Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1.
General provisions and
applicability.
A. This part applies to
the decommissioning of facilities licensed under this chapter and to facilities
subject to the NRC's jurisdiction under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as
amended, and the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, as amended. This part does
not apply to uranium and thorium recovery facilities already subject to Code of
Federal Regulations, title 10, part 40, Appendix A, or to uranium solution
extraction facilities.
B. This part
does not apply to sites that:
(1) have been
decommissioned before January 3, 2005, according to criteria identified in the
Site Decommissioning Management Plan (SDMP) Action Plan of April 16, 1992, as
listed in the Federal Register, volume 57, page 13389;
(2) have previously submitted and received
the commissioner's approval on a license termination plan or decommissioning
plan that is compatible with the SDMP Action Plan criteria; or
(3) submit a sufficient license termination
plan or decommissioning plan before August 20, 1998, that is approved by the
commissioner before August 20, 1999, and is according to the criteria
identified in the SDMP Action Plan, except that if an environmental impact
statement is required in the submittal, there will be a provision for
day-for-day extension.
C. After a site has been decommissioned and
the license terminated according to this part, the commissioner shall require
additional cleanup only if, based on new information, the commissioner
determines that the criteria of this part were not met and residual
radioactivity remaining at the site could result in a significant threat to
public health and safety.
D. When
calculating the TEDE to the average member of the critical group, the licensee
must determine the peak annual TEDE expected within the first 1,000 years after
decommissioning.
Subp.
2.
Radiological criteria for unrestricted use.
A site is considered acceptable for unrestricted use
if:
A. the residual radioactivity that
is distinguishable from background radiation results in a TEDE to an average
member of the critical group that does not exceed 25 millirems (0.25 mSv) per
year, including that from groundwater sources of drinking water; and
B. the residual radioactivity has been
reduced to levels that are ALARA. Determination of levels that are ALARA must
take into account consideration of any detriments, such as deaths from
transportation accidents, expected to potentially result from decontamination
and waste disposal.
Subp.
3.
Criteria for termination under restricted
conditions.
A site is considered acceptable for license termination under
restricted conditions, if the licensee:
A. can demonstrate that further reductions in
residual radioactivity necessary to comply with subpart 2:
(1) would result in net public or
environmental harm; or
(2) are not
being made because the residual levels associated with restricted conditions
are ALARA. Determination of the levels that are ALARA must take into account
consideration of any detriments, such as traffic accidents, expected to
potentially result from decontamination and waste disposal;
B. has made provisions for legally
enforceable institutional controls that provide reasonable assurance that the
TEDE from residual radioactivity, distinguishable from background radiation,
will not exceed 25 millirems (0.25 mSv) per year to the average member of the
critical group;
C. has provided
sufficient financial assurance to enable an independent third party, including
a governmental custodian of a site, to assume and carry out responsibilities
for any necessary control and maintenance of the site. Acceptable financial
assurance mechanisms are:
(1) funds placed
into a trust segregated from the licensee's assets and outside the licensee's
administrative control , and in which the adequacy of the trust funds is to be
assessed based on an assumed annual one percent real rate of return on
investment;
(2) a statement of intent, in the case of federal,
state, or local government licensees, as described under part 4731.3080,
subpart 6, item E; or
(3) when a
governmental entity is assuming custody and ownership of a site, an arrangement
that is deemed acceptable by the governmental entity;
D. has submitted a decommissioning plan or a
license termination plan to the commissioner indicating the licensee's intent
to decommission according to part 4731.0600, subpart 2, 4731.0790, subpart 4,
or 4731.3085, subpart 4, or Code of Federal Regulations, title 10, section
50.82, paragraphs (a) and (b), or 72.54, and specifying that the licensee
intends to decommission by restricting use of the site. The licensee must
document in the license termination plan or decommissioning plan how the advice
of individuals and institutions in the community has been sought according to
items E and F and incorporated, as appropriate, following analysis of that
advice;
E. if proposing to
decommission by restricting use of the site, seeks advice from individuals and
institutions in the community who may be affected by the decommissioning
regarding whether:
(1) institutional controls
proposed by the licensee:
(a) will provide
reasonable assurance that the TEDE from residual radioactivity distinguishable
from background radiation to the average member of the critical group will not
exceed 25 millirems (0.25 mSv) TEDE per year;
(b) will be enforceable; and
(c) will not impose undue burdens on the
local community or other affected parties; and
(2) the licensee has provided sufficient
financial assurance to enable an independent third party, including a
governmental custodian of a site, to assume and carry out responsibilities for
any necessary control and maintenance of the site;
F. while seeking advice under item E,
provides for:
(1) participation by
representatives of a broad cross section of community interests who may be
affected by the decommissioning;
(2) an opportunity for a comprehensive,
collective discussion on the issues by the participants represented;
and
(3) a publicly available
summary of the results of all such discussions, including a description of the
individual viewpoints of the participants on the issues and the extent of
agreement and disagreement among the participants on the issues; and
G. reduces residual radioactivity
at the site so that if the institutional controls were no longer in effect,
there is reasonable assurance that the TEDE from residual radioactivity
distinguishable from background radiation to the average member of the critical
group is as low as reasonably achievable and would not exceed:
(1) 100 millirems (1 mSv) per year;
or
(2) 500 millirems (5 mSv) per
year, if the licensee:
(a) demonstrates that
further reductions in residual radioactivity necessary to comply with subitem
(1) are not technically achievable, would be prohibitively expensive, or would
result in net public or environmental harm;
(b) makes provisions for durable
institutional controls; and
(c)
provides sufficient financial assurance, according to item C, to enable a
responsible governmental entity or independent third party, including a
governmental custodian of a site, to carry out periodic rechecks of the site no
less frequently than every five years to ensure that the institutional controls
remain in place as necessary to meet the criteria of item B and to assume and
carry out responsibilities for any necessary control and maintenance of those
controls.
Subp.
4.
Alternative criteria for license termination.
A. The commissioner may terminate a license
using alternative criteria greater than the dose criterion of subparts 2 and 3,
items B and E, subitem (1), unit (a), if the licensee:
(1) provides assurance that public health and
safety would continue to be protected and that it is unlikely that the dose
from all man-made sources combined, other than medical, would be more than the
100 millirems per year (1 mSv per year) limit under part 4731.2090, by
submitting an analysis of possible sources of exposure;
(2) employs, to the extent practical,
restrictions on site use according to subpart 3, in minimizing exposures at the
site;
(3) reduces doses to ALARA
levels, taking into consideration any detriments, such as traffic accidents,
expected to potentially result from decontamination and waste disposal;
(4) submits a decommissioning plan
or license termination plan to the commissioner indicating the licensee's
intent to decommission according to part 4731.0600, subpart 2; 4731.0790,
subpart 4; or 4731.3085, subpart 4, or Code of Federal Regulations, title 10,
section 50.82, paragraphs (a) and (b), or 72.54, and specifying that the
licensee proposes to decommission by use of alternate criteria. The licensee
must document in the decommissioning plan or license termination plan how the
advice of individuals and institutions in the community who may be affected by
the decommissioning has been sought and addressed, as appropriate, following
analysis of that advice. In seeking such advice, the licensee must provide for:
(a) participation by representatives of a
broad cross section of community interests who may be affected by the
decommissioning;
(b) an opportunity
for a comprehensive, collective discussion on the issues by the participants
represented; and
(c) a publicly
available summary of the results of all such discussions, including a
description of the individual viewpoints of the participants on the issues and
the extent of agreement and disagreement among the participants on the issues;
and
(5) has provided
sufficient financial assurance in the form of a trust fund to enable an
independent third party, including a government custodian of a site, to assume
and carry out responsibilities for any necessary control and maintenance of the
site.
B. The use of
alternate criteria to terminate a license requires the approval of the
commissioner after consideration of staff recommendations of the Radioactive
Materials Unit of the Department of Health that address any comments provided
by the Environmental Protection Agency or the Pollution Control Agency and any
public comments submitted under subpart 5.
Subp. 5.
Public notification and public
participation.
Upon receipt of a license termination plan or decommissioning
plan from a licensee or a proposal by a licensee for release of a site
according to subpart 3 or 4, or whenever the commissioner deems such notice to
be in the public interest, the commissioner must:
A. notify and solicit comments from:
(1) local and state governments in the
vicinity of the site and any Indian nation or other indigenous people that have
treaty or statutory rights that could be affected by the decommissioning;
and
(2) the Environmental
Protection Agency for cases when the licensee proposes to release a site
according to subpart 4; and
B. publish a notice in the State Register and
in a forum, such as local newspapers, letters to state and local organizations,
or other appropriate forum, that is readily accessible to individuals in the
vicinity of the site and solicit comments from affected parties.