ML18199A297

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Presentation: Defining Unacceptable Radiological Consequences from a Security Perspective
ML18199A297
Person / Time
Issue date: 07/18/2018
From:
Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards
To:
Holahan E
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Download: ML18199A297 (22)


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TECHNICAL MEETING ON SECURITY OF NUCLEAR AND OTHER RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL IN TRANSPORT Vienna, Austria 913 July 2018 Defining Unacceptable Radiological Consequences from a Security Perspective Vincent Holahan, Ph.D.

Senior Level Advisor for Health Physics Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards

TECHNICAL MEETING ON SECURITY OF NUCLEAR AND OTHER RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL IN TRANSPORT Vienna, Austria 913 July 2018 Outline:

Background

Definitions Consequences Comparison method Conclusions

Background

  • The Code of Conduct on the Safety and Security of Radioactive Materials (2004) identifies three threshold activity levels based on the relative health hazards each radionuclide would present if not kept under adequate controls.
  • Category 1 and 2 quantities are considered the most risk significant.

Transportation Security The IAEA Implementing Guide, Security in the Transport of Radioactive Material, Nuclear Security Series No. 9, states that radioactive material is most vulnerable during transport.

NRC is responsible for licensing the possession and use of these sources. DOT regulates the transport of such sources. DHS is responsible for securing all modes of transportation.

Federal, State, and local stakeholders are working to develop and enhance mobile and stationary detection systems to detect and report on radiological and nuclear materials that are out of regulatory control.

Spent Fuel Transport Security The NRC regulates how spent nuclear fuel is protected in transit against sabotage or theft. Rules for the physical protection of spent fuel transport include:

  • Coordinating with law enforcement agencies before the shipment
  • Requiring advance notice to States, Indian tribes, and the NRC
  • Using a communications center and other means to monitor shipments while in route using armed escorts
  • Using devices that allow drivers and escorts to immobilize the vehicle

Interagency task force on Radiation Source Protection and Security

Radiation Source Protection and Security

  • US Government task force reviews and considers changes to the list of radioactive sources that warrant security and oversight.
  • Foreign and domestic threat reviewed.
  • The global use of radioactive sources reviewed.

Definitions

  • Significant Radiation Exposure Device (RED):

An object used to maliciously expose people, equipment, and/or the environment to ionizing radiation without dispersal of radioactive material that could cause debilitating injury to people exposed for a period of minutes to hours.

  • Significant Radiation Dispersal Device (RDD):

The combination of radioactive material and the means (whether active or passive) to disperse that material with malicious intent without a nuclear explosion, that could (1) impact national security, national economy, public health and safety, or any combination thereof, or (2) require a robust, coordinated Federal response.

Factors Influencing Transportation Security Availability Threat Consequence Scenarios Significant Event

Potential Radionuclides of Concern Radionuclides available to end users:

  • californium-252 polonium-210*
  • curium-244 selenium-75
  • plutonium-238 ytterbium-169 Limited use radionuclides:
  • gadolinium-153* strontium-82

Potential Radionuclides of Concern Spent Fuel is comprised mainly of:

Pu-241, Cs-137, Sr-90, Cs-134, Pm-147, Ru-106, Rh-106, Ce-144, Eu-154, Pu-238, and Cm-244

Consequences

  • Health and safety effects Prompt fatality Deterministic effects Delayed effects
  • Economic and Social Disruption (area denial)

Size of area Protective Action Guidelines

  • Psychological consequences
  • Economic

Consequence Assessment Paramount concern is protecting against radiation-induced life threatening or permanent injury that would reduce the quality of life.

Psychological and social disruption consequences and associated economic losses are difficult to quantify. Hence, the potential for deterministic health effects is the primary criterion for assessing the level of impact of an RED event.

Consequence Assessment

  • Difficult to directly quantify psychological and social disruption consequences and correlate them to a particular quantity of radioactive material. Physical, psychological, and social disruption consequences may be secondary criteria relative to the economic consequences.
  • Economic loss may be a primary criterion for assessing the level of impact of an RDD event.

Power to Contaminate Land (Calculation)

  • PCL is a methodology that provides a basic risk comparison of different radionuclides.

Maximum Activity of Device PCL = = Area Activity Limit per Unit Area

  • Model Parameters and Assumptions

Power to Contaminate Land (Calculation)

For example:

Maximum Activity of Device PCL = = Area Activity Limit per Unit Area

= 286 km2

= 111 mi2

  • Cs-137 source - 444 TBq (12,000 Ci)
  • The activity limit of 1.55 MBq (4.2x104 nanocuries) per square meter is calculated

PCL Calculation Parameter Assumption Environment Urban / rural Consequence Health / Economic Duration 1 year / many years Protective Action Guide 20 mSv / other Costs Considered Direct / Indirect Euro / Dollar amount millions / billions Method of Attack Crude Explosive device Area covered 1 km2 / other Distribution of Radioactive material Uniform / non-uniform

RDD Characterization Deposition Derived Response Level

  • A level of radioactivity in an environmental medium that would be expected to produce a dose equal to a specific consequence (e.g., Protective Action Guide level).
  • Used to create data products and define activity levels for a radionuclide to help Decision Makers determine where protective actions (e.g., sheltering, evacuation, or relocation) may be warranted.

RDD Modeling and Dose Limits EPA TEDE PAGs In several US studies, the dose guidance used to characterize RDD scenarios of at-risk radionuclides was based on the EPA/DHS Protective Action Guide, which recommends the relocation of a population exposed at certain levels for certain time phases after detonation (therefore starts at deposition of material - no plume exposure included; 2-Pathway Method).

Early Phase - 10 mSv (1 rem) (0-96 hrs) 1st Year - 20 mSv (2 rem) 2nd and subsequent years - 5 mSv (0.5 rem)

Power to Contaminate Land A deposition Derived Response Level can be developed for each radionuclide of concern. The PCL concept provides a basic risk comparison of these radionuclides.

  • An appropriate PAG is required [20 mSv (2 rem) in the first year attributable to ground deposition, i.e.,

groundshine and resuspension pathways].

  • Standardized area of concern, e.g., 1 km2
  • Most common, commercially available chemical form
  • 100-percent efficient and perfectly even dispersion over an area of land.

Conclusion

  • IAEA Code of Conduct Category 1 and 2 quantities remain valid as a list of radioactive sources that could result in a significant RED or a significant RDD event, therefore warranting enhanced security and protection.
  • An additional seven other radionuclides were identified through the down-selection process as not commercially available to end users, but could potentially be used in a significant RDD. They dont warrant enhanced security unless aggregated to IAEA Category 2 quantities or in bulk quantities.

Thank you !

Questions ?