.
Department of Energy, Idaho Operations Office, 1955 Fremont Avenue,
Idaho Falls, Idaho 83415; or by email to
[email protected]. This Notice of Adoption, as well as
other general information concerning the DOE NEPA process, are
available for viewing or download at: https://www.energy.gov/gdo/cnc-cycle-1-diablo-canyon-conditional-award-nepa-documentation. For general
information on the CNC Program, visit www.energy.gov/gdo/civil-nuclear-credit-program.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Theodore Taylor,
[email protected], (202) 586-4316.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Part of the DOE mission is to ensure
America's security and prosperity by addressing its energy,
environmental, and nuclear challenges through transformative science
and technology solutions. As described at www.energy.gov/gdo/civil-nuclear-credit-program, the CNC Program was established on November 15,
2021, when President Biden signed the Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act (IIJA) (Pub. L. 117-58), also known as the Bipartisan
Infrastructure Law, into law. Section 40323 of the IIJA (42 U.S.C.
18753) provides $6 billion to establish a program to award civil
nuclear credits. The CNC Program is a strategic investment to help
preserve the existing U.S. commercial power reactor fleet and save
thousands of high-paying jobs across the country.
Under the CNC Program, owners or operators of U.S. commercial power
reactors can apply for certification to bid on credits to support the
nuclear reactor's continued operation. An application must demonstrate
that the nuclear reactor is projected to close for economic reasons and
that closure will lead to a rise in air pollutants and carbon
emissions, among other conditions. An owner or operator of a certified
nuclear reactor whose bid for credits is selected by DOE is then
eligible to receive payments from the Federal government in the amount
of the credits awarded to the owner or operator, provided it continues
to operate the nuclear reactor for the four-year award period (2023 to
2026) and subject to its satisfaction of other specified payment terms.
PG&E submitted its application for certification and its bid for
credits under the CNC Program on September 9, 2022. DOE made a
conditional award of credits to PG&E on November 21, 2022.
NEPA requires Federal agencies to evaluate the environmental
impacts of proposals for major Federal actions with the potential to
significantly affect the quality of the human environment. Awarding
credits for continued operation of a commercial nuclear power reactor
under the CNC Program is subject to NEPA. Therefore, to award credits
to DCPP, an existing commercial nuclear power plant, DOE conducted a
review of the existing NEPA documentation for continued operation of
the reactor in accordance with the Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) and DOE NEPA regulations, 40 CFR 1506.3 and 10 CFR 1021.200(d),
respectively. DOE also considered non-NEPA documents, such as available
licensing basis documents, the 2021 Safety Analysis Report, Federal and
State permits, site reports and documents, and relevant public
information to satisfy its obligations under NEPA.
Proposed Action
DOE proposes to award credits to PG&E under the CNC Program for the
continued operation of DCPP under DCPP's current NRC operating
licenses. While DCPP's current NRC operating licenses are valid until
November 2, 2024 (Unit 1) and until August 26, 2025 (Unit 2), they may
remain in effect by operation of law beyond those dates in accordance
with NRC rules and 5 U.S.C. 558(c). DOE's review and adoption of the
NRC NEPA documents covers DOE's proposed action, which occurs during
the period that DCPP's current NRC operating licenses remain in effect.
The issuance or payment of credits awarded to PG&E beyond the period
that DCPP's current NRC operating licenses remain in effect would be
dependent on PG&E's compliance with NRC requirements applicable to
license renewal. DOE would consider the need for further NEPA review
prior to deciding whether to issue any credits or make any
[[Page 51799]]
payments during the period of operation under an NRC license
renewal.\1\
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\1\ The NRC has granted PG&E a one-time exemption for DCPP from
10 CFR 2.109(b) to allow PG&E to submit a license renewal
application for DCPP less than 5 years prior to expiration of the
current operating licenses, but no later than December 31, 2023.
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Pacific Gas and Electric Company
Diablo Canyon Power Plant, Units 1 and 2 Exemption, ADAMS Accession
No. ML 23026A109 (NRC 2023). As the NRC explained, ``[t]he decision
to issue PG&E an exemption from 10 CFR 2.109(b) does not constitute
approval of the license renewal application PG&E intends to submit
by December 31, 2023. Rather, this exemption provides that if PG&E
submits an application by December 31, 2023, and the application is
sufficient for docketing, the licensee will receive timely renewal
protection under 10 CFR 2.109(b) while the NRC evaluates that
application.''
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NEPA Document Review
Because DOE did not participate as a cooperating agency in the
preparation of the NRC NEPA documents,\2\ in accordance with 10 CFR
1021.200(d), DOE conducted a review to determine if the NRC
documentation ``meets the standards for an adequate statement,
assessment, or determination'' under the CEQ NEPA regulations and an
evaluation of whether ``the actions covered by the original
environmental impact statement and the proposed action are
substantially the same.'' 40 CFR 1506.3. DOE reviewed the following NRC
NEPA documents:
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\2\ For ease of reference, documents prepared by either the AEC
or the NRC are referred to as ``NRC documents'' or the ``NRC NEPA
documents,'' unless a specific AEC document is identified.
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U.S. Atomic Energy Commission Final Environmental
Statement related to the Nuclear Generating Station Diablo Canyon Units
1 & 2 (AEC 1973);
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Addendum to the Final
Environmental Statement for the Operation of the Diablo Canyon Nuclear
Power Plant Units 1 & 2 (NRC 1976);
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Pacific Gas and
Electric Company Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2
Notice of Issuance of Environmental Assessment and Finding of No
Significant Impact (NRC 1993);
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Environmental
Assessment Related to the Construction and Operation of the Diablo
Canyon Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (NRC 2003); and
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Supplement to the
Environmental Assessment and Final Finding of No Significant Impact
Related to the Construction and Operation of the Diablo Canyon
Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (NRC 2007).
DOE's review of the DCPP NRC NEPA documents was guided by the NRC's
2013 Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS) (NUREG 1437,
Revision 1). The 2013 GEIS examines the possible environmental impacts
that could occur as a result of renewing licenses of individual nuclear
power plants under 10 CFR part 54. The GEIS, to the extent possible,
establishes the bounds and significance of these potential impacts.
While DOE's proposed action does not cover license renewal of DCPP
beyond the current licenses in effect, the analyses in the GEIS
encompass all operating light-water nuclear power reactors in the
United States and provide a reasonable analytical structure for DOE's
review of its proposed action to provide financial support for
continued operation of existing NRC licensed light-water nuclear power
reactors.
In 1967 and 1968, PG&E submitted license applications for the
construction and operation of DCPP to the AEC. In 1973, the AEC issued
a final Environmental Statement (ES) related to construction and
operation of DCPP. The NRC updated some of the analyses and issued an
addendum to the ES in 1976. The NRC documents analyzed the potential
environmental impacts associated with construction and operation of
DCPP. In 1981, the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel, an
independent adjudicatory body of the NRC, authorized the issuance to
PG&E of two NRC licenses, DPR-80 and DPR-82, for operation of DCPP.
Based on its review of the NRC NEPA documents, and subsequent documents
as referenced in the DOE EIS (including available licensing basis
documents, Federal and State permits, site reports and documents, and
relevant public information), DOE has determined that the documents
meet the standards for an adequate statement, assessment, or
determination under CEQ NEPA regulations and the actions covered by the
NRC NEPA documents are substantially the same as the actions proposed
to be undertaken with respect to the award of credits described herein.
In this instance, DOE's action is proposed financial support for the
continuing operation of DCPP, and NRC has permitting (licensing)
authority over the same project. DOE took a hard look at the
environmental effects of the planned action, including the analysis in
prior NRC NEPA documents and other environmental documents. DOE
concluded that the NEPA documentation is adequate for continued
operation during the period that DCPP's current operating licenses
remain in effect. Therefore, DOE has adopted the NRC NEPA documents as
a single DOE EIS (DOE/EIS-0555).
While the NRC NEPA documents themselves are the basis of this
adequacy review, it is permissible to use non-NEPA documents, such as
available licensing basis documents, Federal and State permits, site
reports and documents, and relevant public information in DOE's
analysis. Further, as a condition of the Environmental Protection Plan
(EPP) which is part of the NRC licenses for operation of DCPP, PG&E is
required to report ``unreviewed environmental questions'' which ``may
result in a significant increase in any adverse environmental impact
previously evaluated in the final environmental statement.''
Implementation of such changes are subject to prior approval by the NRC
in the form of a license amendment incorporating the appropriate
revision into the EPP. PG&E is required to submit an annual report
identifying if any of these events occurred. For example, PG&E's most
recent report to the NRC with respect to DCPP, dated May 1, 2023,
reported that there were no EPP noncompliances nor changes in plant
design or operation, tests, or experiments involving an unreviewed
environmental question during 2022. These documents were included in
DOE's review and are consistent with the NRC NEPA documents.
DOE determined that the project analyzed in the NEPA documents is
substantially the same project for which DOE is considering awarding
credits as part of the CNC Program, namely the continued operation of
DCPP under its NRC operating licenses, and that the NEPA documents meet
the standards for an adequate statement, assessment, or determination
under the CEQ NEPA regulations. Additional details on that review are
summarized below.
Potential Environmental Impacts
The existing NEPA documents as well as available public documents
were reviewed by DOE to satisfy DOE's obligations under NEPA. The NEPA
resource areas reviewed by DOE included land use and visual resources,
meteorology and air quality, noise, geologic environment, biological
resources, water resources, ecological resources, historic and cultural
resources, socioeconomics, human health, environmental justice, waste
management, transportation, intentional destructive acts, and
cumulative impacts.
The NRC's 1996 GEIS (NUREG 1437) examines the possible
environmental impacts that could occur because of
[[Page 51800]]
renewing licenses of individual nuclear power plants under 10 CFR part
54. The GEIS, to the extent possible, establishes the bounds and
significance of these potential impacts. The analyses in the GEIS
encompass all operating light-water power plants. As part of the
review, DOE considered the resource areas analyzed in the 2013 GEIS and
listed above.
DOE's review of the NRC NEPA documents and other available
information for DCPP indicates the impact findings in the existing NEPA
documentation remains adequate through the current operating licenses
and that the impacts of continued DCPP operation would be consistent
with the impacts of current and historic operations.
DOE found that there was sufficient information in the documents
reviewed by DOE to complete DOE's analysis and to determine that the
NEPA documents remain adequate, despite the age of many of these
documents. In its review, DOE did not identify significant new
circumstances or information relevant to environmental concerns and
bearing on the proposed award of credits or the impact of the award of
credits and therefore, no supplemental EIS is required. In addition,
DCPP complies with Federal, State, and local environmental regulations,
requirements, and agreements, and it operates using best management
practices. Further, DOE determined that the proposed action is
substantially the same as the proposed action analyzed in the existing
NEPA documents: both the NRC's issuance of an operating license to DCPP
pursuant to the NEPA documents and DOE's award of credits under the CNC
Program for DCPP have the purpose and effect of allowing for the
continued operation of DCPP. DOE's award of credits under the CNC
Program for the period that DCPP's current NRC license remains in
effect does not change the existing location, design, construction,
size, fuel usage, production of electricity, or environmental impacts
of DCPP as evaluated by the NEPA documents and for which the NRC has
issued an operating license. In light of the foregoing, DOE finds the
NEPA documentation is adequate for continued operation through the
period that DCPP's current NRC operating licenses remain in effect.
Therefore, DOE is adopting and republishing the NRC NEPA documents as a
single final EIS (DOE/EIS-0555).
Signing Authority
This document of the DOE was signed on July 28, 2023, by Maria D.
Robinson, Director, Grid Deployment Office, 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 July 28, 2023.
Treena V. Garrett,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S. Department of Energy.
[FR Doc. 2023-16448 Filed 8-3-23; 8:45 am]
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