ML15113A277
ML15113A277 | |
Person / Time | |
---|---|
Site: | Callaway |
Issue date: | 04/23/2015 |
From: | Annette Vietti-Cook NRC/SECY |
To: | Union Electric Co |
SECY RAS | |
References | |
50-483-LR, ASLBP 12-919-06-LR-BD01, CLI-15-11, RAS 27553 | |
Download: ML15113A277 (8) | |
Text
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION COMMISSIONERS:
Stephen G. Burns, Chairman Kristine L. Svinicki William C. Ostendorff Jeff Baran In the Matter of UNION ELECTRIC COMPANY Docket No. 50-483-LR (Callaway Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1)
CLI-15-11 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Missouri Coalition for the Environment (MCE) moves to reopen the record of this proceeding. MCE seeks a hearing on its claim that the final supplemental environmental impact statement prepared in connection with this license renewal application violates the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to consider environmental impacts associated with the continued storage of spent nuclear fuel.1 For the reasons discussed below, MCEs request is denied.
I. BACKGROUND MCE sought to intervene early on in this license renewal proceeding. In its initial petition, MCE proffered three contentions that ultimately were rejected by the Atomic Safety and 1
Missouri [Coalition] for the Environments Hearing Request and Petition to Intervene in License Renewal Proceeding for Callaway Nuclear Power Plant (Dec. 8, 2014) (Petition); Missouri
[Coalition] for the Environments Motion to Reopen the Record of License Renewal Proceeding for Callaway Unit 1 Nuclear Power Plant (Dec. 8, 2014) (Motion to Reopen).
Licensing Board.2 Subsequently, our 2010 Waste Confidence Decision and Temporary Storage Rule were vacated by the court of appeals and remanded to the agency.3 In response, MCE, together with several other petitioners, filed requests to suspend final licensing decisions in this and other proceedings pending completion of our action on the remanded Waste Confidence proceeding.4 We suspended final licensing decisions until we addressed the courts remand and instructed the boards in the affected proceedings to hold the contentions in abeyance pending our further order.5 Thereafter, concurrent with our approval last year of the final Continued Storage Rule and companion Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS), we lifted the suspension on final licensing decisions and directed that the proposed contention in this matter (among others) be dismissed.6 We observed that, [a]s part of the analysis 2
See LBP-12-15, 76 NRC 14 (2012). MCE did not appeal this decision.
3 See New York v. NRC, 681 F.3d 471 (D.C. Cir. 2012).
4 Petition to Suspend Final Licensing Decisions in All Pending Reactor Licensing Proceedings Pending Completion of Remanded Waste Confidence Proceedings (June 18, 2012). MCE also filed a fourth contention asserting that the applicants environmental report improperly failed to address the environmental impacts associated with spent fuel pool leaks and fires, and the lack of a permanent spent fuel disposal facility. Intervenors Motion for Leave to File a New Contention Concerning Temporary Storage and Ultimate Disposal of Nuclear Waste at Callaway Nuclear Power Plant (July 9, 2012).
5 Calvert Cliffs 3 Nuclear Project, LLC and UniStar Nuclear Operating Services, LLC (Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3), CLI-12-16, 76 NRC 63 (2012). At that time, we observed,
[t]o the extent the NRC takes action with respect to waste confidence on a case-by-case basis, litigants can challenge such site-specific agency actions in our adjudicatory process. Id. at 67 (but citing Potomac Electric Power Co. (Douglas Point Nuclear Generating Station, Units 1 and 2), ALAB-218, 8 AEC 79, 85 (1975) ([L]icensing boards should not accept in individual license proceedings contentions which are (or are about to become) the subject of general rulemaking by the Commission.)).
6 See NUREG-2157, Vols. 1 & 2, Generic Environmental Impact Statement for Continued Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel (Sept. 2014) (ADAMS accession nos. ML14196A105 and ML14196A107) (Continued Storage GEIS); Final Rule, Continued Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel, 79 Fed. Reg. 56,238 (Sept. 19, 2014) (Continued Storage Rule); Calvert Cliffs 3 Nuclear Project, LLC, and UniStar Nuclear Operating Services, LLC (Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3), CLI-14-8, 80 NRC 71, 77-79 (2014). The Staff issued the renewed license on March 6, 2015. See Ghosh, Anita, Counsel for NRC Staff, letter to the Parties, In the Matter of Union (continued . . .)
underpinning the GEIS . . . we concluded that the impacts of continued storage will not vary significantly across sites; the impacts of continued storage at reactor sites, or at away-from-reactor sites, can be analyzed generically.7 For this reason, these generic determinations were appropriately excluded from litigation in individual proceedings.8 MCE now has filed a fresh intervention petition in which it argues that the recently released final supplemental environmental impact statement for license renewal of the Callaway plant is inherently flawed because it relies on the NRCs generic analysis, in the Continued Storage Rule and GEIS, of the environmental impacts of the continued storage of spent fuel.9 The NRC Staff and the applicant, Union Electric Company, doing business as Ameren Missouri, oppose the hearing request.10 II. DISCUSSION MCE seeks to lodge with us a placeholder contention.11 MCE does not seek to litigate the substance of its contention now and candidly acknowledges that our rules of practice do not allow litigants to challenge our regulations within the context of individual license proceedings, Electric Co. (Callaway Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), Docket No. 50-483-LR, Notification of Commission Authorization to Issue Renewed License (Mar. 6, 2015).
7 Calvert Cliffs, CLI-14-8, 80 NRC at 78. We stated additionally that the assumptions used in the analysis are sufficiently conservative to bound the impacts such that variances that may occur between sites are unlikely to result in environmental impact determinations greater than those presented in the [Continued Storage] GEIS. Id. (citation omitted).
8 Id. at 79.
9 See NUREG-1437, Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal, Supp. 51 (Regarding Callaway Plant, Unit 1) (ML14289A140) (Oct. 2014), at 1-4 to 1-5, 6-3.
10 See NRC Staff Answer to Missouri Coalition for the Environments Hearing Request and Petition to Intervene and Motion to Reopen the Record in the License Renewal Proceeding for Callaway Unit 1 Nuclear Power Plant (Dec. 18, 2014); Amerens Answer Opposing Missouri Coalition for the Environments Hearing Request and Motion to Reopen the Record (Dec. 18, 2014).
11 Petition at 2.
absent a request for a waiver.12 MCEs stated reason for filing its petition and motion to reopen is to ensure that any court decision resulting from its federal court challenge to the Continued Storage Rule and GEIS will also be applied to the individual Callaway proceeding.13 MCE is correct that the proposed contention is not admissible under our rules of practice because it impermissibly challenges an agency regulation and is therefore outside the scope of this individual licensing proceeding.14 MCE provides seven bases for its contention, all of which challenge the generic findings in the GEIS.15 None of the contentions bases pertain specifically to the Callaway license renewal application. The contention therefore does not provide sufficient information to demonstrate a genuine dispute with the applicant on a material issue.16 For these reasons, we decline to admit the contention.17 In MCEs view, its placeholder contention is the only procedural means available for ensuring that any court decision resulting from the pending appeal of the Continued Storage 12 See id. at 2 & 2-3 n.3. MCE does not seek a rule waiver. Id.
13 Id. at 2. MCE has challenged the Continued Storage Rule and Continued Storage GEIS in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Beyond Nuclear v. NRC, Docket No. 14-1216 (D.C. Cir. filed Oct. 29, 2014). As MCE notes in its hearing request, its petition for review has been consolidated with similar petitions before the D.C. Circuit and the case is now captioned New York v. NRC, Docket Nos. 14-1210, 14-1216, and 14-1217 (D.C. Cir. Oct. 31, 2014). MCE states that, should we decline to admit its contention, it will ask the court to consolidate its challenge here with its pending appeal. Petition at 2-3.
14 See, e.g., Calvert Cliffs, CLI-14-8, 80 NRC at 79; Duke Energy Corp. (Oconee Nuclear Station, Units 1, 2, and 3), CLI-99-11, 49 NRC 328, 345 (1999).
15 See Petition at 7-9.
16 10 C.F.R. § 2.309(f)(1)(vi).
17 Because MCE has not submitted an admissible contention, it necessarily has not satisfied our reopening standards because it has not raised a significant environmental issue and has not demonstrated that a materially different result would be likely if the contention had been considered initially. 10 C.F.R. § 2.326(a)(2)-(3). Because MCEs contention is inadmissible, we need not address the timeliness of its filing, a matter of some debate among the litigants.
Rule and GEIS will be applied to the Callaway license renewal matter.18 However, MCE cannot litigate the Continued Storage Rule and GEIS here. We addressed the environmental impacts of continued storage generically, via the rulemaking process, in accordance with NEPA and general principles of administrative law.19 MCE hadand took advantage ofthe opportunity to provide comments on the proposed rule and draft GEIS.20 Now that the rule has been adopted, MCE has sought review of the rule and GEIS in the appropriate venue, the court of appeals.
Absent a successful petition that the rule should be waived in accordance with 10 C.F.R.
§ 2.335, MCEs challenges to the Continued Storage Rule and GEIS are appropriately brought before the court of appeals. Should the D.C. Circuit find any infirmities in the Continued Storage Rule or GEIS, we would take appropriate action consistent with the courts direction. In the meantime, however, admission of a placeholder contention is not necessary to ensure that MCEs challenges to the Continued Storage Rule and GEIS receive a full and fair airing.21 18 Missouri [Coalition] for the Environments Reply to Oppositions to Hearing Request/Petition to Intervene and Motion to Reopen the Record of License Renewal Proceeding for Callaway Nuclear Power Plant, 2 (Dec. 29, 2015).
19 New York, 681 F.3d at 483 (declining to grant the petitioners request that the NRC consider continued storage on a site-by-site basis); see also NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co. Div. of Textron, Inc., 416 U.S. 267, 294 (1974) (agency had discretion to choose between rulemaking and adjudication); SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194, 203 (1947) (the choice made between proceeding by general rule or by individual, ad hoc litigation is one that lies primarily in the informed discretion of the administrative agency).
20 See Continued Storage GEIS at D-596.
21 Cf. Entergy Nuclear Generation Co. and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI-12-6, 75 NRC 352, 372-76 (2012) (declining a suspension request filed by the intervenor to protect its position and eventually enable it to litigate challenges to a final supplemental EIS following resolution of a rulemaking petition).
III. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, we deny MCEs motion to reopen the record of this proceeding and admit a new contention.
For the Commission NRC SEAL /RA/
Annette L. Vietti-Cook Secretary of the Commission Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 23rd day of April, 2015
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION In the Matter of )
)
UNION ELECTRIC COMPANY D/B/A AmerenUE )
)
) Docket No. 50-483-LR (Callaway Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1) )
)
(License Renewal) )
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing COMMISSION MEMORANDUM AND ORDER (CLI-15-11) have been served upon the following persons by Electronic Information Exchange.
Office of Commission Appellate U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Adjudication Office of the Secretary of the Commission U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Mail Stop O-16C1 Washington, DC 20555-0001 Washington, DC 20555-0001 E-mail: ocaamail@nrc.gov Hearing Docket Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel E-mail: hearingdocket@nrc.gov U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Mail Stop - T-3 F23 Union Electric Company Washington, DC 20555-0001 Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, LLP 1200 Seventeenth Street NW G. Paul Bollwerk, III, Chair Washington, DC 20036-3006 Administrative Judge E-mail: paul.bollwerk@nrc.gov David R. Lewis, Esq.
Counsel for the Applicant William J. Froehlich E-mail: david.lewis@pillsburylaw.com Administrative Judge E-mail: william.froehlich@nrc.gov Missouri Coalition for the Environment Dr. Nicholas G. Trikouros Edward Smith, Safe Energy Director Administrative Judge Diane Curran, Esq.
E-mail: nicholas.trikouros@nrc.gov Henry B. Robertson, Esq.
Email: showmenocwip@gmail.com Matthew Flyntz, Law Clerk dcurran@harmoncurran.com Email: matthew.flyntz@nrc.gov hrobertson@greatriverslaw.org
Callaway Power Plant, Unit 1, Docket No. 50-483-LR COMMISSION MEMORANDUM AND ORDER (CLI-15-11)
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of the General Counsel Mail Stop - O-15 D21 Washington, DC 20555-0001 Edward Williamson, Esq.
Mary Spencer, Esq.
Catherine Kanatas, Esq.
Anita Ghosh, Esq.
Beth N. Mizuno, Esq.
David Cylkowski, Esq.
Brian Harris, Esq.
Email: edward.williamson@nrc.gov mary.spencer@nrc.gov catherine.kanatas@nrc.gov anita.ghosh@nrc.gov beth.mizuno@nrc.gov david.cylkowski@nrc.gov brian.harris@nrc.gov OGG Mail Center: ogcmailcenter@nrc.gov
[Original signed by Herald M. Speiser]
Office of the Secretary of the Commission Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 23rd day of April, 2015 2