IR 05000456/2006002

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IR 05000456-06-002, 05000457-06-002; 01/01/2006 - 03/31/2006; Braidwood Station, Units 1 & 2; Event Followup
ML061360416
Person / Time
Site: Braidwood  Constellation icon.png
Issue date: 05/15/2006
From: Richard Skokowski
NRC/RGN-III/DRP/RPB3
To: Crane C
Exelon Generation Co
References
FOIA/PA-2010-0209 IR-06-002
Download: ML061360416 (29)


Text

SUBJECT:

BRAIDWOOD STATION, UNITS 1 AND 2 NRC INTEGRATED INSPECTION REPORT 05000456/2006002; 05000457/2006002

Dear Mr. Crane:

On March 31, 2006, the U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) completed an integrated inspection at your Braidwood Station, Units 1 and 2. The enclosed report documents the inspection results, which were discussed on April 3, 2006, with Mr. K. Polson and other members of your staff. Additionally, on May 12, 2006, a followup telephone discussion was held with Mr. Ambler of you staff to reclassify one issue provided during the April 3, 2006, meetings.

The inspection examined activities conducted under your license as they relate to safety and to compliance with the Commissions rules and regulations and with the conditions of your license.

The inspectors reviewed selected procedures and records, observed activities, and interviewed personnel.

Based on the results of this inspection, one self-revealed finding of very low safety significance (Green) is documented in this report. This finding was determined to involve a violation of NRC requirements. Because this violation was of very low safety significance and because the issue was entered into your corrective action program, the NRC is treating this finding as a Non-Cited Violation in accordance with Section VI.A.1 of the NRCs Enforcement policy.

If you contest the subject or severity of the Non-Cited Violation, you should provide a response within 30 days of the date of this inspection report, with the basis for your denial, to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ATTN: Document Control Desk, Washington, D.C.

20555-001, with a copy to the Regional Administrator, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission -

Region III, 2443 Warrenville Road, Suite 210, Lisle, IL 60532-4352; the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, D.C. 20555-001; and the Resident Inspector office at the Byron facility. In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRCs Rules of Practice, a copy of this letter and its enclosure will be made available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRCs document system (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).

Sincerely,

/RA/

Richard A. Skokowski, Chief Branch 3 Division of Reactor Projects Docket Nos. 50-456; 50-457 License Nos. NPF-72; NPF-77 Enclosure: Inspection Report 05000456/2006002; 05000457/2006002 w/Attachment: Supplemental Information cc w/encl: Site Vice President - Braidwood Station Plant Manager - Braidwood Station Regulatory Assurance Manager - Braidwood Station Chief Operating Officer Senior Vice President - Nuclear Services Vice President - Operations Support Vice President - Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Director Licensing Manager Licensing - Braidwood and Byron Senior Counsel, Nuclear, Mid-West Regional Operating Group Document Control Desk - Licensing Assistant Attorney General Illinois Emergency Management Agency State Liaison Officer Chairman, Illinois Commerce Commission

SUMMARY OF FINDINGS

IR 05000456/2006002, 05000457/2006002; 01/01/2006 - 03/31/2006; Braidwood Station,

Units 1 & 2; Event Followup.

This report covers a 3-month period of baseline resident inspection and an inspection in accordance with Temporary Instruction 2515/165, Operational Readiness of Offsite Power and Impact on Plant Risk. The inspections were conducted by resident and inspectors based in the NRC Region III office. One Green finding which was a violation of NRC requirements was identified. The significance of most findings is indicated by their color (Green, White, Yellow,

Red) using Inspection Manual Chapter (IMC) 0609, Significance Determination Process (SDP). Findings for which the SDP does not apply may be Green or be assigned a severity level after NRC management review. The NRCs program for overseeing the safe operation of commercial nuclear power reactors is described in NUREG-1649, Reactor Oversight Process,

Revision 3, dated July 2000.

A. Inspector-Identified and Self-Revealed Findings

Green.

A finding of very low safety significance and associated Non-Cited Violation of Licensee Condition 2.C(1) Maximum Power Level, was self-revealed during the November 18, 2004, feedwater heater transient, which resulted in an increase of reactor power as high as 103.3 percent. Power was returned below the maximum licensed power by an automatic control rod stop and a turbine runback.

This finding was considered more than minor because it had a credible impact on safety, in that exceeding the maximum allowed power level potentially challenged the integrity of the reactor coolant and fuel integrity barriers. This finding affected the Barrier Integrity Cornerstone and was considered to have a very low safety significance (Green). Specifically, using the SDP Phase 1 screening worksheet (IMC 0609,

Appendix A, Attachment 1), the inspectors determined that the actual increase in reactor power did not significantly challenge either the reactor coolant or fuel integrity barriers.

(Section 40A3.2)

Licensee-Identified Violations

None.

REPORT DETAILS

Summary of Plant Status

Both units operated at or near full power throughout the inspection period except for brief power reductions for turbine valve testing, control rod adjustments, or feedwater system manipulations.

REACTOR SAFETY

Cornerstones: Initiating Events, Mitigating Systems, and Barrier Integrity

1R01 Adverse Weather Protection

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors performed several walkdowns of the temporary liquid radwaste storage tank areas in response to actual high winds, tornado watches, rainfall events, and freezing conditions. The purpose of the inspections was to monitor the licensees response to damage to the berm around the tanks and determine if additional concerns or vulnerabilities existed. Minor issues identified during the walkdowns were brought to the attention of plant management and the inspectors verified that they were entered into the licensees corrective action program.

The inspectors also reviewed Issue Reports (IRs) generated since the tanks were installed to verify that problems with the tanks and transfer system identified by the licensee staff were being adequately addressed. Documents reviewed as part of this inspection are listed in the Attachment. This review constituted one sample of this inspection requirement for the onset of a site specific weather related condition.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R04 Equipment Alignment

.1 Partial Walkdowns

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors performed partial walkdowns of the accessible portions of risk-significant system trains during periods when the train was of increased importance due to redundant trains or other equipment being unavailable. The inspectors utilized the valve and electric breaker checklists listed to determine whether the components were properly positioned and that support systems were aligned as needed. The inspectors also examined the material condition of the components and observed operating parameters of equipment to determine whether there were any obvious deficiencies.

The inspectors reviewed IRs associated with the train to determine whether those documents identified issues affecting train function. The inspectors used the information in the appropriate sections of the Technical Specifications (TS) and the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR) to determine the functional requirements of the system. The inspectors also reviewed the licensees identification of and the controls over the redundant risk-related equipment required to remain in service. The inspectors verified that minor issues identified during this inspection were entered into the licensees corrective action program. Documents reviewed during this inspection are listed in the Attachment.

The inspectors completed three samples of this requirement by walkdowns of the following trains:

  • 1A safety injection (SI) train; and

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

.2 Complete Walkdowns

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors performed a complete system walkdowns of the following systems:

  • Unit 1 diesel generator (DG) fuel oil transfer system.

The WS system was selected because it is considered risk-significant from an initiating event standpoint, and the Unit 1 DG fuel oil system walkdown was performed after the licensee discovered an out of positioned drain valve on the 1B DG fuel oil day tank.

In addition to the walkdowns, the inspectors reviewed the following:

  • selected operating procedures regarding system configuration;
  • the UFSAR, system drawings, and other selected design bases documentation regarding the system; and
  • IRs for the system initiated within the last year.

The inspectors verified that minor issues identified during this inspection were entered into the licensees corrective action program. Documents reviewed as part of this inspection are listed in the Attachment. These walkdowns represented two inspection samples.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R05 Fire Protection

.1 Quarterly Inspection

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors conducted fire protection walkdowns which were focused on availability, accessibility, and the condition of fire fighting equipment, the control of transient combustibles and ignition sources, and on the condition and operating status of installed fire barriers. The inspectors selected fire areas for inspection based on their overall contribution to internal fire risk, as documented in the Individual Plant Examination of External Events with additional insights or their potential to impact equipment which could initiate a plant transient or be required for safe shutdown. The inspectors used the Fire Protection Report, Revision 21, to determine: whether fire hoses and extinguishers were in their designated locations and available for immediate use; that fire detectors and sprinklers were unobstructed; that transient material loading was within the analyzed limits; and that fire doors, dampers, and penetration seals appeared to be in satisfactory condition.

The inspectors completed nine samples of this inspection requirement during the following walkdowns:

  • halon fire suppression system;
  • 0FP10S fire hydrant out of service and compensatory measure review;
  • 1B DG room;
  • Unit 1 upper cable spreading room;
  • Unit 1 lower cable spreading room;
  • Unit 1 essential switchgear room - Division 11;
  • Unit 2 essential switchgear room - Division 21;
  • turbine building 451 foot elevation general area pre-outage review of transient combustibles; and
  • auxiliary building 383 foot elevation.

The inspectors verified that minor issues identified during the inspection were entered into the licensees corrective action program. Documents reviewed during this inspection are listed in the Attachment.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

.2 Annual Inspection (Fire Drill)

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors observed licensee fire brigade response to a simulated fire in the Division 22 essential switchgear room. The inspectors evaluation included the following criteria:

  • proper number of fire brigade members, including a brigade leader, responded;
  • protective equipment, including self-contained breathing apparatus, was donned properly;
  • adequate fire fighting equipment was brought to the scene;
  • command and control, communications, and procedure usage was appropriate;
  • checks for victims and fire propagation were conducted;
  • attacks on the fire were conducted in accordance with training and procedures;
  • smoke removal was simulated;
  • drill objectives were met;
  • emergency action level conditions were discussed; and
  • a critique was conducted in which any deficiencies identified by the inspectors were also identified and discussed by the licensee evaluators or participants.

This inspection constituted one sample of the annual requirement.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R06 Flood Protection Measures

Internal Flooding Review

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors evaluated the internal flooding controls for the following area:

  • turbine building general area proximate to the 2C circulating water box with system drained and manhole covers removed during maintenance.

This area constituted one sample of this inspection requirement. This turbine building general area was selected because of the use of a temporary pumping system established to prevent water intrusion into the water box and subsequently into the turbine building lower levels while the manhole covers were removed on the system.

The inspectors reviewed the licensees procedures for the pump rig set-up and performed walkdowns to assess the validity of the line-up to ensure both mechanical adequacy and electrical power supply diversity was achieved.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R11 Licensed Operator Requalification Program

Quarterly Review of Testing/Training Activity

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors observed operating crew performance during an evaluated simulator out-of-the-box scenario involving a steam generator tube rupture and failure of the reactor containment fan coolers to switch to slow speed.

The inspectors evaluated crew performance in the following areas:

  • clarity and formality of communications;
  • ability to take timely actions in the safe direction;
  • prioritization, interpretation, and verification of alarms;
  • procedure use;
  • control board manipulations;
  • oversight and direction from supervisors; and
  • group dynamics.

Crew performance in these areas was compared to licensee management expectations and guidelines.

The inspectors verified that the crew completed the critical tasks listed in the simulator guide. The inspectors also compared simulator configurations with actual control board configurations. For any weaknesses identified, the inspectors observed the licensee evaluators to determine whether they also noted the issues and discussed them in the critique at the end of the session. This review constituted one sample of this inspection requirement.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R12 Maintenance Effectiveness

Routine Inspection

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors reviewed the licensees overall maintenance effectiveness for selected plant systems. This evaluation consisted of the following specific activities:

  • observing the conduct of planned and emergent maintenance activities where possible;
  • reviewing selected IRs, open Work Orders (WOs), and control room log entries in order to identify system deficiencies;
  • reviewing licensee system monitoring and trend reports;
  • attending various meetings throughout the inspection period where the status of maintenance rule activities was discussed;
  • a partial walkdown of the selected system; and
  • interviews with the appropriate system engineer.

The inspectors also reviewed whether the licensee properly implemented Maintenance Rule, 10 CFR 50.65, for the chosen systems. Specifically, the inspectors determined whether:

  • performance problems constituted maintenance rule functional failures;
  • the system had been assigned the proper safety significance classification;
  • the system was properly classified as (a)(1) or (a)(2); and
  • the goals and corrective actions for the system were appropriate.

The above aspects were evaluated using the maintenance rule program and other documents listed in the Attachment. The inspectors also verified that the licensee was appropriately tracking reliability and/or unavailability for the systems.

The inspectors completed two samples in this inspection requirement by reviewing the following systems:

  • WS system subsequent to an increasing trend of temperature control valve circuit issues and pump packing leaks; and

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R13 Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work Control

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors reviewed the licensees management of plant risk during emergent maintenance activities or during activities where more than one significant system or train was unavailable. The activities were chosen based on their potential impact on increasing the probability of an initiating event or impacting the operation of safety-significant equipment. The inspections were conducted to determine whether evaluation, planning, control, and performance of the work were done in a manner to reduce the risk and minimize the duration where practical, and that contingency plans were in place where appropriate.

The licensees daily configuration risk assessment records, observations of operator turnover and plan-of-the-day meetings, and observations of work in progress, were used by the inspectors to verify; that the equipment configurations were properly listed; that protected equipment were identified and were being controlled where appropriate; that work was being conducted properly; and that significant aspects of plant risk were being communicated to the necessary personnel.

In addition, the inspectors reviewed selected issues, listed in the Attachment, that the licensee encountered during the activities, to determine whether problems were being entered into the corrective action program with the appropriate characterization and significance.

The inspectors completed six samples by reviewing the following activities:

  • troubleshooting and repair of feedwater isolation valve 1FW009D;
  • 1B RH pump maintenance;
  • 2SX016A unplanned extension of TS allowed outage time;
  • 1C reactor coolant pump (RCP) undervoltage trip circuit troubleshooting and repair;
  • 1A RH pump maintenance; and
  • Unit Common component cooling water heat exchanger maintenance.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R14 Operator Performance During Non-Routine Evolutions and Events

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors completed three samples by observing and/or reviewing operator performance during the following events:

  • Unit 1 power ascension with two moisture separator reheater drain tanks operating on their emergency level control valves;
  • Unit 1 unplanned rod motion during routine surveillance testing; and
  • failure of the Group C shutdown bank indication.

The inspectors observed the control room response, interviewed plant operators and reviewed plant records including control room logs, operator turnovers, and IRs. The inspectors verified that the control room response was consistent with station procedures and that identified discrepancies were captured in the corrective action program. Documents reviewed as part of this inspection are listed in the Attachment.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R15 Operability Evaluations

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors evaluated plant conditions and selected IRs for risk-significant components and systems in which operability issues were questioned. These conditions were evaluated to determine whether the operability of components was justified. The inspectors compared the operability and design criteria in the appropriate section of the UFSAR to the licensees evaluations presented in the IRs and documents listed in the Attachment to verify that the components or systems were operable. The inspectors also conducted interviews with the appropriate licensee system engineers and conducted plant walkdowns, as necessary, to obtain further information regarding operability questions. Documents reviewed as part of this inspection are listed in the

.

The inspectors completed six samples by reviewing the following operability evaluations and conditions:

  • review of Braidwoods evaluation of a Byron DG voltage regulator circuit failure;
  • review of procedure modification and re-performance of Unit 1 K640A slave relay surveillance following surveillance failure;
  • Westinghouse fuel manufacturing issue;
  • intermittent failure of 1C RCP undervoltage relay;
  • review of DG operability with flame-hardened pushrods; and
  • power range nuclear instrument positive high flux rate reactor trip testing methodology.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R19 Post-Maintenance Testing

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors reviewed post-maintenance testing activities associated with important mitigating systems, barrier integrity, and support systems to ensure that the testing adequately demonstrated system operability and functional capability. The inspectors used the appropriate sections of the TS and UFSAR, as well as the WOs for the work performed, to evaluate the scope of the maintenance and to determine whether the post-maintenance testing was performed adequately, demonstrated that the maintenance was successful, and that operability was restored. The inspectors determined whether the tests were conducted in accordance with the procedures, including establishing the proper plant conditions and prerequisites; that the test acceptance criteria were met; and that the results of the tests were properly reviewed and recorded. The activities were selected based on their importance in demonstrating mitigating systems capability and barrier integrity. The inspectors verified that minor issues identified during the inspection were entered into the licensees corrective action program by reviewing the documents in the Attachment.

Six samples were completed by observing post-maintenance testing of the following components:

  • 1B RH pump;
  • 1B AF pump;
  • Unit 2 fuel pool cooling pump;
  • 1B SI pump and SI system valve strokes;
  • 1A RH valve stokes; and
  • 0B diesel driven fire pump.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

1R22 Surveillance Testing

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors reviewed surveillance testing activities associated with important mitigating systems, barrier integrity, and support systems to ensure that the testing adequately demonstrated system operability and functional capability. The inspectors used the appropriate sections of the TS and UFSAR to determine whether the surveillance testing was performed adequately and that operability was restored. The inspectors determined whether the testing met the frequency requirements; that the tests were conducted in accordance with the procedures, including establishing the proper plant conditions and prerequisites; that the test acceptance criteria were met; and that the results of the tests were properly reviewed and recorded. The activities were selected based on their importance in demonstrating mitigating systems capability, barrier integrity and the initiating events cornerstone. Documents reviewed as part of this inspection are listed in the Attachment.

Five samples were completed by observing and evaluating the following surveillance tests:

  • 1A AF pump American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) test;
  • 1B DG monthly slow start and turbo charger spindown tests;
  • Unit 1 containment miniflow purge supply and exhaust isolation valve local leak rate test; and
  • 2B DG oil transfer pump train ASME test.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

OTHER ACTIVITIES

4OA1 Performance Indicator Verification

Cornerstones: Initiating Events Reactor Safety Strategic Area

a. Inspection Scope

The inspectors reviewed the documents listed in the Attachment to verify that the licensee had correctly reported Performance Indicator data, in accordance with the criteria in Nuclear Energy Institute 99-02, Regulatory Assessment Performance Indicator Guideline, Revision 2. The data reported by the licensee was compared to a sampling of control room logs, IRs, and other sources of data generated since the last verification. The inspectors verified that minor issues identified during the inspection were entered into the licensees corrective action program. The inspectors completed six samples by reviewing the following Performance Indicators for the time frame covering January 1, 2004 through December 31, 2005:

  • Unit 1 unplanned scrams per 7000 critical hours;
  • Unit 1 unplanned scrams with loss of normal heat removal;
  • Unit 1 unplanned transients per 7000 critical hours;
  • Unit 2 unplanned scrams per 7000 critical hours;
  • Unit 2 unplanned scrams with loss of normal heat removal; and
  • Unit 2 unplanned transients per 7000 critical hours.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

4OA2 Identification and Resolution of Problems

.1 Routine Review of Identification and Resolution of Problems

a. Inspection Scope

As discussed in previous sections of this report, the inspectors routinely reviewed issues during baseline inspection activities and plant status reviews to determine whether they were being entered into the licensees corrective action program at an appropriate threshold, that adequate attention was being given to timely corrective actions, and that adverse trends were identified and addressed. Minor issues entered into the licensees corrective action program as a result of the inspectors observations are generally denoted in the Attachment. These activities were part of normal inspection activities and were not considered separate samples.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

.2 Selected Issue Follow-up Inspection

Issues related to effectiveness of the Focus Area Self Assessment Reports Introduction The inspectors reviewed the adequacy of the licensees focus area self assessments (FASAs), occurring since January 2005. The inspectors reviewed the observations of multiple FASAs to determine if the licensees program was effective at identifying potential issues and developing associated corrective actions. Documents reviewed during this inspection are listed in the Attachment. This activity completed one sample of the annual requirement.

a.

Prioritization and Evaluation of Issues

(1) Inspection Scope The inspectors assessed the licensees evaluation and disposition of FASAs in 2005 concerning the following areas: FASA report for Problem Identification & Resolution of August 2005, Common Cause Analysis for NRC Findings/Non-Cited Violations of September 2005, FASA report for Essential Service Water (SX) of July 2005, and the FASA report for Emergency Preparedness (EP) of July 2005.
(2) Issues The inspectors noted that each finding of the Safety System Design and Performance (SSDPC) inspection that the FASA did not identify was captured in an IR and was assigned a priority consistent with its significance. The inspectors also noted that two of the findings were outside the scope of the FASA charter. The three remaining findings were within the scope of the charter, but were not identified by the FASA team.

Specifically, the FASA team looked into operator actions and procedures related to the SX system, but were unable to identify the deficiency for the recovery of plugged SX strainers and adequate DG SX cross-connect flow. The last finding concerned the ASME in-service inspection of the SX intake header piping, but the FASA did not evaluate for ASME in-service inspection adequacy. The licensee was planning to perform a root cause evaluation to determine the reason(s) for these five discrepancies and the plan was being tracked by IR 370513.

The inspectors determined that the August 2005 FASA for Problem Identification &

Resolution had appropriately reviewed for common causes and resolutions of past findings and violations. However, the inspectors noted that the licensee failed to assess current unresolved items (URIs) for disposition. The licensee had disputed the validity of a URI concerning molded case circuit breakers and thus did not assess corrective actions for it.

The inspectors noted that the July 2005 FASA on EP had appropriately reviewed the EP program with the exception of the review of Emergency Action Level (EAL) changes.

The licensee conducted a direct review of EAL changes 13 through 15 for 50.54(q)adequacy. A subsequent NRC inspection determined that an EAL change, which was part of the FASA review for unplanned radiological release in excess of limits, was not adequate and resulted in a Severity Level IV violation. Although these issues indicated shortcomings within the licensees self-assessments, the issue with the self-assessments did not constitute violations of NRC requirements.

4OA3 Event Followup

The inspectors completed two inspection samples in this area.

.1 Offsite Tritium Contamination From Prior Circulating Water Vacuum Breaker Leaks

a. Inspection Scope

This event was previously discussed in Inspection Report 05000456/2005010; 05000457/2005010; Section 4OA3.1. The inspectors continued activities following up this event to monitor the licensees characterization of the leaks and contamination, plans for mitigation, root cause evaluations, and other actions.

Activities completed by the inspectors included:

  • monitoring the licensees efforts to identify historic spills/leaks from the blowdown line and other events that could have caused tritium releases;
  • monitoring the licensees efforts to identify the extent of contamination around the blowdown vacuum breaker valves;
  • participating in a public information night on February 28, 2006, at the licensees training facility;
  • monitoring the licensees response to a spill on March 13, 2006, from the berm around the outside temporary storage tanks;
  • conducting several walkdowns of the outside temporary storage tanks and pumping system;
  • monitoring the licensees response to tritium found in Center Street ditches from a nearby overflowing cistern;
  • observing licensee maintenance on blowdown vacuum breaker valves; and
  • holding several discussions with licensee personnel regarding its plans to pump the water from Exelon pond, just north of Smiley Road.

The inspectors verified that minor issues identified during this inspection were entered into the licensees corrective action program. Documents reviewed during this inspection are listed in the Attachment.

b. Findings

The NRC conducted a separate inspection regarding this event as documented in Inspection Report 05000456/2006008; 05000457/2006008. Violations and findings were identified in that inspection. No additional findings of significance were identified during this inspection.

.2 (Closed) Licensee Event Report (LER) 05000456/2005003-00: Licensed Maximum

Power Level Exceeded Due to Feedwater Heater Transient

Introduction:

On November 18, 2004, a feedwater heater transient resulted in an increase of reactor power as high as 103.3 percent. The overpower event was self-revealing and determined to be a Non-Cited Violation of License Condition 2.C.(1)

Maximum Power Level. This finding was determined to be of very low safety significance.

Description:

On December 2, 2005, the licensee identified that Unit 1 reactor power had exceeded its maximum licensed power level during a feedwater heater transient occurring on November 18, 2004. Initially, the licensee had concluded that the licensed power level was not exceeded based on the nuclear instrumentation readings during the event. However, during a subsequent evaluation, the licensee concluded that the Unit 1 peak power during this event was 103.3 percent, which was a violation of License Condition 2.C.(1) Maximum Power Level.

On November 18, 2004, Braidwood Unit 1 experienced an isolation of extraction steam to the 15A and 15B low pressure feedwater heaters. The isolation occurred after the 15A level controller was inadvertently bumped due to nearby maintenance. The isolation caused a heater control system transient cascading through the 16A/B and 17A/B low pressure feedwater heaters, respectively. The loss of feedwater preheat allowed colder water to enter the steam generator, causing an increase in reactor power due to the positive reactivity feedback. Reactor power increased above the overpower delta-temperature set point on 2 of 4 channels, resulting in an automatic control rod stop and a turbine runback.

The licensees initial evaluation was that event did not exceed the licensed power limit based on nuclear instrumentation readings and a 10 minute average computer calorimetric taken during the event. Although licensee operating staff noted that the reactor coolant loop temperature indications had exceeded 102 percent power during the event, these indications were considered less credible, as the delta temperature channels were less accurate during an event than during steady state operation.

However, during a subsequent peer review of this event, it was questioned whether the Unit 1 power increase was accurately determined. As a result, the licensee asked Westinghouse Corporation to perform an independent evaluation of the Unit 1 power increase. This evaluation was completed on December 1, 2005, and concluded that Unit 1 reactor power was likely as high as 103.3 percent during this event. This new value was based on an evaluation of the affect of the reactor coolant temperature changes observed during the event on the nuclear instrumentation readings. On December 3, 2005, the licensee notified the NRC of the possible violation of the licensed power level.

The licensees corrective actions, as described in the LER, included developing a standard work package for working on the level control assemblies for the low pressure feedwater heaters. This package included guidance on avoiding inadvertent isolation of the heaters during maintenance on the level controllers. Additionally, the licensee was developing guidance for determining the appropriate corrections to nuclear power instrumentation readings, after a potential overpower transient. This event and the corrective actions were being tracked by licensee IR 280594, dated November 18, 2004.

Analysis:

The inspectors determined that the inadvertent bumping of the feedwater heater level controller during nearby maintenance was a performance deficiency warranting a significance evaluation. This finding was considered more than minor because it had a credible impact on safety, in that exceeding the maximum allowed power level potentially challenged the integrity of the reactor coolant and fuel integrity barriers. This finding affected the Barrier Integrity Cornerstone and was considered to have very low safety significance (Green). Specifically, using the SDP Phase 1 screening worksheet (IMC 0609, Appendix A, Attachment 1), the inspectors determined that the actual increase in reactor power did not significantly challenge either the reactor coolant or fuel integrity barriers.

Enforcement:

Licensee Condition 2.C.(1) Maximum Power Level, required that Braidwood, Unit 1, reactor core power levels not exceed 3586.6 megawatts thermal (100 percent rated power). Contrary to this, on November 18, 2004, Braidwood Unit 1 power was 103.3 percent following a feedwater heater transient, caused by the inadvertent isolation of feedwater heaters during routine maintenance. This event and the corrective actions were being tracked by licensee IR 280594, dated November 18, 2004. Because the violation was of very low safety significance and the issue was captured in the licensees corrective action program, this violation is being treated as a Non-Cited Violation consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy (NCV 05000456/2006002-01).

4OA5 Other

Implementation of Temporary Instruction (TI) 2515/165 - Operational Readiness of Offsite Power and Impact on Plant Risk

a. Inspection Scope

The objective of TI 2515/165, Operational Readiness of Offsite Power and Impact on Plant Risk, was to confirm, through inspections and interviews, the operational readiness of offsite power systems in accordance with NRC requirements. On March 13 through 15, 2006, the inspectors reviewed licensee procedures and discussed the attributes identified in TI 2515/165 with licensee personnel. In accordance with the requirements of TI 2515/165, the inspectors evaluated the licensees operating procedures used to assure the functionality/operability of the offsite power system, as well as, the risk assessment, emergent work, and/or grid reliability procedures used to assess the operability and readiness of the offsite power system.

The information gathered while completing this TI was forwarded to the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation for further review and evaluation. The TI is closed.

b. Findings

No findings of significance were identified.

4OA6 Meetings

Exit Meeting The inspectors presented the inspection results to Mr. K. Polson and other members of licensee management at the conclusion of the inspection on April 3, 2006. The inspectors asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary. No proprietary information was identified.

On May 12, 2006, an additional followup telephone discussion was held with Mr. Ambler of the licensee management to reclassify one issue described during the April 3, 2006, meeting.

ATTACHMENT:

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION

KEY POINTS OF CONTACT

Licensee

K. Polson, Site Vice President

G. Boerschig Plant Manager

D. Ambler, Regulatory Assurance Manager
S. Butler, Licensing Engineer
T. DAntonio, Project Manager
G. Dudek, Operations Director
J. Kuczynski, Chemistry Manager
J. Moser, Radiation Protection Manager
M. Smith, Engineering Director
E. Wrigley, Maintenance Director

Nuclear Regulatory Commission

R. Skokowski, Chief, Reactor Projects Branch 3

LIST OF ITEMS

OPENED, CLOSED AND DISCUSSED

Opened

05000456/2006002-01 NCV Licensed Maximum Power Level Exceeded Due to Feedwater Heater Transient

Closed

05000456/2005003-00 LER Licensed Maximum Power Level Exceeded Due to Feedwater Heater Transient
05000456/2006002-01 NCV Licensed Maximum Power Level Exceeded Due to Feedwater Heater Transient

Discussed

None.

Attachment

LIST OF DOCUMENTS REVIEWED