ML101550244

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Presentation Slides from Clinton Power Station June 2, 2010 Annual Assessment Meeting
ML101550244
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Site: Clinton Constellation icon.png
Issue date: 06/02/2010
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Download: ML101550244 (29)


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Clinton Power Station Annual Assessment M ti Meeting Reactor Oversight Program - 2009 Nuclear Regulatory Commission - Region III Clinton, IL June 2, 2010 1

Purpose of Todays Meeting

  • A public forum for discussion of the licensees performance in 2009
  • NRC will address the performance issues identified in the annual assessment letter
  • Licensee will be given the opportunity to respond and inform the NRC of new or existing programs to maintain or improve performance 2

Agenda

  • Introduction
  • Review of Reactor Oversight Process
  • National Summary of Plant Performance
  • Di Discussion i off Pl Plant Performance P f Results R l
  • Licensee Response and Remarks
  • NRC Closing Remarks
  • Break
  • NRC available to address public questions 3

Region 3 Organization Mark Satorius Regional Administrator Cindy Pederson Deputy Regional Administrator Steve West Anne Boland Director ec o Division v s o of o Reactor e c o Projects ojec s Director ec o Division v s o of o Reactor e c o Safety S ey Gary Shear Ken OBrien Deputy Director Deputy Director Mark Ring Regional Specialists Branch Chief Clinton Project and Reactor Engineers Carl Moore Senior Resident Inspector Ellery Coffman Brian Kemker Jason Draper Duane Sand Resident Inspector 4 David Lords

Our Mission

  • To license and regulate the nations civilian use of byproduct, source, and special nuclear materials to ensure adequate protection of public health and safety, promote the common defense and security, and protect the environment.

5

Some Nuclear Facts

  • 104 nuclear power plants supply about 20 percent of the electricity in the U.S.
  • Nuclear materials are used in medicine for diagnosis and cancer treatment.
  • Nuclear materials are widely used in industry, such as in density gauges, flow measurement devices, radiography devices, and irradiators.

6

The NRC Regulates

  • Nuclear reactors - commercial power reactors, research and test reactors, new reactor designs
  • Nuclear materials - nuclear reactor fuel, radioactive materials for medical, industrial, and academic use
  • Nuclear waste - transportation, storage and disposal of nuclear material and waste, decommissioning of nuclear facilities
  • Nuclear security - physical security of nuclear facilities and materials from sabotage or attacks 7

What We Dont Do

  • Regulate nuclear weapons, military reactors, or space vehicle reactors
  • Own or operate nuclear power plants
  • Regulate some radioactive materials, such as X-rays and naturally occurring radon 8

How We Regulate

  • Establish rules and regulations
  • Issue licenses
  • Provide oversight through inspection, enforcement, f t andd evaluation l ti off operational experience
  • Conduct research to provide support for regulatory decisions
  • Respond to events and emergencies 9

Assurance of Plant Safety

  • Require defense-in-depth
  • Require long-term maintenance of equipment
  • Require continual training of operators
  • Verify compliance with regulations 10

What We Do - Nuclear Waste

  • The NRC regulates:

- Storage of spent reactor fuel in fuel pools or dry storage casks and casks,

- Any national spent fuel storage site, such as the proposed Yucca Mountain site.

11

What We Do - Nuclear Security

  • NRC Requires:

- Well-armed and well-trained security forces,

- Surveillance and perimeter patrols,

- State-of-the-art site access equipment and controls,

- Physical barriers and detection zones, and

- Intrusion detection systems and alarm stations.

12

NRC Performance Goals

  • Safety: Ensure adequate protection of public health and safety and the environment.
  • Security: Ensure adequate protection in the secure use and management of radioactive materials.

13

Reactor Oversight Process Strategic Performance Areas Safety Cornerstones Performance Indicator Baseline Inspection Results Results Significance Significance Threshold Threshold Action Matrix Regulatory Response 14

Examples of Baseline Inspections

  • Equipment Alignment ~80 hrs/yr
  • Triennial Fire Protection ~250 hrs every 3 yrs
  • Operator Response ~125 hrs/yr
  • Emergency E Preparedness P d ~80 80 h hrs/yr

/

  • Rad Release Controls ~110 hrs every 2 yrs
  • Worker Radiation Protection ~95 hrs/yr
  • Corrective Action Program ~250 hrs every 2 yrs
  • Corrective Action Case Reviews ~60 hrs/yr 15

Significance Threshold Performance Indicators Green: Only Baseline Inspection White: Increases NRC oversight Yellow: Increases NRC oversight Red: Increases NRC oversight Inspection Findings Green: Very low safety issue White: Low to moderate safety issue Yellow: Substantial safety issue Red: High safety issue 16

Action Matrix Concept Licensee Regulatory Degraded Multiple/R ep. Unacceptable Response Response Cornerstone Degraded Perform ance Cornerstone Increasing Safety Significance Increasing NRC Inspection Efforts Increasing NRC/Licensee Management Involvement Increasing Regulatory Actions 17

National Summary of Plant Performance Status as of 12/31/2009 Licensee Response 79 Regulatory Response 24 Degraded Cornerstone 1 Multiple/Repetitive Deg. Cornerstone 0 Unacceptable 0 Total 104 18

National Summary

  • Performance Indicator Results (total for CY 2009)

- Green 7039

- White 18

- Yellow 0

- Red 0

  • Total Inspection Findings (total for CY 2009)

- Green 879

- White 7

- Yellow 0

- Red 0 19

Clinton Power Station Assessment Results January 1 - December 31, 2009

  • Licensee Response column of Action Matrix 20

Safety Significant Findings or PIs January 1 - December 31, 2009

  • No greater than Green findings
  • No greater than Green Performance Indicators 21

Clinton Inspection Activities January 1 - December 31, 2009

  • 100% Baseline Inspection Completion

- Resident Inspectors

- Regional Inspectors

- 6 Green Findings and 2 Severity Level IV violations (baseline inspections)

  • A refueling outage was recently completed in February of 2010 22

Clinton Inspection Activities January 1 - December 31, 2009

  • Exelon operated the Clinton Station in a manner that preserved public health and safety
  • All cornerstone objectives were met with no greater than Green findings or PIs
  • Baseline inspections at Clinton for the remainder of the assessment period 23

Noteworthy License Amendments

  • The NRC recently approved a license amendment for Clinton Power Station to pproduce Cobalt-60 from Cobalt-59.

- During the recent outage, Cobalt-59 was loaded into the reactor core and will be removed in future outages.

- Cancer Treatment

- Food Sterilization 24

Open to the Public

  • The NRC places a high priority on keeping the public and stakeholders informed of its activities.
  • At www.nrc.gov, you can:

- Find public meeting dates and transcripts;

- Read NRC testimony, speeches, press releases, and policy decisions; and

- Access the agencys Electronic Reading Room to find NRC publications and documents.

25

Contacting the NRC

  • Report an emergency

- (301) 816-5100 (call collect)

  • Report a safety concern

- (800) 695-7403

- Allegation@nrc.gov

  • General information or questions

- www.nrc.gov

- Select What We Do for Public Affairs 26

NRC Representatives

  • Steve West, Director, Division Reactor Projects

- (630) 829-9634

  • Gary Shear, Deputy Division Director, DRP

- (630) 829-9634

  • Nick DeFrancesco DeFrancesco, Project Manager Manager, NRR

- (301) 415-1115

- (217) 935-9521

  • David Lords, Resident Inspector

- (217) 935-9521

  • Mark Ring, Branch Chief

- (630) 829-9703 27

NRC Representatives

- (630) 829-9662

- (630) 829-9663

  • NRC Region III Office Switchboard

- (630) 829-9500

- Toll Free: (800) 522-3025 28

Reference Sources

  • Reactor Oversight Process

- http://www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/in dex.html

  • Public Electronic Reading Room

- http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm.html

  • Public Document Room 800-397-4209 (Toll Free) 29