ML20137F228
| ML20137F228 | |
| Person / Time | |
|---|---|
| Issue date: | 02/06/1997 |
| From: | Rathbun D NRC OFFICE OF CONGRESSIONAL AFFAIRS (OCA) |
| To: | Inhofe J, Schaefer D HOUSE OF REP., SENATE, ENVIRONMENT & PUBLIC WORKS |
| Shared Package | |
| ML20137F222 | List: |
| References | |
| FRN-60FR50248, FRN-62FR5907, RULE-PR-71 CCS, NUDOCS 9704010015 | |
| Download: ML20137F228 (4) | |
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UNITED STATES j
,j NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION 2
WASHINGTON, D.C. 3000H001
- s
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February 6, 1997 The Honorable James M. Inhofe, Chairman Subcommittee on Clean Air, Wetlands, Private, l
Property and Nuclear Safety 1
Committee on Environment and Public Works United States Senate Washington, DC 20510
Dear Mr. Chairman:
The NRC has sent to the Office of the Federal Register for publication the enclosed final rule to amend 10 CFR Part 71 for fissile material shipments and exemptions.
An NRC fuel cycle facility licensee, Babcock & Wilcox (B&W), notified the NRC on September 11, 1996, that it had discovered a defect in the current NRC and Department of Transportation (DOT) regulations, in 10 CFR 71.53 and 49 CFR 173.453 respectively, which could cause nuclear criticality to occur in shipments of fissile material. The regulatory defect is not indicative of unsafe fissile material shipments in the past.
Rather, it was identified by B&W during preparation for shipment of an unprecedented type of fissile material that could result in nuclear criticality under current requirements.
This unique material is produced as a waste product from processing of strategic material resulting from operations to commercially downblend weapons-usable fissile material from the former Soviet Union. The NRC reviewed its regulations and determined that revisions to 10 CFR Ptrt 71.53, j
71.18, 71.22 were needed on an emergency basis because shipments under these t
three sections can be made without specific NRC approval.
1 In addition to this rulemaking, the NRC has taken other actions to protect public health and safety, including obtaining a commitment from B&W not to make such shipments and confirming this with a legally binding order. An Information Notice was also issued to all special nuclear material licensees.
This rule will utilize the " good cause" exception to the Administrative Procedure Act's (APA's) requirement for notice and comment (5 U.S.C. 553 (b)(B)), as permitted under 10 CFR 2.804(d)(2) of the Commission's regulations, because providing public notice and comment is impractical and,
contrary to public interest in this case where an inadvertent criticality in' the public domain could involve fatalities, health effects from the resultant radiation, and extensive clean-up costs. This rule will also utilize the
" good cause" exception to the APA requirement that a final rule must be 9704010015 970206 PbR PR 71 62FRS907 PDR
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published at least 30 days before its effective date (5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3)) and will become effective immediately. However, the public will be provided a 30-day post promulgation comment period and the Comission will publish a response to significant comments in the Federal Register.
Sincerely, i
W }V i
l ennis K. Rathbun, Director I
1 Office of Congressional Affairs
Enclosure:
Federal Register Notice cc: Senator Bob Graham j
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1 UNITED STATES g
,j NUC'. EAR REGULATORY COMMISSION R
WASHINGTON. D.C. sese64001 o
February 6, 1997 The Honorable Dan Schaefer, Chairman Subcommittee on Energy and Power Committee on Commerce United States House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515
Dear Mr. Chairman:
r The NRC has sent to the Office of the Federal Register for publication the enclosed final rule to amend 10 CFR Part 71 for fissile material shipments and exemptions.
An NRC fuel cycle facility licensee, Babcock & Wilcox (B&W), notified the NRC on September 11, 1996, that it had discovered a defect in the current NRC and Department of Transportation (DOT) regulations, in 10 CFR 71.53 and 49 CFR 173.453 respectively, which could cause nuclear criticality to occur in shipments of fissile material. The regulatory defect is not indicative of unsafe fissile material shipments in the past.
Rather, it was identified by B&W during preparation for shipn.ent of an unprecedented type of fissile material that could result in nuclear criticality under current requirements.
This unique material is produced as a waste product from processing of strategic material resulting from operations to commercially downblend weapons-usable fissile material from the former Soviet Union. The NRC reviewed its regulations and determined that revisions to 10 CFR Part 71.53, 71.18, 71.22 were needed on an emergency basis because shipments under these three sections can be made without specific NRC approval.
In addition to this rulemaking, the NRC has taken other actions to protect public health and safety, including obtaining a commitment from B&W not to make such shipments and confirming this with a legally binding order. An Information Notice was also issued to all special nuclear material licensees.
This rule will utilize the " good cause" exception to the Administrative Procedure Act's (APA's) requirement for notice and coront (5 U.S.C. 553 (b)(B)), as permitted under 10 CFR 2.804(d)(2) of the commission's regulations, because providing public notice and comment is impractical and contrary to public interest in this case where an inadvertent criticality in, the public domain could involve fatalities, health effects from the resultant radiation, and extensive clean-up costs. This rule will also utilize the
" good cause" exception to the APA requirement that a final rule must be I
i
! published at least 30 days before its effective date (5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3)) and will become effective immediately. However, the public will be provided a 30-day post promulgation comment period and the Commission will publish a response to significant comments in the Federal Register.
Sincerely, i
Dennis K. Rathbun, Director 4
Office of Congressional Affairs
Enclosure:
Federal Register Notice cc:
Rep. Ralph Hall
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[7950-01-P]
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION 10 CFR Part 71 RIN: 3150-AF58 Fissile Material Shipments and Exemptions AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION:
Final rule.
SUMMARY
- The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is amending its regulations regarding the shipment of exempt quantities of fissile material and the shipment of fissile material under a general license. This emergency final rule restricts the use of beryllium and other special moderating materials (i.e., graphite and deuterium) in the shipment of fissile materials and consigns quantity limits on fissile exempt shipments. These amendments are necessary to correct a recently discovered defect in the current regulations which could permit, in special circumstances, nuclear criticality to occur in shipments of fissile materials which are permitted to take place without specific Comission approval. The regulatory defect is not indicative of unsafe fissile material shipments in the past. Rather, it was identified by Babcock & Wilcox (B&W) during preparation for shipment of an unprecedented
~ type of fissile material that could result in nuclear criticality under current requirements. This unique material is produced as a waste product from processing of strategic material resulting from operations to Gn dn in A i nw I ff WIP I
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i commercially downblend weapons-usable fi.;sile material from the former. Soviet l
Union. Although this rule is being issued as an immediately effective final j
rule, the Commission is requesting public comment and will revise the rule if l
necessary.
DATES: This final rule is effective on (insert the same date as the publication date in the Federal Register).
Comments must be received by l
(insert a date 30 days after the publication date).
If public comments l
i require changes in the rule, timely notice will be published in the Federal
- Register, ADDRESSES:
Comments may be submitted either electronically or in written form.
Mail written comments to: U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Washington. DC 20555-0001. Attention: Docketing and Service Branch.
Hand j
deliver comments to:
11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville. MD between 7:30 am and 4:15 pm Federal workdays. For information on submitting comments electronically, see the discussion under Electronic Access in the j
Supplementary Information Section.
Copies of comments received may be j
examined at the NRC Public Document Room. 2120 L Street NW. (Lower Level).
Washington. DC.
l FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Naiem S. Tanious. Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Washington. DC 20555-0001. telephone (301) 415-6103. E-mail:
INTERNET:NSTONRC. GOV I
s SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On September 11, 1996, an NRC fuel cycle facility licensee. Babcock &
Wilcox, Naval Nuciear Fuel Division (B&W), notified NRC by telephone that it had discovered that the NRC and U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) regulations (10 CFR 71.53 and 49 CFR 173.453, respectively) on fissile exempt shipments do not provide adequate criticality safety for certain shipments of fissile materiali (enriched uranium containing beryllium oxide.)
Specifically, B&W discovered through calculations, that a shipment, intended 1
to be shipped pursuant to S 71.53(d) containing large amounts of an exempt concentration of enriched uranium in the presence of beryllium, could result 2
in a nuclear criticality. B&W indicated that a beryllium oxide-enriched uranium mixture would be produced as a waste product from its processing of strategic material resulting from operations to commercially downblend i
weapons-usable fissile material from the former Soviet Union.
B&W promptly notified the NRC of its concern, provided its calculations to the NRC, and Fissile material is defined in 10 CFR Part 71 and 49 CFR Part 173 as:
plutonium-238, plutonium-239, plutonium-241, uranium-233, uranium-235, or any combination of these radionuclides.
Packages used for shipment of materials containing these radionuclides Inust meet specific standards and operating limits designed to preclude nuclear criticality during transport, unless excepted by specific regulations (e.g.,10 CFR 71.53 or 49 CFR 173.453).
For transportation purposes, nuclear criticality means a condition in i
2 which an uncontrolled, self-sustairing and neutron-multiplying m ion chain s
reaction occurs.
Nuclear criticality is generally a concern when sufficient j
concentrations and masses of fissile material and neutron moderating material exist together in a favorable configuration. The neutron moderating material cannot achieve criticality by itself in any concentration or configuration.
It can enhance the ability of fissile material to achieve criticality by slowing down neutrons or reflecting neutrons.
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made commitments not to make any such shipments. The NRC staff subsequently i
1 reviewed and verified B&W's calculations and determined that expeditious j
' revisions to NRC regulations are needed to correct the deficiency because an l
inadvertent nuclear criticality in the public domain could involve fatalities.
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i health effects from the resulting radiations, and extensive clean-up costs.
l The criticality safety problem brought to NRC's attention with respect j, -
to S 71.53 caused the NRC staff to review 10 CFR Part 71 to determine whether any other provisions of this Part might be similarly deficient. The general j
j licenses in SS 73.18 and 71.22 provide for criticality control by limiting the quantity of fissile material in a single package (i.e.. similar to the quantit"-b6 sed fissile exemptions in 10 CFR 71.53).
Section 71.18 also I
assigns a criticality transport index (pursuant to S 71.4) to each package.
1 These sections were found to have deficiencies comparable to those discovered in S 71.53 in that there are no restrictions placed on special moderating l
t i
materials (i.e., materials which would increase the number of neutrons t
l available to cause fission as compared with ordinary water), and S 71.22 has j
the additional deficiency of not limiting the total amount of fissile material i
in a conveyance. During the NRC staff's review, secNo1s S 71.20 and S 71.24.
I which also provide general licenses, were found to be adequate in that the i
l moderators of concern were excluded.
f Packages for shipments made in accordance with a fissile material exemption in S 71.53 or the general license in S 71.18 or S 71.22, are not required to be certified by NRC. The intent of SS 71.53, 71.18, and 71.22 is that any materials packaged and shipped in accordance with the limits in these j
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section's (and the other applicable sections of 10 CFR Part 71 and 49 CFR Part 173) are incapable of an inadvertent criticality. The B&W analyses demonstrated that a deficiency exists in these requirements.
The NRC has already taken a number of actions to resolve the potential safety problem identified by B&W. First, the NRC obtained a comitment from B&W not to ship Be-U materials without prior NRC authorization and confirmed this commitment in a Confirmatory Action Letter (CAL) dated October 10,'1996.
1 Subsequently, the CAL was superseded by an imediately effective Confirmatory Order Modifying License dated December 16, 1996, which imposed B&W's commitment as a legally binding license condition. The NRC had no reason to doubt B&W's earlier voluntary commitment because B&W had demonstrated its concern for safety by bringing the problem in the first place to the NRC's attention. However, the NRC staff also believed that, given the significance of this issue for public health and safety. the NRC needed to exercise its full authority to assure itself and the public that the one licensee known to be in a position to make potentially unsafe shipments was legally prevented from doing so pending completion of this rulemaking.
On December 5,1996, NRC also issued NRC Information Notice 96-63 to all NRC licensees authorized to possess special nuclear material. The purpose of this information notice was to alert all such licensees to this problem so that any of them who might be in a position to make potentially unsafe shipments could take appropriate measures.
The NRC also brought this problem to the attention of the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT) and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
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DOT is a co-regulator of fissil'e material shipments and is currently ' revising its parallel regulations in 49 CFR Part 173 on an expedited basis. DOE makes many shipments of fissile exempt material each year.
Discussion The safety problem uncovered by the B & W calculations, and verified by the NRC, involves quantities, geometries, and concentrations of fissile j
materials and moderators which could result in criticality when shipped in t
compliance with sections of the regulations for which criticality analyses are not required. The current regulations (fissile exemptions in S 71.53 and the general licenses in SS 71.18 and 71.22) are based on the assumption that water
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is the only moderator which might be present in fissile exempt shipments.
j These rules are assumed to provide inherent criticality safety without a need for shippers to perform separate analyses-.
However, some moderators (herein referred to as special uderating materials) can increase the number of neutrons available to cause fission as compared to ordinary water and result in the potential for criticality in shipments where these moderators are present, even though the shipments are in compliance with 10 CFR 71.53 and 49 CFR 173.453.
'Jntil recently the presence of special moderating materials in i
significant quantities in NRC-regulated shipments of fissile exempt materials was not anticipated. However, certain international initiatives, including efforts of reduction in stockpiles of strategic material by processing for conmercial use, have resulted in the greater likelihood of inclusion of these i
materials in NRC regulated shipments. The materials proposed to be shipped by w-,
nm--,v-+n.
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B&W, wriich prompted this final rule, resulted from such a source. A recent
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contract was awarded to B&W to process weapons-usable enriched uranium materials from the Republic of Kazakstan. The waste product of tne processing, a uranium-beryllium filtercake, met the fissile exemption provisions in 10 CFR 71.53(d) and 49 CFR 173.453(d). However, B&W used a computer model of the enriched uranium-beryllium oxide waste packages, to demonstrate that if the packages were loaded for shipment into a sea-land j
container, and at the regulatory fissile exempt concentration limit, adequate i
1 confidence in nuclear criticality safety would not have been provided. NRC has verified through independent analvu that the concerns raised by the B&W analysis are valid and apply to other geometries and moderating characteristics as well. To guard against inadvertent criticality, this final rule restricts shipments of fissile material with three special moderating materials: beryllium, graphite, and deuterium.
However, limiting beryllium, graphite, and deuterium to trace quantities would not completely eliminate the possibility of criticality in fissile exempt or generally licensed shipments, There is also a need to limit the quantity of material in a single consignment (the B&W criticality model calculations were performed using 200 cm high infinite slab configuration).
The problem of a lack of control on the total amount of fissile exempt material in an exempt shipment, was originally identified during the revision process for the 1996 Edition of the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA's) " Regulations for the Safe Transport of Radioactive Material," Safety Series No. 6, 1996. The problem was addressed in Safety Series No. 6,1996, j
by adopting a consignment limit on the amount of fissile exempt material that a shipper could transport as a private carrier or deliver to a common carrier ;
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for shipment. The NRC cannot presently enforce a limit on the total quantity i
of fissile material in a common carrier shipment because the regulations do not require a transport index for each package or require shipment by exclusive use. The latter would restrict the ability to use common carriers, while requiring a transport index would negate much of the advantage gained by the exemption.
Consignment limits are enforceable and represent a practical operating limit that would prevent the potentially unsafe accumulation of fissile exempt materials during shipment.
Therefore. this final rule restricts special moderating materials and includes consignment limits on shipments of fissile materials under the provisians of SS 71.22 and 71.53. This final rule also restricts speci^1
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moderating materials under the provisions of S 71.18. Together these changes will eliminate the possibility of inadvertent criticality during shipments made in compliance with 10 CFR 71.18, 71.22, or 71.53. The NRC anticipates that DOT will issue parallel revisions to 49 CFR Part 173. Accordingly, NRC
'and DOT are coordinating the necessary revisions to 10 CFR Part 71 and 49 CFR Part 173.
i Compatibility with the IAEA Standards 1
On September 9, 1996, the Board of Governors of the IAE' approved the i
1996 revisions to Safety Series No. 6.
Among the changes in these revised
~ IAEA regulations are that consignment limits and limits on the types of j
moderators were placed on the fissile exemptions in paragraph 672 of Safety Ser_ies No. 6, 1996. The changes to 10 CFR Part 71 made by this rulemaking are j
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generally compatible with the changes made to IAEA Safety Series No. 6,1996.
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l Future' revisions to 10 CFR Part 71 and 49 CFR Part 173 are planned by NRC and l
i DOT, respectively, to bring them into general accord wdth other sections of i
IAEA Safety Series No. 6, 1996.
One area in which this final rule for 10 CFR Part 71 is not compatible
[
kdth IAEA Safety Series No. 6, 1996. paragraph 672 is-that graphite was added t
as a special moderating material in the 1995 revisions to 10 CFR Part 71 (60 FR 50248), but does not appear in IAEA Safety Series No. 6, 1996.
[ Graphite is limited by the current general licenses in 10 CFR 71.20 and 71.24.] The l
NRC believes that it is appropriate to continue to limit graphite (being a special moderating material) in domestic regulations for shipment of fissile material. Therefore, the revisions to the fissile exemptions in 10 CFR 71.53 and the general licenses in 10 CFR 71.18 and 71.20 provide for exclusion of other than trace quantities of graphite.
L Alternatives Considered l
l To determine the appropriate amendments to 10 CFR 71.18, 71.22. and l
71.53, the NRC staff considered the folicwing three alternatives:
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1.
The No-Action Alternative. This alternative is not acceptable to the NRC.
Shipnents of fissile material (Be-U mixtures) meeting the fissile naterial exemption requirements could be made in a configuration that does not maintain criticality safety during transport. Therefore, this alternative was I
not pursued.
2.
Eliminate the fissile material exemotion. This alternative is not l
acceptable to the NRC.
Elimination of fissile material exemption, while._.
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solving the criticality safety problem identified by B&W, would create other problems. Many packages, such as those containing low-level radioactive waste materials (e.g., ion-exchange resins), contain only trace concentrations of fissile nuclides, which are incidental to the overall radioactivity of the l
package contents, and criticality events are not credible for shipments of these packages. The S 71.53 fissile material exemptions are applied for these shipments, and there is a continuing need to provide for this application.
Elimination of S 71.53 would place an additional burden and cost on many shippers whose shipments posed no criticality safety concerns. Therefore, this alternative was not pursued.
3.
Revise the fissile material exemptions in S 71.T and the aencral licensees in SS 71.18 and 71.22 to exclude the oresence of soecial moderatina materials such as bervilium. deuterium and arachite in other than trace cuantities. and olace consianment limits on shioments. Together these changes solve the criticality safety problem identified by B&W and the related problem of the potential accumulation of an unsafe quantity of fissile materials in a shipment.
Given the limited number of affected shipments and the small number of licensees involved. some additional costs on shippers may be expected because they can no longer use the fissile material exemptions and general licenses for materials with beryllium, deuterium and graphite in other than trace quantities, and because some shipments may have to be divided to meet the consignment limits.
It keeps the exemption and general license provisions available for other shippers.
This alternative was chosen by the NRC staff, and is the basis for the following specific changes in SS 71.18, 71.22, and 71.53.
k s
Changes in 10 CFR 71.18, 71.22, and 71.53 Section 71.18 The title of S 71.18: General license: Fissile material, limited quantity per package, remains the same. Also paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) in S 71.18 remain the same. The old paragraph (d) in S 71.18 is replaced by three new paragraphs: (d), (e), and (f). The new paragraph (d) covers general licenses for packages containing no more than a type A quantity of radioactive material where fissile material is mixed with substances having an average hydrogen density greater than water (defined in S 71.20).
The new paragraph (e) rascricts the quantity of beryllium, graphite, or hydrogenous material enriched in deuterium in a package to no greater than 0.1% of the fissile material mass. The new paragraph (f) is a modification of the old paragraph (d) that includes a simplified formula for calculation of the minimum transport index.
Section 71.22 The title of S 71.22: General License: Fissile material, limited quantity, controlled shipment, remains the same. Also paragraphs (a), (b),
and (c) in S 71.22 remain the same. The old par 39raph (d) is modified with the addition of a new table and accompanying formula which restrict the mass of uranium-235 and other fissile material in a controlled shipment. The table gives both new limits of 290 g and 180 g for uranium-235 and other fissile materials, when these materials are mixed with substances having hydrogen density greater than water: the table also gives the old S 71.22 limits for shipments of U-235 and other fissile material when mixed with substances U
having a hydrogen density less than or equal to water.
The new paragraph (e) restricts the quantity of beryllium, graphite, or hydrogenous material enriched in deuterium in a package to no greater than 0.1% of the fissile material mass.
Paragraph (f) is the same as old paragraph (e).
Section 71.53 The title of S 71.53 remains the same.
The introductory paragraph restates the old S 71.53 language that packages are exempted from the fissile material standards of S 71.55 and S 71.59: however, the same paragraph restricts these exempted packages to only situations when beryllium, graphite, or deutraiurn is not present in quantities exceeding 0.1 % of the fissile material mass.
A new paragraph (a).is added which contains a formula and an accompanying table to limit individual consignment, but also includes the requirements in old paragraphs (a), (b)(1) and (2), and (d). The remainder of S 71.53 (paragraphs (b), (c), and (d)) is essentially the same as the old S 71.53 (paragraphs (c), (f), and (e)).
Good Cause for Immediate Adoption The Commission is promulgating this emergency final rule because the problem of regulatory Safety limits over quantities and concentrations of fissile material and moderators, which has been demonstrated to permit criticality in at least one proposed shipment, is an important safety issue meriting immediate corrective action. An accidental nuclear criticality in the public domain would very likely involve fatalities, health effects from the resulting radiations, and extensive clean-up costs.
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s Shipments of fissile exempt material are normally made without any j
associated criticality analysis because in the past it has been assumed that the regulations provide inherant criticality ;,afety.
However, B&W's contemplated shipment demonstrates that this assumption is not correct for all possible types of shipments. While the Commission expects that B&W's consnitment, as expressed in the NRC's Confirmatory Order, not to undertake shipments without the prior approval of the NRC, and the Information Notice issued to all licensees authorized to possess special nuclear material, will prevent an unsafe shipment from occurring pending revision of its rules. the Consnission does not track shipments by licensees made under the provisions of 10 CFR 71.18, 71.22 or 71.53. Moreover, the nature of the materials being imported and shipped domestically has recently changed due to initiatives with the States of the former Soviet Union to reduce weapons-usable material such as high-enriched uranium. The materials B&W had intended to ship were byproducts from processing this type of material.
Shipments made under 10 CFR 71.18, 71.22 or 71.53 are made without specific NRC approval and the possibility exists that a licensee could unwittingly make an unsafe shipment in reliance upon the present rules. Thus, the Commission must amend its rules quickly to prevent unsafe shipments from occurring.
For the reasons stated above, the Commission finds good cause, pursuant to Section 553(b)(B) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B)), to dispense with notice and prepromulgation public comment as being impracticable and contrary to the public interest.
Further, the Commission finds, pursuant to Section 553(d)(3) of the APA (5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3)), that good cause exists for making these amendments immediately i
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O effective because the need to have these regulations in place outweighs the inconvenience., if any, to licensees who may need to alter shipping plans.
Nevertheless, the Comission is providing a 30-day post-promulgation public comment period during which interested persons are invited to submit their comments to the Commission. Within a reasonable time after the end of the comment period, the Comission will publish a statement in the Federal Register containing an evaluation of the significant comments received and any revisions of the rule to be made as a result of the comments.
Electronic Access Coments may be submitted electronically, in either ASCII text or Wordperfect format (version 5.1 or later), by calling the NRC Electronic Bulletin Board (3BS) on FedWorld. The bulletin board may be accessed using a personal computer, a modem, and one of the commonly available communications software packages, or directly via Internet.
Background documents on the rulemaking are also available, as practical, for downloading and viewing on the bulletin board.
If using a personal computer and modem, the NRC rulemaking subsystem on FedWorld can be accessed directly by dialing the toll free number (800) 303-9672.
Comunication software parameters should be set as follows: parity to none, data bits to 8, and stop bits to 1 (N,8,1).
Using ANSI or VT-100 terminal emulation, the NRC rulemaking subsystem can then be accessed by selecting the " Rules Menu" option from the "NRC Main Menu." Users will find,.
the "Fe'dWorld Online User's Guides" particularly helpful. Many NRC subsystems and data bases also have a " Help /Information Center" option that is tailored to the particular subsystem.
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The NRC subsystem on FedWorld can also be accessed by a direct dial phone number for the main FedWorld BBS, (703) 321-3339, or by using Telnet via Internet: fedworld. gov.
If using (703) 321-3339 to contact FedWorld, the NRC subsystem will be accessed from the main FedWorld menu by selecting the
" Regulatory, Government Administration and State Systems," then selecting
" Regulatory Information Mall." At that point, a menu will be displayed that has an option "U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission" that will take you to the NRC Online main menu. The NRC Online area also can be accessed directly by 4
typing "/go nrc" at a FedWorld comand line.
If you access NRC from i
FedWorld's main menu, you may return to FedWorld by selecting the " Return to FedWorld" option from the NRC Online Main Menu. However, if you access NRC at FedWorld by using NRC's toll-free number, you will have full access to all NRC f
systems, but you will not have access to the main FedWorld system.
If you contact FedWorld using Telnet, you will see the NRC area and f
menus, including the Rules Menu. Although you will be able to download documents and leave messages, you will not be able to write coments or upload j
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files (comments).
If you contact FedWorld using FTP, all files can be l
accessed and downloaded but uploads are not allowed; all you will see is a 1
list of files without descriptions (normal Gopher look). An index file listing all files within a subdirectory, with descriptions, is available.
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There is a 15-minute time limit for FTP access.
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0 Although FedWorld also can be accessed through the World Wide Web, ifke FTP, that mode only provides access for downloading files and does not display the NRC Rules Menu.
For more information on NRC bulletin boards call Mr. Arthur Davis.
1 Systems Integration and Development Branch, NRC, Washington, DC 20555-0001, j
telephone (301) 415-5780: e-mail AXD39nrc. gov.
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Finding of No Significant Environmental Impact: Availability t
The Commission has determined, under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969. as amended and the Commission's regulations in Subpart A of
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10 CFR Part 51, that this rule is not a major Federal action significantly I
affecting the quality of the human environment, and therefore an environmental impact statement (EIS) is not required.
The Commission's " Final Environmental Statement on the Transportation of Radioactive Material by Air and Other Modes," NUREG-0170, dated December 1977, is NRC's generic EIS. covering all types of radioactive material transportation by all modes (road, rail, air and water). The total limited quantity impacts were included in the overall transportation risk assessment in NUREG-0170 and found to be acceptable. The radiological safety impact estimates in this EIS clearly bound the impacts for limited quantity shipments of fissile material containing special moderating materials.
This final rule affects only a small subset of the limited quantity shipments, i.e., those that contain both fissile material and special moderating materials.
NUREG-0170 does not specify the annual number of limited quantity. fissile material shipments containing special moderating.
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s materials but does estimate that 50.000 NRC-certified fissile material packages (used for larger quantities of, and/or more highly enriched, fissile materials) would be shipped in 1985. The number of shipments affected by this final rule is a small fraction of the NRC certified fissile package shipments because fissile materials containing special moderating materials are less common than moderately enriched fissile materials.
The options available to licensees under this final rule include shipping the material using different administrative controls (i.e., shipping it as a fissile materiel and not using the quantity-limited exemption / general license) or reducing the special moderating material concentration to specified limits. The NRC s',aff believes the first option may prove more economical because the increase in cost in making a single shipment under fissile material controls is less than that involved in reducing or removing the special moderating material.
Under this option, the same number of shipments are made as before the rule change, but shipments of fissile materials containing special moderating material would be made in NRC certified packages.
Under the latter option, the concentration of special moderating material might be reduced through additional processing, perhaps involving dilution or extraction. This option may involve additional transportation, either due to the increase in shipment volume due to dilution.
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or the transportation of extracted materials. Since the quantities of affected fissile materials are relatively small, staff believes the additional transportation would also be small.
The two options provide the added nuclear criticality safety control the rule seeks, either through the use of NRC-certified packages, and the administrative controls associated with their use. or through the reduction of 7 l
the concentration of special moderating materials to an acceptably low level.
Thus, the ultimate environmental inpact of.the rule is beneficial in that criticality safety is increased.
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement This final rule does not contain a new or amended information collection
- requirement subject to requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
Existing information collection requirements were approved by the Office of Managenent and Budget, approval number 3150-0008.
Public Protection Notification l
The NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to t
respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid j
f OMB control number.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act In accordance with the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, the NRC has determined that this action is not a major rule and has verified this determination with the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. Office of Management and Budget.,
Backfit Analysis The NRC has determined that a backfit analysis is not required for this final rule because these amendments do not involve any provisions that would require backfits as defined in 10 CFR Part 50.109(a)(1).
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 71 Criminal penalties Hazardous materials transportation. Nuclear materials, Packagin;; and containers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set out in the preamble and under the authority of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, as amended: and 5 U.S.C. 552 and 553, the NRC is adopting the following amendments to 10 CFR Part 71.
PART 71--PACKAGING AND TRANSPORTATION OF RADI0 ACTIVE MATERIAL 1.
The authority citation for Part 71 continues to read as follows:
AUTHORITY:
Secs. 53, 57, 62, 63, 81, 161, 182, 183, 68 Stat. 930, 932, 933, 935. 948, 953, 954, as amended sec. 1701, 106 Stat. 2951, 2952, 2953 (42 j
U.S.C. 2073, 2077., 2092, 2093, 2111, 2201, 2232, 2233, 2297f): secs. 201, as amended, 202, 206, 88 Stat. 1242, as amended. 1244, 1246 (42 U.S.C. 5841, 4
5842, 5846).
Section 71.97 also issued under sec. 301, Pub. L.96-295, 94 Stat. 789-790.,
m 2.
Section 71.18 is revised to read as follows:
S 71.18 General license: Fissile material, limited quantity per package.
(a)
A general license is issued to any licensee of the Comission to I
transport fissile material, or to deliver fissile material to a carrier for j
i transport, without complying with the package sQ ndards of Subparts E and F of this part, if the material is shipped in accordance with this section.
(b) The general license applies only to a licensee who has a quality assurance program approved by the Commission as satisfying the provisions of Subpart H of this part.
(M Except'as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, this general i
license applies only when a package contains no more.than a Type A quantity of l
radioactive material, including only one of the following:
(1) Up to 40 g of uranium-235:
i (2) Up to 30 g of uranium-233:
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l (3) Up to 25 g of the fissile radionuclides of plutonium, except that for encapsulated plutonium-beryllium neutron sources in special form, an Ai quantity of plutonium may be present: or (4) A combination of fissile radionuclides in which the sum of the ratios of the amount of each radionuclide to the corresponding maximum amounts in paragraphs (c)(1), (2), and (3) of this section does not exceed unity.
(d)
For packages where fissile material is mixed with substances having an average hydrogen density greater than water, this general license applies only when a package contains no more than a Type A quantity of radioactive material, including only one of the following:
(1) Up to 29 g of uranium-235:
- _... _ _ _ _.___ _._~_._.__
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i (2) Up to 18 g of uranium-233:
(3) Up to 18 g of fissile radionuclides of plutonium, or (4) A combination of fissile radionuclides in which the sum of the ratios of the amount of each radionuclide to the corresponding maximum amounts in paragraphs (d)(1), (2), and (3) of this section does not exceed unity.
(e) Except for the beryllium contained within the special form plutonium-beryllium sources authorized in paragraph (c) of this section, this general license applies only when beryllium, graphite, or hydrogenous material i
enriched in deuterium is not present in quantities exceeding 0.1% of the fissile material mass.
(f)(1) Except as specified in paragraph (f)(2) of this section for encapsulated plutonium-beryllium sources, this general license applies only when, a package is labeled with a transport index not less than the number given by the following equation, where the package contains'x grams of uranium-235, y grams of uranium-233, and z grams of the fissile radionuclides I
of plutonium:
Minimum Transport Index = (0.25x + 0.33y + 0.4z).
J (2) For a package in which the only fissile material is in the form of encapsulated plutonium-beryllium neutron sources in special form, the transport index based on criticality considerations may be taken as 0.025 times the number of grams of the fissile radionuclides of plutonium.
(3) Packages which have a transport index greater than 10 are not authorized under the general license provisions of this part.
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3.
Section 71.22 is revised to read as follows:
l S 71.22 General license:
Fissile material, limited quantity, controlled shipment.
(a)
A_ general license is issued to any licensee of the Commission to transport fissile material, or to deliver fissile material to a carrier for transport, without complying with the package standards of Subparts E and F of this part, if limited material is shipped in' accordance wnth this section.
(b) The general license applies only to a licensee who has a quality assurance program approved by the Commission as satisfying the provisions of
.Subpart H of this part.
(c) This general license applies only when a package contains no more j
than a Type A quantity of radioactive material and no more than 400 g total of the fissile radionuclides of plutonium encapsulated as plutonium-beryllium j
t neutron sources in special form.
(d) This general license applies only when:
(1) The mass of fissile radionuclides in the shipment is limited such that the arams of uranium-235 + arams of other fissile material s 1 X
Y where X and Y are the mass defined in the following table: or l
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1
-w-.m
~
- r
~
e-
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i PERMISSIBLE MASS LIMITS FOR SHIPMENTS OF FISSILE MATERIAL 1
Fissile material mass (g)
Fissile material mass (g)
Fissile material mixed with substances having mixed with substances a hydrogen density less than having a hydrogen density or equal to water greater than water Uranium-235(X) 500 290 Other fissile material (Y) 300 180 (2) the encapsulated plutonium-beryllium neutron sources are in special l
form and the total mass of fissile radionuclides in the shipment does ri>t i
exceed 2500 g.
(e) Except for the beryllium containeo within the special form f
plutonium-beryllium sources authorized in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, this general license applies only when beryllium, graphite or 4
hydrogenous material enriched in deuterium is not present in quantities exceeding 0.1% of the fissile material mass.
(f) This general license applies only when shipment of these packages is made under procedures specifically authorized by DOT. in accordance with 49 CFR Part 173 of its regulations, to prevent loading, transport, or storage of these packages with other fissile material shipments.
- 4. Section 71.53 is revised to read as follows:
S 71.53 Fissile material exemptions.
Fissile materials meeting the requirements of one of the paragraphs in (a) through (d) of this section are exempt from fissile material classification and from the fissile material package standards of SS 71.55 and 71.59, but are subject to all other requirements of this part. These i
exemptions apply only when beryllium, graphite, or hydrogenous material enriched in deuterium is not present in quantities exceeding 0.1 percent of the fissile material mass.
(a) Fissile material such that arams of uranium-235 + arams of other fissile material s 1 X
Y for an individual consignment, where X and Y are the mass limits defined in following table, CONSIGNMENT MASS LIMITS FOR EXEMPTIONS FROM i
THE REQUIREMENTS FOR PACKAGES CONTAINING FISSILE MATERIAL l
Fissile material mass (g)
Fissile material mass (g)
Fissile material mixed with substances having mixed with substances an average hydrogen density having an average hydrogen less than or equal to water density greater than water Uranium-235(X) 400 290 Other fissile material (Y) 250 180 provided that--
(1) Each package contains no more than 15 g of fissile material. For unpackaged material the mass limit of 159 applies to the conveyance; or (2) The fissile material consists of a homogeneous hydrogenous solution or mixture where the minimum ratio of hydrogen atoms to fissile radionuclide atoms (H/X) is 5200 and the maximum concentration of fissile radionuclides within a package is 5 g/ liter; or (3) There is no more than 5g of fissile material in any 10 liter volume of material and the material is packaged so as to maintain this limit of 74
U fissile radionuclide concentration during normal transport.
(b) Uranium enricheu in uranium-235 to a maximum of 1 percent by weight, and with total plutonium and uranium-233 content of up to 1 percent of the mass of uranium-235, provided that the fissile material is distributed homogeneously throughout the package contents and does not form a lattice arrangement within the package, (c) Liquid solutions of uranyl nitrate enriched in uranium-235 to a maximum of 2 percent by weight, with a total plutonium and uranium-233 content not exceeding 0.1 percent of the mass of uranium-235, and with a minimum nitrogen to uranium atomic ratio (N/U) of 2.
(d) Plutonium, less than 1 kg, of which not more than 20 percent by mass may consist of plutonium-239. pluton!um-241, or any combination of these radionuclides.
]d Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this / - day of February,1997.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
John,4/. Hoyle,
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Secgefary of the Conmission.
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CONGRESSIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SYSTEM DOCUMENT PREPARATION CHECRLEST
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17da check list is to be submitted with each document (or group of Qs/As) sentforprocessing into the CCS.
- 1. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DOCUMENT (S)
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- 2. TYPE OF DOCUMENT X CORRESPONDENCE HEARINGS (Qs/As)
- 3. DOCUMENT CONTROL SENSITIVE (NRC ONLr) X NON-SENSITIVE
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- 4. CONGkESSIONAL COMMITIEE AND SUBCOMMITIEE (if applicable)
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Congressional Committee l
Subcommittee i
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- 5. SUBIECT CODES l
(A)
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(B)
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- 6. SOURCE OFDOCUMENTS I
(A) 5520 (DOCUMENT NAME
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(B)
SCAN (C).
A7TACHMENTS
<D)
OrHER l
- 7. SYSTEu wG DATES (A) 3l20$] DATA OC4 SENTDOCUMENT TO CCS
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(B)
DATE CCS RECEIVED DOCUMENT j
(C)
DATE RETURNED TO OC4 FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION l
(D)
DATE RESUBMITTED BY OCA TO CCS (E)
DATE ENTERED INTO CCS By i
(F)
DATE OCA NOTIFIED THATDOCUMENT IS IN CCS i
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COMMENTS.C10022 1
RELEASE TO PDR i
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