ML20206A666
ML20206A666 | |
Person / Time | |
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Issue date: | 04/22/1999 |
From: | Marsh L NRC (Affiliation Not Assigned) |
To: | Paquin P CHEM-NUCLEAR SYSTEMS, INC. |
References | |
NUDOCS 9904280272 | |
Download: ML20206A666 (5) | |
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April 22,1999 Mr. Patrick Paquin CHEM-NUCLEAR Systems incorporated 140 Stoneridge Drive Columbia, South Carolina 29210
SUBJECT:
REQUEST FOR A TECHNICAL REVIEW OF A DRAFT INFORMATION NOTICE REGARDING IF-300 SPENT FUEL SHIPPING CASK
Dear Mr. Paquin:
The U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is planning to issue an information notice 1
- discussing the IF-300 spent fuel shipping cask. We ask that you review the enclosed draft of that information notice to ensure the technical information is accurate. Your cooperation in this matter is appreciated. Please return any comments you may have as soon as possible. A copy of this request and your response will be place in the Public Document Room for review by the public. Your response should to mailed to:
U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D. C. 20555-0001 1
ATTN: Thomas Greene, NRR/REXB f
MAIL STOP: 0-12D3 J
l Please address any questions you may have on this matter to Tom Greene of my staff.
Mr. Greene may be reached by phone 301-416-1175 or e-mail tag @nrc. gov. If no comments are received by close of business on May 14,1999, we will assume the technical information in the notice is correct.
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Original signed by James E. Lyons FOR Ledyard B. Marsh, Chief Events Assessment, Generic Communications,
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and Non-Power Reactors Branch
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Division of Regulatory improvement Programs Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
Enclosure:
Draft Information Notice DISTRIBUTION tCentnd Files;.4 R
R/F 080078 q1 'k TGreene LMarsh DOCUMENT NAME: G:\\ TAG \\LETCHENU.WPD To r ceive a copy of this document, indicate in the box C= Copy w/o attachmentlenclosure E= Copy with attachment / enclosure N = No copy OFFICE PECB: DRIP G
C:PEDB: DRIP NAME TGreene M l LMah
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r DATE fM//99 i L /W99 OFFICIAL RECORD COPY
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9904290272 990422 PDR ORO NRRA J
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UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION OFFICE OF NUCLEAR REACTOR REGULATION WASH 1NGTON, D.C. 20555-0001 May xx,1999 NRC INFORMATION NOTICE 99 xx: MISAPPLICATION OF 10 CFR PART 71 TRANSPORTATION SHIPPING CASK UCENSING BASIS TO 10 CFR PART 50 DESIGN BASIS j
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/N Addressees
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All holders of operating licenses or construction permits for nuclear power reactors.
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The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issbing 'this information notice to alert addressees to a potential problem with use of the vendor's consohdated safety analysis report for the IF-300 spent fuel. shipping cask, which could place plants outside their design basis during the loading or unloading of spent fuel. ft is expected that recipients will review the information for applicability to their facilities and consider actions, as appropriate, to avoid 4
similar problems. However, suggestions contained in this information notice are not NRC I
requirements; therefore, no specific action or written response is required.
Backaround The current license holder for the IF-300 shipping cask is CHEM-NUCLEAR Systems, Inc. The IF-300 spent fuel shipping cask is licensed under Title 10 of the Code of Federal Reaulations q
Part 71 (10 CFR Par'.71) as a type B package and, therefore, must be designed to withstand the tests for hypothetical accident conditions required by 10 CFR 71.73. The cask must be able f
to withstand a 9-meter [30-foot] drop through air onto a flat, horizontal, essentially unyielding sudace. This test is performed in the %nsportation ready" position with the head in place and fully tensioned, and the vane box covers installed.
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Desodotion of Circumstances t
NRC Bulletin 96-02," Movement of Heavy Loads Over Spent Fuel, Over Fuel in the Reactor 4
j Core, or Over Safety-Related Equipment," dated April 11,1996 (Accession Number I
0259) asked licensees to review their programs for handling heavy loads and to send a to the NRC. A request for additionalinformation (RAI) was sent to a number of plants that did not have single failure-proof cranes asking them to evaluate an accident scenario for in-plant cask movement where cask integrity would not be achieved should the lid not be fully secured.
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' g IN 99-XX May xx,1999 Page 2 of 4 Since Carolina Power and Light Company (CP&L), the licensee for the Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant (Harris plant), does not have a single failure-proof crane, it was asked to evaluate the scenario described in the RAl. At the Harris plant, the valve box covers are removad in the 4
rail bay before the cask is lifted. With the valve box covers removed, the cask is no longer in f
the transportation configuration. The cask is then moved from the rail car to the cask l
prenaration area. The IF-300 shipping cask Consolidated Safety Analysis Report (CSAR) and the IF 300 shipping cask Operating Manual describe detensioning all cask head sleevs nuts and removing all but four sleeve nuts in the cask preparation area. A0ain, these changes put the cask outside its transportation ready configuration. The cask is then moved from the preparation area to the loading basin. With the top of the cask suspended 30.5 centimeters
[1 foot) above the surface of the unloading basin, the final four sleeve nuts are removed The cask is then placed in the unloading basin and the head removed. CP&L had implemented the cask vendor loading / unloading procedures at the Harris plant amos it was licensed in 1987.
Since these steps were described in the vendor's CSAR and operating manual, CP&L assumed the vendor had an analysis dernonstrating that full cask integrity was maintained even when the four-sleeve nut configuration was used. This assumption was undocumented, but it formed the basis for the statements in Section 15.7.5," Spent Fuel Cask Drop Accident," of the Harris plant's Final Safety Analysis Report (FSAR), which states that the potential drop of a spent fuel cask is limited to less than an equivalent 9-meter [30-foot] drop onto a flat, essentially unyielding, horizontal surface. Stoco the spent fuel cask is designed to withstand such loadings, the radiological consequences of these accidents are not evaluated.
In evaluating the RAI, CP&L requested that the vendor provide the analysis that supported the CSAR statements related to the four sleeve-nut configuration. CP&L was told by the vendor that no analysis existed. Such as analysis is not required by 10 CFR Part 71. The licensee stopped any further cask unloading until this issue could be resolved. The vendor was asked to perform an analysis to support the CSAR statements. Upon completion of the analysis, the vendor concluded that the lid would not become dislodged, and that fuel elements would remain in the cask. However,it could nc; ahow that the cask would remain gas tight. CP&L used this information in an analysis to determine the consequences of releasing the radioactive nuclides contained in the fuel gap, due to a loss of cask head sealing, into the fuel handling building.
CP&L found that the consequences were a small fraction of the NRC acceptance criteria for Section 15.7.5 of the Standard Review Plan (NUREG-0800). Since no release had been postulated in the FSAR, this was considered an increase in consequences and was submitted to the NRC as an unreviewed safety question on March 14,1997. In addition, this item was reported to the NRC in accordance with 10 CFR 50.73 in licensee event report (LER) 50400/97-004-00 on March 31,1997.
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.J ISC requested additional information in relation to particulate contamination in the cask tFat could be blown out with the fuel gap fission product gas venting. Additional analysis was performed by CP&L, which showed that the release would be a small fraction of 10 CFR Part 100 limits and was well within the Standard Review Plan acceptance criteria. On June 26, 1997, the NRC issued Amendment 73 to the Harris license in relation to this issue.
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IN 99-XX May xx,1999 Page 3 of 4 Subsequently, the CP&L Brunswick site and Robinson site evaluated the results of the Harris findings. Both plants have single-failure proof cranes. Both plants concluded that the removal of the valve covers constituted a change frem the transportation configuration and, therefore, was not previously analyzed. This was based on the fact that the lift to place the cask onto the rail car was conducted with the crane not in the single-failure-proof configuration. At both Brunswick and Robinson sites, the licensee concluded that an unreviewed safety question existed and submitted a license amendment to address the issue. CP&L maintained a hold on these casks at the applicable site until the unreviewed safety questioniwas resolved.
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Discussion f
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Where 10 CFR Part 71 licensing-basis information is being relied upon to satisfy the design basis for 10 CFR Part 50, licensees should ensure that the Part 71 information is adequately supported to satisfy the requirements of Part 50. Information provided by a vendor should be consistent but may not always be site specific. Where a site specific analysis is needed to support FSAR statements, vendor information should be supplemented with the necessary additional analysis, it is important to review vendor information before using their equipment.
x Plants with single failure-proof cranes that move the cask in other than the transportation ready configuration may also find this problem applicable, even though cask drops or tipping accidents are not required to be considered. When a cask is moved in other than the transportation ready configuration, a plant specific analysis would be necessary to determine that the consequences are bounded by the current design basis of the plant. For example, the removal of the valve covers before movement may make the cask susceptible to damage from bumping into the side of the pool or building or being bumped into by other equipment, in this case, the valves on the side of the cask could be damaged, causing the cask to lose its leak-tight quality.
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Related Generic Communications NRC Information Nodce (IN) 97-51, ' Problems Experienced With Loading and Unloading Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage and Transportation Casks," issued July 11,1997 (Accession Number 9707080365).
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i NRC Bulletin 96-02, " Movement of Heavy Loads Over Spent Fuel, Over Fuel in the Reactor
- Core, or Over Safety-Related Equipment," April 11,1996 (Accession Number 9604080259).
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IN 99 XX May xx,1999 Page 4 of 4 This information notice requires no specific action or written response. However, recipients are reminded that they are required to consider industry wide operating experience (including NRC information notices) where practical, when setting goals and performing periodic evaluations under Section 50.65, ' Requirement for monitoring the effectiveness of. maintenance at nuclear power plants," to 50 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Reaulations. If you have any questions about the information in this notice, please contact the technical contact listed below or the appropriate Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR) project manager.
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Ledyard B. Marsh, Chief Events Assessment, Generic Communications, and Non-Power Reactors Branch Division of Regulatory improvement Programs Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation i
Technical contact: J. B. Brady, Ril 919-362-0601
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E-mail: jbb1 @nrc. gov
Attachment:
List of Recently issued NRC Information Notices l
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