ML12201A315

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NRC 2011 EOC Public Meeting Slides
ML12201A315
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Site: Byron  Constellation icon.png
Issue date: 07/19/2012
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Download: ML12201A315 (32)


Text

Byron Station Annual Assessment M

ti 1

Meeting Reactor Oversight Process - 2011 Nuclear Regulatory Commission - Region III Lisle, Illinois July 18, 2012

Purpose of Todays Meeting

  • A public forum for discussion of the licensees performance in 2011
  • NRC will address the performance 2

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

Agenda

  • Introduction
  • Review of Reactor Oversight Process
  • National Summary of Plant Performance Di i

f Pl P

f R

l 3

  • Discussion of Plant Performance Results
  • Licensee Response and Remarks
  • NRC Closing Remarks
  • Break
  • NRC Available to Address Public Questions

Region III Organization Charles Casto Regional Administrator Cynthia Pederson Deputy Regional Administrator Gary Shear Acting Director, Division of Reactor Projects Steven Reynolds Director, Division of Reactor Safety 4

Kenneth OBrien Acting Deputy Director Richard Skokowski Acting Deputy Director Eric Duncan Branch Chief Regional Specialists Byron Station Resident Inspectors Bruce Bartlett John Robbins Project Engineer Raymond Ng

Our Mission

nuclear materials to ensure adequate protection of public health and safety, promote the common defense and security, and protect the environment.

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 6

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.

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 7
  • 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

What We Dont Do

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

How We Regulate

  • Establish rules and regulations
  • Issue licenses
  • Provide oversight through inspection, f

t d

l ti f

9 enforcement, and evaluation of operational experience

  • Conduct research to provide support for regulatory decisions
  • Respond to events and emergencies

Assurance of Plant Safety

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

What We Do - Nuclear Waste

  • The NRC regulates:

- Storage of spent reactor fuel in fuel pools or dry storage casks 11 casks

- Any national spent fuel storage site

What We Do - Nuclear Security

  • NRC Requires:

- Well-armed and well-trained security forces

- Surveillance and perimeter patrols 12 perimeter patrols

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

- Physical barriers and detection zones

- Intrusion detection systems and alarm stations

NRC Performance Goals

  • Safety: Ensure adequate protection of public health and safety and the environment 13
  • Security: Ensure adequate protection in the secure use and management of radioactive materials

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

Examples of Baseline Inspections

  • Equipment Alignment

~80 hrs/yr

  • Triennial Fire Protection

~250 hrs every 3 yrs

  • Operator Response

~125 hrs/yr E

P d

80 h

/

15

~80 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

Significance Threshold Performance Indicators Green:

Only Baseline Inspection White:

Increases NRC oversight Yellow:

Increases NRC oversight Red:

Increases NRC oversight 16 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

Action Matrix Concept Licensee

Response

Regulatory

Response

Degraded Cornerstone Multiple/Rep.

Degraded Cornerstone Unacceptable Performance 17 Increasing Safety Significance Increasing NRC Inspection Efforts Increasing NRC/Licensee Management Involvement Increasing Regulatory Actions

National Summary of Plant Performance Status as of 12/31/2011 Licensee Response 88 Regulatory Response 11 Degraded Cornerstone 3

18 Degraded Cornerstone 3

Multiple/Repetitive Deg. Cornerstone 1

Unacceptable 0

IMC 0350 Oversight 1

Total 104

National Summary

  • Performance Indicator Results for 20111

- Green 6585

- White 9

- Yellow 0

Red 0

19

- Red 0

  • Total Inspection Findings in 20112

- Green 846

- White 13

- Yellow 2

- Red 0

1 Pis are counted per plant per quarter 2

Finding data does not include security findings

Byron Station Assessment Results January 1 - December 31, 2011

  • Unit 1 was in the Licensee Response column throughout 2011 20
  • Unit 2 was in the Regulatory Response column throughout 2011
  • There was no substantive cross-cutting issue identified during 2011

Safety Significant Findings or PIs One White Finding was issued on March 14, 2011 The White finding was associated with the failure of the Upper Lube Oil Cooler of the Unit 2 Train B Diesel Generator on November 17 2010 21 November 17, 2010 Unit 2 transitioned to Regulatory Response column in 1st quarter 2011 A 95001 Supplemental Inspection was completed and the White finding was closed in August 2011 Unit 2 returned to Licensee Response column in 1st quarter 2012

Byron Station Inspection Activities January 1 - December 31, 2011 Examples of Major Inspection Activities in 2011:

Unit 1 Refueling Outage (March 13 to April 24) 22 Temp. Inst. 183 (March 23 to April 27)

Special Inspection (March 31 to May 4)

Modification/50.59 Inspection (May 2 to June 16)

Problem Identification and Resolution Inspection (Aug. 15 to Sept. 2) 95001 Supplemental Inspection (August 22 to August 26)

Unit 2 Refueling Outage (September 18 to October 10)

Byron Station Annual Assessment Summary January 1 - December 31, 2011

  • Exelon operated Byron Station in a manner that preserved public health and safety 23 p

p y

  • All cornerstone objectives were met with one White finding identified

January 1 - December 31, 2011

  • No substantive cross-cutting issue was identified at Byron Station Byron Station Annual Assessment Summary 24
  • NRC plans baseline inspections at Byron Station for 2012 for both units

Licensee Response and Remarks Tim Tulon 25 Tim Tulon Site Vice President, Byron Exelon Nuclear

Open to the Public

  • The NRC places a high priority on keeping the public and stakeholders informed of its activities 26
  • At www.nrc.gov, you can:

- Find public meeting dates and transcripts

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

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

Contacting the NRC

  • Report an emergency

- (301) 816-5100 (call collect)

  • Report a safety concern 27

- (800) 695-7403

- Allegation@nrc.gov

  • General information or questions

- www.nrc.gov

- Select What We Do for Public Affairs

Actions in Response to the Japan Nuclear Accident

  • Mailbox for comments on staff actions:

28 JLD_Public.Resource@nrc.gov

  • Office of Public Affairs Point of

Contact:

OPA.resource@nrc.gov or 301-415-8200

NRC Representatives Gary Shear, Acting Director, Division Reactor Projects

- (630) 829-9600 Kenneth OBrien, Acting Deputy Division Director, DRP

- (630) 829-9601 Joel Wiebe, Project Manager, NRR

- (301) 415-6606 29

(

)

Bruce Bartlett, Senior Resident Inspector

- (815) 234-5451 John Robbins, Resident Inspector

- (630) 234-5451 Raymond Ng, Project Engineer

- (630) 829-9574 Eric Duncan, Branch Chief

- (630) 829-9620

NRC Representatives Christine Lipa, Chief, Decommissioning Branch (ISFSI)

- (630) 829-9834 Viktoria Mitlyng, Public Affairs Officer

- (630) 829-9662 30 Prema Chandrathil, Public Affairs Officer

- (630) 829-9663 NRC Region III Office Switchboard

- (630) 829-9500; (800) 522-3025

NRC Social Media Channels

  • Blog:

http://public-blog.nrc-gateway.gov/

31

  • Flickr:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/nrcgov/

  • Twitter:

http://twitter.com/#!/nrcgov

  • RSS:

http://www.nrc.gov/public-involve/listserver.html#rss

Reference Sources

  • Reactor Oversight Process

- http://www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/in dex.html 32 Public Electronic Reading Room

- http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm.html Public Document Room 800-397-4209 (Toll Free)