ML20207A007

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Proposed Rule 10CFR52, AP600 Design Certification. Rule Would Amend Regulations to Certify AP600 Std Plant Design Under Subpart B of 10CFR52
ML20207A007
Person / Time
Site: 05200003
Issue date: 05/13/1999
From: Vietticook A
NRC OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY (SECY)
To:
References
FRN-64FR27626, RULE-PR-52 PR-990513, NUDOCS 9905260084
Download: ML20207A007 (86)


Text

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. PROPOSED RUlfTR 64 _ 00cKETED

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l AP600 Design Certification AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

SUMMARY

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC or Commission) proposes to amend its regulations to certify the AP600 standard plant design under Subpart B of 10 CFR Part 52.

This action is necessary so that applicants or licensees intending to construct and operate an AP600 design may do so by referencing the AP600 design certification rule (DCR). This proposed DCR, set out as Appendix C, is nearly identical to the two previously codified DCRs in Appendirec A and B of 10 CFR Part 52. The applicant for certification of the AP600 de'sign is Westinghouse Electric Company LLC (hereinafter referred to as Westinghouse).

The public is invited to submit corrzments on this proposed DCR and the AP600 design control document (DCD) that is incorporated by reference into the DCR. In addition, interested parties may request an informal hearing before an NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, in accordance with 10 CFR 52.51(b), on matters pertaining to this proposed DCR. The NRC also invites the public to submit comments on the environmental assessment for the AP600 design.

DATE:

t%u & B /999 i Submit comments by [!rd i:; 75 2,; eLi p Ll, ;;vi. ;r. ;6 ret.;rel

":f::;r].. Comments received after this date will be considered if it is practical to consider O them, but the Commission is only able to ensure consideration for comments received on or before this date. Requests for an informal hearing must be submitted by (Insert date 75 days after publication in the Federal Register). ( 7 l

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ADDRESSES: Mail written comments and requests for an informal hearing to: Secretary, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, Attention: Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff, Mail Stop O-16 C1. Comments may also be delivered to: One White .

Flint North,11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland, between 7:30 am and 4:15 pm on Federal workdays. Copies of comments received, the DCD, and the environmental assessment will be available for examination and copying at the NRC Public Document Room at 2120 L Street NW. (Lower Level), Washington, DC.

Electronic comments may be provided via the NRC's interactive rulemaking website through the NRC home page Iwww.,irc.aovl. From the home page, select "Rulemaking" from the tool bar at the bottom of the page. The interactive rulemaking website can then be accessed by selecting "Rulemaking Forum." This site provides the ability to upload comments as files (any format), if your web browser supports that function. Contact Ms. Carol Gallagher by telephone (301) 415-5905 or e-mail:caa @ nrc.aov for information about the interactive rulemaking website.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jerry N. Wilson, Mail Stop O-12 G15, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington / DC 20555-0001, or telephone (301) 415-3145, or e-mail: inw@nrc.oov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Background.

II. ' Comments and Hearings in the design certification rulemaking.

A. Opportunity to submit written and electronic comments.

B. Opportunity to request hearing.

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i C. Hearing process.

D. Resolution of issues for the final rulemaking.

E. Access to proprietary information in rulemaking.

F. Ex parte and separation of functions restrictions.

111. Section-by-section discussion of design certification rule.

A. Introduction (Section 1).

B. Definitions (Section ll).

i C. Scope and contents (Section lil).

D. Additional requirements and restrictions (Section IV).  ;

E. Applicable regulations (Section V).

F. Issue resolution (Section VI).

G. Duration of this appendix (Section Vil).

H. Processes for changes and departures (Section Vill).

I. Inspections, tests, analyses, and acceptance criteria (Section IX).

J. Records and Reporting (Section X).

IV. Finding of no significant environmental impact: availability l V. Paperwork Reduction Act statement.

VI. Regulatory analysis.

Vll. Regulatory Flexibility Act certification.

Vill. Backfit analysis. l IX. Consensus standards.

l.- BACKGROUND The NRC added 10 CFR Part 52 to its regulations to provide for the issuance of early 3

i' site permits, standard design certifications, and combined licenses for nuclear power reactors.

Subpart B of 10 CFR Part 52 established the process for obtaining design certifications. On June 26,1992, Westinghouse tendered its application for certification of the AP600 standard plant design with the NRC. Westinghouse submitted this application in accordance with Subpart B and Appendix 0 of 10 CFR Part 52. The NRC formally accepted the application as a docketed application for design certification (Docket No.52-003) on December 31,1992.

Information submitted before that date can be found under Project No. 676.

The NRC staff issued a final safety evaluation report (FSER) related to certification of the AP600 standard plant design in September 1998 (NUREG-1512). The FSER documents the results of the NRC staff's safety review of the AP600 design against the requirements of 10 CFR Part 52, Subpart B, and delineates the scope of the technical details considered in evaluating the design. The FSER provides the bases for Commission approval of the AP600 design through design certification. A copy of the FSER may be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office, P.O. Box 37082, Washington, DC 20402-9328 or the National Technical Information Service, Springfield, VA 22161-0002.

The final design approval for the AP600 design was issued on September 3,1998, and published in the Federal Register on September 11,1998 (63 FR 48772).

Rulemaking Procedures Subpart B of 10 CFR Part 52 provides for Commission approval of standard designs for nuclear power facilities (Lg., design certification) through rulemaking. In accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), Part 52 provides the opportunity for the public to submit written comments on the proposed design certification rule. However, Part 52 goes beyond the requirements of the APA by providing the public with an opportunity to request a hearing before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panelin a design certification rulemaking. While Part 4

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52 describes a general framework for conducting a design certification rulemaking, 52.51(a) states that more detailed procedures for ti'e conduct of each design certification will be l

specified by the Commission.

L To assist the Commission in developing the detailed rulemaking procedures, the NRC's Office of the General Counsel prepared a paper (SECY-92-381, "Rulemaking Procedures for l

l Design Certification," dated November 10,1992), that recommended design certification rulemaking procedures. This paper was prepared after mnsideration of the panel discussions at a public workshop and the writteii comments received after the workshop. On April 30,1993, the Commission issued a Memorandum to the General Counsel that provided the Commission's i

determinations with respect to the procedural issues raised by the General Counsel's paper.

Section ll describes the procedures to be utilized in this design certification rulemaking.

II. COMMENTS AND HEARINGS IN THE DESIGN CERTIFICATION RULEMAKING A. Opportunity to Submit Written and Electronic Comments Any person may submit written comments on the proposed design certification rule to the Commission for its consideration.' Commenters have 75 days from the publication of this notice to file written comments on the proposed design certification rule. Commenters needing access to proprietary or safeguards information in order to provide written comments must follow the procedures and filing deadlines (including the date for filing written comments) set i forth in Section E below.

Commenters are encouraged to submit, in addition to the original paper copy, a copy of j the comment letter in electronic fonfiat on a 3.5 inch computer diskette. Text files should be 2

An opportunity for public comment is required by Section 553 of the Administrative Procedures Act and 10 CFR 52.51(b). i 5

provided in Wordperfect 8 format or unformatted ASCll code. The format and version should be identified on the diskette's external label.

B. Opportunity to Request Hearing Any person may request an informalhearing on one or more specific matters with respect to the proposed design certification rule.2 An informal hearing provides the admitted party with an opportunity to provide written and oral presentations on those matters to an Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, and to request that the licensing board question the applicant on those matters. The conduct of an informal hearing is discussed in more detail in Section C. below. Under certain circumstances, a party in an informal hearing may request that the Commission hold a formal hearing on specific and substantial factual disputes necessary to resolve the matters for which the party was granted an informal hearing (Section C.11 below).

A person may request an informal hearing even though that person has not submitted separate written comments on the design certification rule (Lg., is not a commenter). Requests for an informal hearing must be received by the Commission no later than 75 days from the .

publication of this notice, and a copy of the request must be sent via overnight mail to the design certification applicant at the following address: Mr. Brian A. McIntyre, Manager, Advanced Plant Safety and Licensing, Westinghouse Electric Company, P.O. Box 355, Pittsburgh, PA 15230-0355. The information which a person requesting a hearing must provide in the hearing request, as well as the procedures and standards to be used by the Commission i in its determination of the request, are discussed in Sections C.1 through C.4 below.

A person who needs to review proprietary information submitted by the design certification applicant in order to prepare a request for an informal hearing must follow the 2

An opportunity for a hearing is provided by 10 CFR 52.51(b).

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. l procedures and filing schedule set forth in Section E. below.

The Commission is also providing an opportunity for interested State, county, and city / municipal and other local Governments, as'well as Native American tribal governments, to participate as " interested governments" in any informal hearings which the Commission 1

authorizes, similar to their participation as " interested governments" in Subpart G hearings under 10 CFR 2.715. State, county, city / municipal, local, and tribal Governments wishing to participate as an " interested government" in any design certification rulemaking hearings must I

file their request to participate no later than 75 days from the publication of this notice.

C. Hearing Process

1. Filings and Computation of Times All notices, papers, or other filings discussed in this section must be filed by express I

mail.' The time periods specified in this section have been established based upon such a j i

filing. The express mail filing requirement shall be considered in establishing other filing I deadlines. i in computing any period of time, the day of the act, event, or default after which the designated period of time begins to run is not included. The last day of the period so computed is included, unless it is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday at the place where the action or event is to occur, in which case the period runs until the next day which is neither a Saturday, 3

Filings discussed in this section may also be served upon the Comissio'n in electronic form in lieu of express mail-. However, parties must ,

serve copies of their filings on other parties by express mail, unless the  !

receiving party agrees to filing in electronic form. These filings must be transmitted no later than the last day of the time period specified for filing and must be in accordance with the requirements specified under Date and l Addresses in this notice.

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Sunday, nor holiday.

2. Content of Hearing Request The Commission will grant a request for an informal hearing only if the hearing request satisfies each of the following two requirements. First, the hearing request must include the written presentations that the requestor wishes to be included in the record of the hearing. The written presentations must:

(i) Identify the specific portion of the proposed design certification rule or supporting bases which are challenged, (ii) Describe the reasons why the proposed rule or supporting bases are incorrect or

, insufficient, and (iii) Identify the references or sources upon which the person requesting the hearing relies.

If the requestor has submitted written comments in the public comment period addressing these three factors for the specific issue for which the requestor seeks a hearing, it will be sufficient for the requestor to identify the portions of the written comments that the requestor intends to submit as a written presentation. Also, the hearing request must demonstrate that the requestor (or other persons identified in the hearing request who will I represent, assist, or speak on behalf of the requestor at the hearing) has appropriate knowledge and qualifications to enable the requestor to contribute significantly to the l

development of the hearing record on the specific matters at issue. The Commission does not. I l

intend that the requestor meet a judicia! " expert witness" standard in order to meet the second I

criterion. Nonetheless, given the substantial commitment of time and resources associated with any hearing, the Commission believes it to be a reasonable prerequisite that the requestor 8

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(i) Substantial familiarity with the publicly available docketed information relevant to the issue for which a hearing is requested; I (ii) The requisite technical capability to understand the factual matters and develop a record on the issue for which a hearing is requested, and l (iii) An understanding of the NRC's hearing procedures in 10 CFR Part 2.*

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3. Request to Hold Hearing Outside of Washington, DC Any hearing (s) which the Commission may authorize ordinarily will be conducted in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. However, the Commission at its discretion may schedule hearings outside the Washington, DC. metropolitan area in response to requests submitted by a person requesting a hearing that all or part of the hear!ng be held elsewhere. These requests must be submitted in conjunction with the request for hearing, and must specifically explain the special circumstances for holding a hearing outside the Washington, DC. metropolitan area.
4. Responses to Hearing Request The applicant may fih a response to any hearing request within 15 days of the date of the hearing request. The NRC staff will not provide a response to the hearing request unless requested to do so by the Commission but may assist the Commission in its ruling on the request.
5. Commission Determination of Hearing Request

' Requesters will satisfy this requirement by stating that they possess and have read a copy of 10 CFR Part 2. Subparts A G, and L.

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-l The Commission intends to rule on a hearing request within 20 days of the close of the period for requesting a hearing. The Commission's determination will be based upon the materials accompanying the hearing request and the applicant's response (and the NRC staff's response, if requested by the Commission). The hearing request shall be granted if:

(i) The request is accompanied by a written presentation containing the information required by Section C.2. above; and (ii) The requester has the appropriate knowledge and qualifications to enable the requestor to contribute significantly to the development of the hearing record on the matters sought to be controverted.

The Commission may consult with the NRC staff before its determination of a hearing request. A written decision either granting or denying the hearing request will be published by the Commission.

If a hearing request is granted in whole or in part, the Commission's decision will delineate the controverted matter that will be the subject of the hearing an'd whether any issues and/or parties are to be consolidated (agg Section C.7. below). The Commission's decision granting the hearing will direct the establishment of a licensing board to preside over the informal hearing. Finally, the Commission's decision will specify:

(i) The date by which any requests for discovery must be filed with the licensing board (normally 20 days after the date of the Commission's decision), and (ii) The date by which any objections to discovery must be filed (agg Section C.9.

l below).

The Commission's decision will be sent to each admitted party by overnight mail.

Separate hearings may be granted for each controverted matter or set of consolidated matters.

Thus, if there are three different controverted matters, the Commission may establish three l

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l separate hearings. In this fashion, closing of the hearing record on a controverted matter and l its referral to the Commission for resolution need not await completion of the hearing on the other controverted matters. Finally, the Commission's decision will rule on any requests for l

hearings outside of the Washington, DC. metropolitan area (ggg Section C.3 above).

6. Authority of the Licensing Board if the Commission authorizes an informal hearing on a controverted matter, the licensing j l i l board will function as a " limited magistrate" in that hearing with the authority and responsibility for assuring that a sufficient record is developed on those controverted matters which the Commission has determined are appropriate for consideration in that hearing. The licensing board shall have the following specific responsibilities and authority:

(i) Schedule and expeditiously conduct the informal hearing for each admitted controverted matter, consistent with the rights of all the parties and with the Commission's l Statement of Policy on Conduct of Adjudicatory Proceedings5 , CLI-98-12,48 NRC 18 (1998),

(63 FR 41872, August 5,1998), I (ii) Review all discovery requests against the criteria established by the Commission, and refer all appropriate requests to the Commission with a decision explaining the licensing board's action, (iii) Preside over and resolve any issues regarding the scheduling and conduct of any discovery authorized by the Commission, (iv) Order such further consolidation of parties and issues as the licensing board 5A lthough the opportunity for an informal hearing provided for in Section 52.51(b) and this rulemaking notice is ng_t an adjudicatory hearing pr g , the underlying principals and goal of expeditious and. fair conduct of adjudicatory hearings are also applicable to informal hearings.

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determines is necessary or desirable, (v) Orally examine persons making oral presentations in the informal hearing, based in part upon the licensing board's review of the parties' proposed oral questions to be asked of persons making oral presentations, (vi) Request that the NRC staff:

(A) Answer licensing board questions about the FSER or the proposed rule, (B) Provide additional information or documentation with respect to the design certification, and (C) Provide other assistance as the licensing board may request. Licensing board requests for NRC staff assistance should be framed such that the NRC staff does not assume a role as an adversary party in the informal hearing (gge Section C.8 below),

(vii) Review all requests for additional hearing procedures and refer all appropriate requests to the Commission with a decision explaining the licensing board's action, (viii) Certify the hearing record to the Commission, based upon the licensing board's determination that the hearing record contains sufficient information for the Commission to make a reasoned determination on the controverted matter; and (ix) include with its certification any concerns identified by the licensing board in the course of the hearing which, although neither raised by the parties nor necessary to resolution of the controverted hearing matters, are significant enough in the licensing board's view to warrant attention by the Commission.

Licensing board determinations with respect to referral of requests to the Commission, as well as licensing board determinations of parties' mctions, are not appealable to the Commission as an interlocutory matter. Instead, any disagreements with the licensing board's determinations and a specific discussion of how the hearing record is deficient with respect to 12 1

the contested issue must be set forth in the parties' proposed findings of fact which are submitted directly to the Commission (ggg Section C.13 below).

As suggested by item (ix) above, the licensing board shall not have any "sua sponte" authority analogous to 10 CFR 2.760a. The Commission believes that in the absence of a request for an informal hearing on a matter, the Commission should resolve issues with respect to the design certification rule in the same manner as other agency-identified rulemaking l

issues, yig., through NRC staff consideration of the issue followed by the Commission's review and its final resolution of the matter. However, when it certifies the completed hearing record to the Commission (agg Section C.12. below), the licensing board should identify to the Commission any concems identified during the hearing that are significant enough to warrant Commission consideration but that are unnecessary or irrelevant to the resolution of the controverted hearing matter.

The licensing board shall close the hearing and certify the record to the Commission only after it determines that the record on the controverted matter is sufficiently complete for the Commission to make a reasoned determination with respect to that matter. However, the licensing board shall not have any responsibility or authority to resolve and decide controverted matters in either an informal or a formal hearing. Rather, the Commission retains its traditional authority in rulemaking proceedings to evaluate and resolve all rulemaking issues identified in public comments on a proposed rule. Therefore, the Commission will resolve any controverted matters that are the subject of a hearing in this d'esign certification rulemaking.

7. Consolidation of Parties and issues; Joint Hearings on Related Issues if two or more persons seek an informal hearing on the same or similar matters, the Commission may, in its discretion, grant an informal bearing and consolidate the matters into a 13

r-single issue (as defined by the Commission). The Commission may also, in its discretion, roquire that the parties be consolidated analogous to the consolidation permitted under 10 CFR 2.715a. If the Commission consolidates two or more issues into a single consolidated issue but does not consolidate parties, each admitted person will be deemed a separate party with an individual right to:

(i) Submit separate written presentations, (ii) Submit separate sets of proposed oral questions to be asked by the licensing board (fag Section C.10 below),

(iii) Make separate oral presentation, ed (iv) Submit and separately respond to motions.

If the Commission also requires that parties be consolidated, the consolidated parties must participate jointly, including deciding upon written and oral presentations, submitting a single set of written questions, submitting motions supported by each of the consolidated parties, and responding to motions filed by other parties.

During the informal hearing, the licensing board may decide that further consolidation of issues or parties would simplify the overall conduct of informal hearings or materially reduce the time or resources devoted to the hearings. In these instances, the licensing board tnay direct such consolidation. The licensing board shall set forth the issues and/or parties to be consolidated and the reasons for such consolidation in a written order.

8. Status of the Design Certification Applicant, the NRC staff, and Requesting Party The design certification applicant shall be a party in the informal hearing, with the right to submit written and oral presentations, propose questions to be asked by the licensing board of oral presenters, and file and submit appropriate motions.

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The NRC staff shall not be a party in the informal hearing but shall be available in the informal hearing to answer licensing board questions about the FSER or the proposed rule, provide additionalinformation or documentation with respect to the design certification, and provide other assistance that the licensing board may request without the NRC staff assuming the role of a party in the informal hearing.

A party whose hearing requests have been granted with respect to a particular controverted matter shall not participate with respect to any controverted matter on which the party was not granted a hearing. For example, if Perscn 1 has been authorized as a party on issue A and Person 2 has been authorized as a party on issue B, then Person 1 may participate only in the informal hearing on issue A, and may not participate in the informal hearing on issue B. Conversely, Person 2 may participate only in the informal hearing on issue B, and may not participate in the informal hearing on issue A.

9. Requests for Discovery Any party may request the opportunity to conduct discovery against another party before

' the oral phase of the informal hearing. The request for discovery must:

(i) Identify the type of discovery permitted under 10 CFR S 2.740,2.740a,2.740a(b),

2.741, and 2.742 which the party seeks to use; (ii) Identify the subject matter or nature of the information sought to be obtained by discovery; and (iii) Explain with particularity the relevance of the information sought to the controverted matter which is the subject of the hearing and why this information is indispensable to the presentation of the party's position on the controverted matter.

The request shall be filed with the licensing board, with copies of the request to be filed with the 15

party against which discovery is sought, and the NRC staff. The requests must be received no later than the deadline specified by the Commission in its decision granting a party's hearing request (se.e s Section C.S. above). A party against whom discovery is sought may file a response objecting to part or all of the request. Such a response must explain with particularity why the discovery request should not be granted.

The licensing board shall review all discovery requests and refer to the Commission those requests that it believes should be granted within 7 days after the date for receiving a party's objections to a discovery request. The licensir.g board shall issue a writton decision explaining its basis for either referring the request to the Commission or declining to refer it.

The written decision shall accompany the discovery requests which are referred by the licensing board to the Commission.

The Commission will determine whether to grant any discovery requests forwarded to it based upon the licensing board's decision, together with the request and the design certification applicant's response (and any NRC staff response requested by the licensing board).

Discovery will be at the discretion of the Comrnission. In this regard, the Commission notes that ihere are two docket files in which the NRC staff has placed information and documents received from the applicant for the AP600 design certification review. The application was docketed on December 31,1992 and assigned Docket No.52-003. Correspondence relating to the application prior to this date was addressed to Project No. 676. This information inciudes the AP600 Design Control Document, Revision 2 (3/99) and the AP600 Standard Safety Analysis Report, Revision 25. Furthermore, the docket files contain NRC staff communications and documents, such as written questions and comments provided to the design certification applicant, and summaries of meetings held between the NRC staff and the design certification applicant. The NRC staff's bases for approving the AP600 design are set forth in the FSER 16

1 (NUREG-1512), dated September 1998. The Commission also notes that each admitted party has already disclosed a substantial amount of information in its hearing request, relating both to bases for the party's position with respect to the controverted matter as well as information on the qualifications of the party (or its representatives and witnesses in the hearing). j As discussed above, much of the information documenting the NRC staff's review and l l

approval of the design certification application has been routinely placed in the docket file. j Furthermore, as discussed above in Section C.8, the NRC staff is not a party in an informal hearing. Therefore, the Commission has decided that in an informal hearing, the parties should not be afforded discovery against the NRC staff. i l

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10. Conduct of Informal Hearing I If the Commission authorizes discovery, the licensing board shall establish a schedule I

for the conduct and completion of discovery. Normally, the licensing board should not permit j more than one round of discovery. The Commission will not entertain any interlocutory appeals  !

l from licensing board orders resolving any discovery disputes or otherwise complaining of the l 1

scheduling of discovery.  ;

Following the completion of discovery, the licensing board should issue an order setting forth the date of commencement of the oral phase of each informal hearing, and the date (no l

less than 30 days before the commencement of the oral phase of the hearing) by which parties must submit:

(i) The identities and curriculum vitae of those persons providing oral presentations; (ii) The outlines of the oral presentations; and (iii) Any questions which a party would like the licensing board to ask.

The licensing board may schedule the oral phases of two or more informal hearings to 17

be held during the same session. The licensing board shall publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing the commencement of the oral phase of the informal hearing (s). The f notice shall set forth the place and time of the oral hearing session, the subject matter (s) of the informal hearing (s), a brief description of the informal hearing procedures, and a statement indicating that the public may observe the informal hearing.

Based upon the parties' outlines of the oral presentations and proposed questions, the licensing board should determine whether it has specific questions of the NRC staff with respect to the staff's review of the design certification application. These questions should be submitted in writing to the NRC staff no less than 20 days before the commencement of the oral phase of the hearing and must specify the date by which the NRC staff shall provide its written

, answers to the licensing board. The licensing board shall send copies of the request by overnight mail to all parties. The NRC staff shall fue its written answers with the licensing board and the parties.

During the oral phase of the hearing, the licensing board shall receive into evidence the written presentations of the parties and permit each party (or the representatives identified in their hearing request) to make oral presentations addressing the controverted matter.

Normally, the party raising the controverted matter should make their presentations, followed by the presentations of the design certification applicant. The licensing board may question the persons making oral presentations, using its own questions as well as those submitted to the licensing board by the other parties. Based upon the parties' oral presentations and/or responses to licensing board questions, the licensing board also may orally question the NRC staff.

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11. Additional Hearing Procedures and Formal Hearings After the parties have made their oral presentations and the lic',nsing board has j concluded its questioning of the presenters (and, as applicable, the NRC staff), the licensing board should declare that the oral phase of an informal hearing on a controverted matter (or consolidated set of controverted matters) is complete.

No later than 10 days after the licensing board has declared that the oral phase of the informal hearing has been completed, parties may file with the licensing board (with copies to 1

the applicant and the NRC staff) a request that some or all of the procedures described in 10 CFR Part 2, Subpart G (Lg., direct and cross-examination by the parties) be utilized. The  ;

I request shalt:  ;

(i) Identify the specific hearing procedures which the party seeks, or state that a formal hearing is requested; (ii) Identify the specific'factualissues for which the additional procedures would be utilized; (iii) Explain why resolution of these factual disputes are necessary to the Commission's decision on the controverted issue; (iv) Explain, with specific citations to the hearing record, why the record is insufficient on the controverted matter; and (v) Identify the nature of the evidence that would be developed utilizing the additional procedures requested.

The design certification applicant may file a response to these requests no later than 7 days after the applicant's receipt of a request for additional procedures. The NRC staff will not provide a response unless specifically requested to do so by the licensing board.

The licensing board will review all requests for additional hearing procedures or a formal 19

hearing and refer those that it believes should be granted to the Commission for its determination. The licensing board shall issue a written decision explaining its determination whether to forward the request to the Commission no later than 7 days after receipt of any applicant response to the request. The decision will provide the basis for either forwarding the request to the Commission or declining to forward it. In the absence of any requests for hearing procedures or if the licensing board concludes that none of the requests should be -

referred to the Commission, the licensing board should declare that the hearing record is closed (agg Section C.12 below).

The Commission will determine whether to grant any requests for additional procedures or a formal hearing that are forwarded by the licensing board. The Commission's determination

' shall be based upon the licensing board's decision along with the request and the design certification applicant's response. If the Commission directs that a formal hearing be held on a controverted factual matter, the NRC staff shall be a party in the formal hearing. Any formal hearing authorized by the Commission shall be conducted in accordance with the Commission's Statement of Policy on Conduct of Adjudicatory Proceedings. As noted in that Policy Statement, the Commission may, in individual cases, establish specific milestone schedules for the conduct of the formal hearing and require the presiding officer to explain and mitigate any  !

l significant deviations from that milestone schedule. After either the additional hearing procedures authorized by the Commission are completed or the formal hearing is concluded on

. the factual dispute, the licensing board should declare the hearing record closed (ggg Section C.12 below).

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12. Licensing Board's Certification of Hearing Record to the Commission After the oral phase of a hearing is completed and either:

(i) There are no re:;uests for additional hearing procedures or a formal hearing; or (ii) The licensing board concludes that none of the requests should be referred to the Cornmission, then the licensing board should declare that the hearing scord is closed.

If the Commission directs that additional hearing procedures should be utilized or a formal  !

hearing be held on specific factual disputes, the licensing board should declare the hearing i record closed after completion of the additional hearing procedures or the formal hearing. 'l i

Within 30 days of the closing of the hearing record the licensing board should certify the 1 hearing record to the Commission on each controverted matter (or consolidated set of controverted matters).8 The licensing board's certification for each controverted matter (or consolidated set of controverted matters) shall contain:

(i) The hearing record, including a transcript of the oral phase of the hearing (and any pre-hearing conferences) and copies of all filings by the parties and the licensing board, (ii) A list of all documentary evidence admitted by the licensing board, including the written presentations of the parties, (iii) Copies of the documentary evidence admitted by the licensing board, (iv) A list of all witnesses who provided oral testimony, (v) The NRC staff's written answers to licensing board requests, and (vi) A licensing board statement that the hearing record contains sufficient information for the Commission to make a reasoned determination on the controverted matter.

6 An informal hearing is deemed to be completed wh.en the period for requesting additional procedures or a formal hearing expires and no request is received.

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Finally, as discussed in Section C.6 above, the licensing board should identify any issues not raised by the parties or otherwise are not relevant to the controverted matters in the hearing, that the licensing board believes are significant enough to warrant attention by the Commission.

' 13. Parties' Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions The applicant must file directly with the Commission proposed findings of fact and conclusions for each controverted hearing matter (or consolidated set of controverted matters) within 30 days following the close of the hearing record on that matter in the form of a proposed final rule and statement of considerations with respect to the controverted hearing issues.

Other parties are encouraged, but not required, to file with the Commission proposed findings of fact and conclusions limited to those issues which a party was afforded a hearing by the Commission (Lg., a party may not file proposed findings of fact and conclusions on issues which it was not admitted). Any findings that a party wishes the Commission to consider must be received by the Commission no later than 30 days after the licensing board closes the hearing record on that issue. Although parties are not required to file proposed findings and conclusions, a party who does not file a finding may not, upon appeal, claim or otherwise argue that the Commission either misunderstood the party's position, or failed to address a specific piece of evidence or issue.

D. Resolution of Issues for the Final Rulemaking

1. Absence of Qualifying Hearing Request if the Commission does not receive any request for hearing within the 75-day period for submitting a request, or does not grant any of the requests (see Section B. above), the 22

Commission will determine whether the proposed design certification rule meets the applicable standards and requirements of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended (AEA), the National l

Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended (NEPA), and the Commission's rules and l

regulations. The Commission's determination will be based upon the rulemaking record, which includes: the application for design certification, including the AP600 Standard Safety Analysis Report (SSAR) and DCD; the applicant's responses to the NRC staff's requests for additional information; the NRC staff's FSER and any supplements thereto; the report on the application by the ACRS; the applicant's evaluation of severe accident mitigation design alternatives for purposes of NEPA in Appendix 18 of the SSAR; the NRC staff's draft EA and FONSl; the 1

proposed rule, and the public comments received on the proposed rule. If the Commission makes an affirmative finding, it will issue a standard design certification in the form of a rule by adding a new appendix to 10 CFR Part 52, and publish the design certification rule and a statement of considerations in the Federal Register.

2. Commission Resolution of Issues Where a Hearing is Granted All matters related to the proposed design certification rule, including'those matters for which the Commission authorizes a hearing (see Sections B. and C. above), will be resolved by the Commission after the licensing board has closed the hearing record and certified it to the Commission. The Commission will determine whether the proposed design certification rule '

meets the applicable standards and requirements of the AEA, NEPA, and the Commission's rules and regulations. The Commission's determination will be based upon the rulemaking record as described in Section D.1'above, with the addition of the hearing record for controverted matters. If the Commission makes an affirmative finding, the Commission will issue a final design certification rule as described in Section D.1.

23 )

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E. Access to Proprietary information in Rulemaking

1. Access to Proprietary Information for the Preparation of Written Comments or Informal Hearing Requests Persons who determine that they need to review proprietary information submitted by the design certification applicant to the NRC in order to submit written comments on the proposed certification or to prepare an informal hearing request, may request access to such information from the applicant.

The request shall state with particularity:

(i) The nature of the proprietary information sought, (ii) The reason why the nqnproprietary information currently available to the public in

- the NRC's Public Document Room is insufficient either to develop public comments or to prepare for the hearing, (ii' The relevance of the requested information either to the issue which the commenter wishes to comment on, and (iv) A showing that the person requesting the information has the capability to understand and utilize the requested information.

Requests must be filed with the applicant such that they are received by the applicant no later than 45 days after the date that this notice of proposed rulemaking is published in the Federal Register.

Within ten (10) days of receiving the request, the applicant must send a written response to the person seeking access. The response must either provide the documents requested (or state that the document will be provided no later than ten days after the date of the response), or state that access has been denied. If access is denied, the response shall state with particularity the reasons for its refusal. The applicant's response must be provided 24

via express mail.

The person seeking access may then request a Commission hearing for the purpose of obtaining a Commission order directing the design certification applicant to disclose the requested information. The person must include copies of the original request (and any subsequent clarifying information provided by the person requesting access to the applicant) and the applicant's response. The' Commission will base its decision solely on the person's original request (including any clarifying information provided to the applicant by the person requesting access), and the applicant's response. Accordingly, a person seeking access to proprietsry information should ensure that the request sets forth in sufficient detail and particularity the information required to be included in the request. Similarly, the applicant should ensure that its response to any request states with sufficient detail and particularity the reasons for its refusal to provide the requested information.

If the Commission orders access in whole or part, the Commission will specify the date by which the requesting party must file with the Commission written comments and any request for an informal hearing before a licensing board as discussed in Section V.C. above. A request for an informal hearing must meet the requirements set forth above in Section V.C., in particular o the requirements goveming the content of the hearing request, and shall be governed by the procedures and standards governing such requests set forth in Section V.C.

2. Access to Proprietary information in a Hearing Parties who are granted a hearing may request access to proprietary information.

Parties must first request access to proprietary information regarding the proposed design certification from the applicant. The request shall state with particularity:

(i) The nature of the proprietary information sought, 25

(ii) The reason why the nonproprietary information currently available to the public in the NRC's Public Document Room is insufficient to prepare for the hearing, (iii) The relevance of the requested information to the hearing issue (s) for which the party has been admitted, and (iv) A showing that the requesting party has the capability to understand and utilize the requested information.

The request must be filed with the applicant no later than the date established by the Commission for filing discovery requests with the licensing board.

If the applicant declines to provide the information sought, within 10 days of receiving the request, the applicant must send a written response to the requesting party setting forth ^

with particularity the reasons for its refusal. The party may then request the licensing board to

, order disclosure. The party must include copies of the original request (and any subsequent clarifying information provided by the requesting party to the applicant) and the applicant's response. The licensing board shall base its decision solely on the party's original request I

(including any clarifying information provided by the requesting party to the applicant), and the

' applicant's response.

Accordingly, a party requesting proprietary information from the applicant should ensure that its request sets forth in sufficient detail and particularity the information required to be included in the request. Similarly, the applicant should ensure that its response to any request states with sufficient detail and particularity the reasons for its refusal to provide the requested information. The licensing board may order the applicant to provide access to nme or all of the requested information, subject to an appropriate non-disclosure agreement.  ;

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F. Ex Parte and Separation of Functions Restrictions Unless the formal procedures of 10 CFR Part 2, Subpart G are approved for a formal hearing in the design certification rulemaking proceeding, the NRC staff will not be a party in the hearing and separation of functions limitations will not apply. The NRC staff may assist in the hearing by answering questions about the FSER put to it by the licensing board, or to provide additional information, documentation, or other assistance as the licensing board may request. Furthermore, other than in a formal hearing, the NRC staff shall not be subject to discovery by any party, whether by way of interrogatory, deposition, or request for production of documents.

Second, the Commission has determined that once a request for an informal or formal hearing is received, certain elements of the ex. parte restrictions in 10 CFR 2.780(a) will be applicable with respect to the subject matter of that hearing request. Under these restrictions, the Commission will communicate with interested persons / parties, the NRC staff, and the licensing board with respect to the issues covered by the hearing request only through docketed, publicly-available written communications and public meetings. Individual Commissioners raay communicate privately with interested persons and the NRC staff; however, the suostance of the communication shall be memorialized in a document which will be placed in the PDR and distributed to the licensing board and relevant parties.

Ill. SECTION-BY-SECTION DISCUSSION OF DESIGN CERTIFICATION RULE The proposed design certification rule (DCR) for the AP600 standard plant design is nearly identical to the two design certification rules for the U.S. ABWR and the System 80+

designs, which the NRC previously adopted. These DCRs are set forth in 10 CFR Part 52, Appendix A (U.S. ABWR,62 FR 25800, May 12,1997) and Appendix B (System 80+,62 FR l

27  ;

I

27840, May 21,1997). The AP600 DCR emulates the U.S. ABWR and System 80+ DCRs,

. inasmuch as the three designs were reviewed contemporaneously against the same technical requirements. Furthermore, many of the proceduralissues and their resolutions for the ABWR arid the System 80+ DCRs (p.s., the two-tier structure, Tier 2*, the scope of issue resolution) were developed after extensive discussions with nuclear industry representatives, and Westinghouse participated in those discussions. It was the NRC's intent (and likely Westinghouse's expectation) that the resolutions for these issues in the ABWR and System 80+ rulemakings would also be applied to the AP600 rule. Accordingly, the NRC has modeled the AP600 DCR on the existing DCRs for the ABWR and System 80+, with certain departures.

These departures are necessary to reflect that Westinghouse is the applicant for the AP600 DCR, and to account for differences in the AP600 design documentation, design features (including the investment protection short-term availability controls), and environmental assessment (including severe accident mitigation design attematives).

The following discussion sets forth the purpose and key aspects of each section and paragraph of the proposed AP600 design certification rule. All section and paragraph references are to the provisions in the proposed Appendix C to 10 CFR Part 52.

A. Introduction.

The purpose of Section I of Appendix C to 10 CFR Part 52 ("this appendix") is to identify the standard plant design that is approved by this design certification rule and the applicant for certification of the standard design. Identification of the design certification applicant is necessary to implement this appendix, for two reasons. First, the implementation of 10 CFR l 52.63(c) depends on whether an applicant for a combined license (COL) contracts with the design certification applicant to provide the generic DCD and supporting design information. If 28 4

i the COL applicant does not use the design certification applicant to provide this information, l then the COL applicant must meet the requirements in 10 CFR 52.63(c). Also, X.A.1 of this appendix imposes a requirement on the design certification applicant to maintain the generic DCD throughout the time period in which this appendix may be referenced.

l B. Definitions.

The terms Tier 1. Tier 2, Tier 2*, and COL action items (license information) are defined in this appendix because these concepts were not envisioned when 10 CFR Part 52 was developed. The design certification applicants and the NRC staff used these terms in implementing the two-tiered rule structure that was proposed by representatives of the nuclear industry after issuance of 10 CFR Part 52. During consideration of the comments received on Appendices A and B to Part 52, the Commission determined that it would be useful to distinguish between the " plant-specific DCD" and the " generic DCD," the latter of which is incorporated by reference into this appendix and remains unaffected by plant-specific l departures. This distinction is necessary in order to clarify the obligations of applicants and l licensees that reference this appendix. Also, the technical specifications that are located in ]

Section 16.1 of the generic DCD are designated as " generic technical specifications" in order to i

facilitate the special treatment of this information under this appendix. Therefore, appropriate  ;

definitions for these additional terms are included in this appendix. j The Tier 1 portion of the design-related information contained in the DCD is certified by this appendix and, therefore, subject to the special backfit provisions in Vill.A of this appendix.

An applicant who references this appendix is required to incorporate by reference and comp!y with Tier 1, under Ill.B and IV.A.1 of this appendix. This information consists of an introduction to Tier 1, the system based and non-system based design descriptions and corresponding 29 6

inspections, tests, analyses, and acceptance criteria (ITAAC), significant interface requirements, and significant site parameters for the design. The design descriptions, interface requirements, and site parameters in Tier 1 were derived entirely from Tier 2, but may be more general than the Tier 2 information. The NRC staff's evaluation of the Tier 1 information is provided in Section 14.3 of the FSER. Changes to or departures from the Tier 1 information i

must comply with Section Vill.A of this appendix.

The Tier 1 design descriptions serve as design commitments for the lifetime of a facility referencing the design certification. The ITAAC verify that the as-built facility conforms with the approved design and applicable regulations. In accordance with 10 CFR 52.103(g), the Commission must find that the acceptance criteria in the ITAAC are met before operation. After the Commission has made the finding required by 10 CFR 52.103(g), the ITAAC do not constitute regulatory requirements for licensees or for renewal of the COL. However, subsequent modifications to the facility must comply with the design descriptions in the plant-specific DCD unless changes are made in accordance with the change process in Section Vill of this appendix. The Tier 1 interface requirements are the most significant of the interface requirements for systems that are wholly or partially outside the scope of the standard design, which were submitted in response to 10 CFR 52.47(a)(1)(vii) and must be met by the site-specific design features of a facility that references this appendix. The Tier 1 site parameters are the most significant site parameters, which were submitted in response to 10 CFR 52.47(a)(1)(iii). An application that references this appendix must demonstrate that the site parameters (both Tier 1 and Tier 2) are met at the proposed site (refer to lli.D of this SOC).

Tier 2 is the portion of the design-related information contained in the DCD that is approved by this appendix but is not certified. Tier 2 information is subject to the backfit l provisions in Vill.B of this appendix. Tier 2 includes the information required by 10 CFR 52.47 l

l 30 l

l

e (with the exception of generic technical specifications, conceptual design information, and the evaluation of severe accident mitigation design alternatives) and the supporting information on inspections, tests, and analyses that will be performed to demonstrate that the acceptance criteria in the ITAAC have been met. As with Tier 1, Ill.B and IV.A.1 of this appendix require an applicant who references this appendix to incorporate Tier 2 by reference and to comply with Tier 2, except for the COL action items, including the investment protection short-term availaoiiity controls in Section 16.3 of the generic DCD. The definition of Tier 2 makes clear that Tier 2 information has been determined by the Commission, by virtue of its inclusion in this j l

appendix and its designation as Tier 2 information, to be an approved (" sufficient") method for meeting Tier 1 requirements. However, there may be other acceptable ways of complying with l 1

Tier 1. The appropriate criteria for departing from Tier 2 information are specified in Section i

Vill.B of this appendix. Departures from Tier 2 do not negate the requirement in Section Ill.B to I reference Tier 2.

A definition of " combined license (COL) action items" (combinbd license information),

which is part of the Tier 2 information, has been added to clarify that COL applicants, who l

reference this appendix, are required to address these matters in their license application, but l the COL action items are not the only acceptable set of information. An applicant may depart from or omit these items, provided that the departure or omission is identified and justified in the FSAR. After issuance of a construction permit or combined license, these items are not requirements for the licensee unless such items are restated in its FSAR.

The investment protection short term availability controls, which are set forth in Section 16.3 of the generic DCD, were added to the list of information that is part of Tier 2. This set of requirements was added to Tier 2 to make it clear that the availability controls are not operational requirements for the purposes of Vill.C of this appendix. Rather, the availability 31

1

. 1 1

I controls are associated with specific design features, and the availability controls may be changed if the associated design feature is changed under Vill.B of this appendix.

Certain Tier 2 information has been designated in the generic DCD with brackets and italicized text as " Tier 2" information and, as discussed in greater detail in the section-by-section explanation for Section Vill.B. a plant-specific departure from Tier 2* information requires prior NRC approval.- However, the Tier 2* designation expires for some of this information when the facility first achieves full power after the finding required by 10 CFR 52.103(g). The process for changing Tier 2* information and the time at which its status as Tier 2* expires is set forth in Vill.B.6 of this appendix. Some Tier 2* requirements, concerning special preoperational tests, are designated to be performed only for the first plant or first three plants referencing the AP600 DCR. The Tier 2* designation for these selected tests will expire after the first plant or first three plants complete the specified tests. However, a COL action item requires that subsequent plants shall also perform the tests or justify that the results of the first-plant-only or first-three-plants-only tests are applicable to the subsequent plant. The i

Commission is interested in comments addressing whether the first-plant-only or first-three-plants-only limitations should be part of the Tier 2* information for these specified tests.

During develooment of Appendices A and B to Part 52, the Commission decided that there would be both generic (master) DCDs maintained by the NRC and the design certification applicant, as well as individual plant-specific DCDs, maintained by each applicant and licensee who references this appendix. The generic DCDs (identical to each other) would reflect generic changes to the version of the DCD approved in this design certification rulemaking. The generic changes would occur as the result of generic rulemaking by the Commission (subject to the change criteria in Section Vill of this appendix). In addition, the Commission understood that each applicant and licensee referencing this appendix would be required to submit and 32 f

4 i

l maintain a plant-specific DCD. This plant-specific DCD would contain (not just incorporate by reference) the information in the generic DCD. The plant-specific DCD would be updated as necessary to reflect the generic changes to the DCD that the Commission may adopt through 1

rulemaking, any plant-specific departures from the generic DCD that the Commission imposed on the licensee by order, and any plant-specific departures that the licensee chose to make in j accordance with the relevant processes in Section Vill of this appendix. Thus, the plant- .

1 specific DCD would function akin to an updated Final Safety Analysis Report, in the sense that it would provide the most complete and accurate information on a plant's licensing basis for that part of the plant within the scope of this appendix. Therefore, this appendix defines both a generic DCD and plant-specific DCD. Also, the Commission decided to treat the technical specifications in Section 16.1 of the generic DCD as a special category of information and to 1

designate them as generic technical specifications. A COL applicant must submit plant-specific l technical specifications that consist of the generic technical specifications, which may be modified under Vill.C of this appendix, and the remaining plant-specific information needed to complete the technical specifications, including bracketed values. The Final Safety Analysis Report (FSAR) that is required by 9 52.79(b) will consist of the plant specific'DCD, the site-specific portion of the FSAR, and the plant-specific technical specifications.

~

1 C. Scope and contents.

The purpose of Section ill of this appendix is to describe and define the scope and contents of this design certification and to set forth how documentation discrepancies or inconsistencies are to be resolved.' Paragraph A is the required statement of the Office of the Federal Register (OFR) for approval of the incorporation by reference of Tier 1, Tier 2, and the generic technical specifications into this appendix and paragraph 0 requires COL applicants 33 i

' and licensees to comply with the requirements of this appendix. The legal effect of incorporation by reference is that the material is treated as if it were published in the Federal Reaistor. This material, like any other properly-issued regulation, has the force and effect of law. Tier 1 and Tier 2 information, as well as the generic technical specifications, have been combined into a single document called the generic design control document, in order to effectively control this information and facilitate its incorporation by reference into the rule. The generic DCD was prepared to meet the requirements of the OFR for incorporation by reference (1 CFR Part 51). One of the requirements of OFR for incorporation by reference is that the design certification applicant must make the generic DCD available upon request after the final rule becomes effemtive. Therefore, Ill.A of this appendix identifies a representative of Westinghouse who can be contacted to obtain a copy of the generic DCD.

Paragraphs A and B also identify the investment protection short-term avaitability controls in Section 16.3 of the generic DCD as part of the Tier 2 information. During its review of the AP600 design, the NRC determined that residual uncertainties associated with passive safety system performance increased the importance of non-safety-selated active systems in providing defense-in-depth functions that back-up the passive systems. As a result, Westinghouse developed some administrative controls to provide a high level of confidence that active systems having a significant safety role are available when challenged. Westinghouse named these additional controls " investment protection short-term availability controls," and the Commiscion included this statement in Section lli to ensure that these availability controls are binding on applicants and licensees that reference this appendix and will be enforceable by the NRC. The NRC's evaluation of the availability controls is provided in Chapter 22 of the FSER.

The generic DCD (master copy) for this design certification will be archived at NRC's central file with a matching copy at OFR. Copies of the up-to-date generic DCD will also be 34 f

available at the NRC's Public Document Room. Questions concerning the accuracy of information in an application that references this appendix will be resolved by checking the master copy of the generic DCD in NRC's central file. If a generic change (rulemaking) is made to the DCD pursuant to the change process in Section Vill of this appendix, then at the completion of the rulemaking the NRC will request approval of the Director, OFR for the changed incorporation by reference and change its copies of the generic DCD and notify the j OFR and the design certification applicant to change their copies. The Commission is requiring that the design certification applicant maintain an up-to-date copy under X.A.1 of this appendix because it is likely that most applicants intending to reference the standard design will obtain the generic DCD from the design certification applicant. Plant-specific changes to and departures from the generic DCD will be maintained by the applicant or licensee that references tnis appendix in a plant-specific DCD, under X.A.2 of this appendix.

In addition to requiring compliance with this appendix, paragraph B clarifies that the conceptual design information and Westinghouse's evaluation of severe accident mitigation design alternatives are not considered to be part of this appendix. The conceptual design information is for those portions of the plant that are outside the scope of the standard design and are intermingled throughout Tier 2. As provided by 10 CFR 52.47(a)(1)(ix), these conceptual designs are not part of this appendix and, therefore, are not applicable to an application that references this appendix. Therefore, the applicant does not need to conform with the conceptual design information that was provided by the design certification applicant.

The conceptual design information, which consists of site-specific design features, was required to facilitate the design certification review. Conceptual design information is neither Tier 1 nor Tier 2. Section 1.8 of Tier 2 identifies the location of the conceptual design information.

Westinghouse's evaluation of various design afternatives to prevent and mitigate severe 35

l l

accidents does not constitute design requirements. The Commission's assessment of this information is discussed in Section IV of this SOC on environmentalimpacts. The detailed methodology and quantitative portions of the design-specific probabilistic risk assessment (PRA), as required by 10 CFR 52.47(a)(1)(v), were not included in the generic DCD, as requested by NEl and the applicant for design certification. The NRC agreed with the request to delete this information because conformance with the deleted portions of the PRA is not necessary. Also, the NRC's position is predicated in part upon NEl's acceptance, in conceptual form, of a future generic rulemaking that will require a COL applicant or licensee to have a -

plant-specific PRA that updates and supersedes the design-specific PRA supporting this rulemaking and maintain it throughout the operational life of the facility.

Paragraphs C and D set forth the manner in which potential conflicts are to be resolved.

Paragraph C establishes the Tier 1 description in the DCD as controlling in the event of an inconsistency between the Tier 1 and Tier 2 information in the DCD. Paragraph D establishes the generic DCD as the controlling document in the event of an inconsistency between the DCD and either the application for certification of the AP600 design (AP600 Standard Safety Analysis Report) or the final safety evaluation report for the certified standard design.

Paragraph E makes it clear that design activities that are wholly outside the scope of this design certification may be performed using site-specific design parameters, provided the design activities do not affect Tier 1 or Tier 2, or conflict with the interface requiremenis in the DCD. This provision applies to site-specific portions of the plant, such as the administration building, Because this statement is not a definition, the Commission decided that the appropriate location is in Section lli of this appendix.

D. Additional requirements and restrictions.

36

Section IV of this appendix sets forth additional requirements and restrictions imposed upon an applicant who references this appendix. Paragraph IV.A sets forth the information ,

requirements for these applicants. This appendix distinguishes between information and/or documents which must actually be includedin the application or the DCD, versus those which may be incorporated by reference (i.e., referenced in the application as if the information or documents were actually included in the application), thereby reducing the physical bulk of the application. Any incorporation by reference in the application should be clear and should specify the title, date, edition, or version of a document, and the page number (s) and table (s) containing the relevant information to be incorporated by reference.

Paragraph A.1 requires an applicant who references this appendix to incorporate by reference this appendix in its application. The legal effect of such incorporation by reference is that this appendix is legally binding on the applicant or licensee. Paragraph A.2.a is intended to make clear that the initial application must include a plant-specific DCD. This assures, among other things, that the applicant commits to complying with the DCD. This paragraph also requires the plant-specific DCD to use the same format as the generic DCD and to reflect the applicant's proposed departures and exemptions from the generic DCD as of the time of submission of the application. The Commission expects that the plant-specific DCD will become the plant's final safety analysis report (FSAR), by including within its pages, at the appropriate points, information such as site-specific information for the portions of the plant outside the scope of the referenced design, including related ITAAC, and other matters required to be included in an FSAR by 10 CFR 50.34 and 52.79. Integration of the plant-specific DCD and remaining site-specific information into the plant's FSAR, will result in an application that is easier to use and should minimize " duplicate documentation" and the attendant possibility for confusion. Paragraph A.2.a is also intended to make clear that the initial applicaiion must 37

i

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include the reports on departures and exemptions as of the time of submission of the application.

Paragraph A.2.b requires that the application include the reports required by paragraph X.B of this appendix for exemptions and departures proposed by the applicant as of the date of submission of its application. Paragraph A.2.c requires submission of plant-specific technical specifications for the plant that consists of the generic technical specifications from Section 16.1 of the DCD, with any changes made under Section Vill.C of this appendix, and the technical specifications for the site-specific portions of the plant that are either partially or wholly outside the scope of this design certification. The applicant must also provide the plant-specific information designated in the generic technical specifications, such as bracketed values.

Paragraph A.2.d makes it clear that the applicant must provide information demonstrating that the proposed site falls within the site parameters for this appendix and that the plant-specific design complies with the interface requirements, as required by 10 CFR 52.79(b). If the proposed site has a characteristic that exceeds one or more of the site parameters in the DCD, then the proposed site is unacceptable for this design unless the applicant seeks an exemption under Section Vill of this appendix and justifies why the certified design should be found acceptable on the proposed site. Paragraph A.2.e requires submissio.n of information addressing COL Action items, which are identified in the generic DCD as Combined License Information, in the application. The Combined License information identifies matters that need to be addressed by an applicant that references this appendix, as required by Subpart C of 10 CFR Part 52. An applic&nt may depart from or omit these items, provided that the departur'e or omission is identified and justified in its application (FSAR). Paragraph A.2.f requires that the application include the information required by 10 CFR 52.47(a) that is not within the scope of this rule, such as generic issues that must be addressed, in whole or in part, 38

4 by an applicant that references this rule. Paragraph A.3 requires the applicant to physically include, not simply reference, the proprietary and safeguards information referenced in the DCD, or its equivalent, to assure that the applicant has actual notice of these requirements.

Paragraph IV.B reserves to the Commission the right to determine in what manner this design certification may be referenced by an applicant for a construction permit or operating license under 10 CFR Part 50. This determination may occur in the context of a subsequent rulemaking modifying 10 CFR Part 52 or this design certification rule, or on a case-by case basis in the context of a specific application for a 10 CFR Part 50 construction permit or operating license. This provision is necessary because the previous design certifications were not implemented in the manner that was originally envisioned at the time that 10 CFR Part 52 was created. The Commission's concem is with the manner in which ITAAC were developed and the lack of experience with design certifications in license proceedings. Therefore, it is appropriate to have some uncertainty regarding the manner in which this appendix could be referenced in a 10 CFR Part 50 licensing proceeding.

E. Applicable regulations. l i

The purpose of Section V of this appendix is to specify the regulations that will be l applicable and in effect (if and) when this proposed design certification is approved. These regulations will consist of the technically relevant regulations identified in paragraph A, except i

for the regulations in paragraph B that will not applicable to this certified design.

Paragraph A will identify the regulations in 10 CFR Parts 20,50,73, and 100 that are applicable to the AP600 design. The Commission's determination of the applicable regulations will be made as of the date specified in paragraph V.A of this appendix, which will be the date that this appendix is approved by the Commission and signed by the Secretary.

39

In paragraph V.B of this appendix, the Commission identified the regulations that do not apply to the AP600 design. The Commission has determined that the AP600 design should be exempt from portions of 10 CFR 50.34,50.62, and Appendix A to Part 50, as described in the FSER (NUREG-1512) and summarized below:

(1) Paragraph (a)(1) of 10 CFR 50.34 - whole body dose criterion.

This regulation sets forth dose criteria to be used in siting determinations. The NRC staff performed its evaluation of the radiological consequences of postulated design basis accidents for the AP600 design against the dose criterion specified in 10 CFR 50.34(a)(1)(ii)(D) because it was the Commission's intent that the new dose criterion be used for future nuclear power plants. However, when the NRC codified the new reactor site criteria for nuclear power plants (61 FR 65157; December 11,1996), it made an error in the assignment of applicants that could use the new dose criterion [25 rem TEDE), versus those that must use the whole body criterion. The assignment of applicants in 10 CFR 50.34(a)(1), who must use the whole body criterion, should not have included applicants for a design certification or combined license who applied prior to January 10,1997 (refer to 61 FR 65158). The Commission adopted 25 rem TEDE as the new dose criterion for future plant evaluation purposes, because this vslue is essentially the same level of risk as the current criterion (61 FR 65160). Therefore, the Commission has determined that the special circumstances described in 10 CFR 50.12(a)(2)(ii) exist in that application of the 25 rem whole body criterion is not necessary to achieve the underlying purpose of the rule because 25 rem TEDE is essentially the same level of risk. On )

)

this basis, the Commission concludes that the AP600 design review can be performed pursuant l to the new dose criterion [25 rem TEDE] and an exemption from the requirements of 10 CFR 50.34(a)(1) is authorized by law, will not present an undue nsk to public health and 40

n 1 ll safety, and is consistent with the common defense and security.

(2) Paragraph (f)(2)(iv) of to CFR 50.34 - Plant Safety Parameter Display Console.

2 10 CFR 50.34(f)(2)(iv) requires that an application provide a plant safety parameter display console that will display to operators a minimum set of parameters defining the safety status of the plant, be capable of displaying a full range of important plant parameters and data trends on demand, and be capable of indicating when process limits are being approached or exceeded. Wostinghouse answered this requirement, in Section 18.8.2 of the DCD, with an integrated design rather than a stand-alone, add-on system, as is used at most current operating plants. Specificahy, Westinghouse integrated the SPDS requirements into the design requirements for the alarm and display systems. In NUREG-0800, the NRC staff indicated that, j 1

for applicants who are in the early stages of the control room design, the " function of a separate I SPDS may be integrated into the overall control room design" (p.18.0-1). Therefore, the  !

Commission has determined that the special circumstances described in 10 CFR 50.12(a)(2)(ii) l i

exist in that the requirement for an SPDS console need not be applied in this particular j circumstance to achieve the underlying purpose because Westinghouse has provided an acceptable alternative that accomplishes the intent of the regulation. On this basis, the Commission concludes that an exemption from the requirements of 10 CFR 50.34(f)(2)(iv) is l

authorized by law, will not present an undue risk to public health and safety, and is consistent i

with the common defense and security.

(3) Paragraphs (f)(2)(vii), (viii), (xxvi), and (xxviii) of to CFR 50.34 - Accident Source Terms in TID 14844.

Pursuant to 10 CFR 52.47(a)(ii), an applicant for design certification must demonstrate 41

compliance with any technically relevant TMl requirements in 10 CFR 50.34(f). The TMI

. requirements in 10 CFR 50.34(f)(2)(vil), (viii), (xxvi), and (xxviii) refer to the accident source term in TID 14844. Specifically,10 CFR 50.34(f)(2)(xxviii) requires the evaluation of pathways that may lead to control room habitability problems "under accident conditions resulting in a TID 14844 source term release." Similar wording appears in requirements (vii), (viii), and (xxvi).

Westinghouse has adopted the new source term technology summarized in NUREG-1465,

" Accident Source Terms for Light Water Nuclear Power Plants," dated February 1995, not the old TID 14844 source term cited in 10 CFR Part 50.34(f). The Commission has determined that the special circumstances described in 10 CFR 50.12(a)(ii) exist in that these regulations need not be applied in this particular circumstance to achieve the underlying purpose because Westinghouse has adopted acceptable alternatives that accomplish the intent of the regulations that specify TID 14844. On this basis, the Commission concludes that a partial exemption from the requirements of paragraphs (f)(2)(vii), (viii), (xxvi), and (xxviii) of 10 CFR 50.34 is authorized by law, will not present an undue risk to public health and safety, and is consistent with the common defense and security.

(4) Paragraph (c)(1) of 10 CFR 50.62 - Auxiliary feedwater system.

The AP600 design relies on the passive residual heat removal system (PRHR) in lieu of an auxiliary or emergency feedwater system as its safety-related method of removing decay heat. Westinghouse requested an exemption from a portion of 10 CFR 50.62(c)(1), which requires auxiliary or emergency feedwater as an alternate system for decay heat removal during an ATWS event. The NRC staff concluded that Westinghouse met the intent of the rule by relying on the PRHR system to remove the decay heat and, thereby, met the underlying purpose of the rule. Therefore, the Commission has determined that the special circumstances 42

l described in 10 CFR 50.12(a)(2)(ii) exist in that the requirement for an auxiliary or emergency feedwater system is not necessary to achieve the underlying purpose of 10 CFR 50.62(c)(1),

because Westinghouse has adopted acceptable alternatives that accomplish the intent of this regulation, and the exemption is authorized by law, will not present an undue risk to public health and safety, and is consistent with the common defense and security.

l (5) Appendix A to 10 CFR Par 150, GDC 17 - Offsite Power Sources.

Westinghouse requested a partial exemption from the requirement in GDC 17 for a  ;

second offsite power supply circuit. The AP600 plant design supports an exemption to this requirement by providing safety-related " passive" systems. These passive safety-related systems only require electric power for valves and the related instrumentation. The onsite Class 1E batteries and associated dc and ac distribution systems can provide the power for these valves and instrumentation. In addition, if no offsite power is available, it is expected that the non-safety-related onsite diesel generators would be available for important plant functions; however, this non-safety- related ac power is not relied on to maintain core cooling or j l

containment integrity. Therefore, the Commission has determined that the special circumstances described in 10 CFR 50.12(a)(2)(ii) exist in that the requirement need not be l applied in this particular circumstance to achieve the underlying purpose of having two offsite l power sources because the AP600 design includes an acceptable alternative approach to accomplish safety functions that does not rely on power from the offsite system and, therefore, accomplishes the intent of the regulation. On this basis, the Commission concludes that a partial exemption from the requirements of GDC 17 is authorized by law, will not present an undue risk to public health and safety, and is consistent with the common defense and security.

43

l l

l (6) Appendix A to 10 CFR Part 50, GDC 19 - whole body dose criterion.

The NRC staff used a criterion of 5 rem TEDE for evaluating the radiological consequences of design basis accidents in the control room of the AP600 design, under GDC 19 of Appendix A to 10 CFR Part 50. The NRC staff used the 5 rem TEDE criterion to be I

consistent with the new reactor site criteria in 10 CFR 50.34(a)(1) [61 FR 65157], although l GDC 19 specifies . . . "5 rem whole body, or its equivalent to any part of the body". . . The Commission adopted 25 rem TEDE as the new dose criterion for plant evaluation purposes, i

because this value is essentially the same level of risk as the current criteria (61 FR 65160).

Therefore, the Commission has determined that the special circumstances described in 10 CFR 50.12(a)(2)(ii) exist in that application of the 5 rem whole body criterion is not necessary to achieve the underlying purpose of the rule because 5 rem TEDE is essentially the same level of risk. On this basis, the Commission concludes that a partial exemption from GDC 19 is authorized by law, will not present an undue risk to public health and safety, and is consistent with the common defense and security.

F, Issue resolution.

The purpose of Section VI of this appendix is to identify the scope of issues that are resolved by the Commission in this rulemaking and; therefore, are " matters resolved" within the meaning and intent of 10 CFR 52.63(a)(4). The section is divided into five parts: (A) the Commission's safety findings in adopting this appendix, (B) the scope and nature of issues which are resolved by this rulemaking, (C) issues which are not resolved by this rulemaking, (D) the backfit restrictions applicable to the Commission with respect to this appendix, and (E) the availability of secondary references.

Paragraph A describes in general terms the nature of the Commission's findings, and 44

makes the finding required by 10 CFR 52.54 for the Commission's approval of this des.gn certification rule. Furthermore, paragraph A explicitly states the Commission's determination that this design provides adequate protection of the public health and safety.

Paragraph B sets forth the scope of issues which may not be challengee e s a matter of

- right in subsequent proceedings. The introductory phrase of paragraph B clarifies that issue resolution as described in the remainder of the paragraph extends to the delineated NRC proceedings referencing this appendix. The remainder of paragraph B describes the categories of information for which there is issue resolution. Specifically, paragraph B.1 provides that all nuclear safety issues arising from the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, that are associated with the information in the NRC staff's FSER (NUREG-1512), the Tier 1 and Tier 2 information (including the availability controls in Section 16.3 of the generic DCD), and the rulemaking record for this appendix are resolved within the meaning of 52.63(a)(4). These issues include the information referenced in the DCD that are requirements (i.e., " secondary references"), as well as all issues arising from proprietary and safeguards information which are intended to be requirements. Paragraph B.2 provides for issue preclusion of proprietary and safeguards information. Paragraphs B.3, B.4, B.5, and B.6 clarify that approved changes to and departures from the DCD which are accomplished in compliance with the relevant procedures and criteria in Section Vill of this appendix continue to be matters resolved in connection with this rulemaking. Paragraph B.7 provides that, for those plants located on sites whose site parameters do not exceed those assumed in Westinghouse's evaluation of severe accident mitigation design alternatives (SAMDAs), all issues with respect to SAMDAs arising under the National Environmental Policy Act of 19.69 associated with the information in the Environmental Assessment for this design and the information regarding SAMDAs in Appendix 18 of the generic DCD are also resolved within the meaning and intent of 6 52.63(a)(4). In the 45

event an exemption from a site parameter is granted, the exemption applicant has the initial burden of demonstrating that the original SAMDA analysis still applies to the actual site j parameters but, if the exemption is approved, requests for litigation at the COL stage must meet the requirements of 9 2.714 and present sufficient information to create a genuine controversy in order to obtain a hearing on the site parameter exemption.

Paragraph C reserves the right of the Commission to impose operational requirements on applicants that reference this appendix. This provision reflects the fact that operational requirements, including generic technical specifications in Section 16.1 of the DCD, were not completely or comprehensively reviewed at the design certification stage. Therefore, the special backfit provisions of 9 52.63 do not apply to operational requirements. However, all design changes will be controlled by the appropriate provision in Section Vill of this appendix.

Although the information in the DCD that is related to operational requirements was necessary to support the NRC staff's safety review of this design, the review of this information was not sufficient to conclude that the operational requirements are fully resolved and ready to be assigned finality under 52.63. As a result, if the NRC wanted to change a temperature limit and that operational change required a consequential change to a design feature, then the temperature limit backfit would be controlled by Section Vill (paragraph A or B) of this appendix. However, changes to other operational issues, such as in-service testing and in-service inspection programs, post-fuel load verification activities, and shutdown risk that do not require a design change would not be restricted by 52.63 (see Vill.C of this appendix).

Paragraph C does allow the NRC to impose future operational requirements (distinct from design matters) on applicants who reference this design certification. Also, license conditions for portions of the plant within the scope of this design certification, e.g. start-up and power ascension testing, are not restricted by 6 52.63. The requirement to perform these testing 46

4 programs is contained in Tier 1 information. However, ITAAC cannot be specified for these subjects because the matters to be addressed in these license conditions cannot be verified ,

prior to fuel load and operation, when the ITAAC are satisfied. Therefore, another regulatory vehicle is necessary to ensure that licensees comply with the matters contained in the license I conditions. License conditions for these areas cannot be developed now because this requires the type of detailed design information that will be developed after design certification. In the j absence of detailed design information to evaluate the need for and develop specific post-fuel load verifications for these matters, the Commission is reserving the right to impose license conditions by rule for post fuel load verification activities for portions of the plant within the scope of this design certification.

Paragraph D reiterates the restrictions (contained in Section Vill of this appendix) i placed upon the Commission when ordering generic or plant-sp3cific modifications, changes or additions to structures, systems or components, design features, design criteria, and ITAAC (VI.D.3 addresses ITAAC) within the scope of the certified design. I Paragraph E provides the procedure for an interested member of the public to obtain access to proprietary or safeguards information for the AP600 design, in order to request and participate in proceedings identified in VI.B of this appendix, viz., proceedings involving licenses and applications which reference this appendix. As set forth in paragraph E, access must first be sought from the design certification applicant. If Westinghouse refuses to provide the information, the person seeking access shall request access from the Commission or the presiding officer, as applicable. Access to the proprietary or safeguards information may be ordered by the Commission, but must be subject to an appropriate non-disclosure agreement.

G. Duration of this appendix.

i i

1 47 i

. l The purpose of Section Vil of this appendix is in part to specify the time period during which this design certification may be referenced by an applicant for a combined license, under 10 CFR 52.55. This section also states that the design certification remains valid for an applicant or licensee that references the design certification until the application is withdrawn or the license expires. Therefore, if an application references this design certification during the 15-year period, then the design certification continues in effect until the application is withdrawn or the license issued on that application expires. Also, the design certification continues in effect for the referencing license if the license is renewed. The Commission intends for this appendix to remain valid for the life of the plant that references the design certification to achieve the benefits of standardization and licensing stability. This means that changes to or 1

plant-specific departures from information in the plant-specific DCD must be made pursuant to the change processes in Section Vill of this appendix for the life of the plant.

H. Processes for changes and departures.

The purpose of Section Vill of this appendix is to set forth the processes for generic changes to or plant-specific departures (including exemptions) from the DCD. The Commission adopteo this restrictive change process in order to achieve a more stable licensing process for applicants and licensees that reference this design certification rule. Section Vill is divided into three paragraphs, which correspond to Tier 1, Tier 2, and Operational requirements. The language of Section Vill distinguishes between generic changes to the DCD versus plant-specific departures from the DCD. Generic changes must be accomplished by rulemaking because the intended subject of the ch&nge is the design certification rule itself, as is contemplated by 10 CFR 52.63(a)(1). Consistent with 10 CFR 52.63(a)(2), any generic rulemaking changes are applicable to all plants, absent circumstances which render the change 48

[" modification" in the language of 6 52.63(a)(2)] " technically irrelevant." By contrast, plant-specific departures could be either a Commission-issued order to one or more applicants or licencees; or an applicant or licensee-initiated departure applicable only to that applicant's or licensee's plant (s), similar to a 6 50.59 departure or an exemption. Because these plant-specific departures will result in a DCD that is unique for that plant,Section X of this appendix requires an applicant or licensee to maintain a plant-specific DCD. For purposes of brevity, this discussion refers to both generic changes and plant-specific departures as " change processes."

Both Section Vill of this appendix and this SOC refer to an " exemption" from one or more requirements of this appendix and the criteria for granting an exemption. The Commission cautions that where the exemption involves an underlying substantive requirement (applicable regulation), then the applicant or licensee requesting the exemption must also show that an exemption from the underlying applicable requirement meets the criteria of 10 CFR 50.12.

Tier 1 information i The change processes for Tier 1 information are covered in paragraph Vill.A. Generic changes to Tier 1 are accomplished by rulemaking that amends the generic DCD and are ,

governed by the standards in 10 CFR 52.63(a)(1). This provision provides that the Commission may not modify, change, rescind, or impose new requirements by rulemaking except where necessary either to bring the certification into compliance with the Commission's regulations applicable eso in effect at the time of approval of the design certification or to ensure adequate protection of the public health and safety or common defense and security. The rulemakings must include an opportunity for hearing with respect to the proposed change, as required by 10 CFR 52.63(a)(1), and the Commission expects such hearings to be conducted ~in accordance 49 4

with 10 CFR Part 2, Subpart H. Departures from Tier 1 may occur in two ways: (1) the Commission may ordera licensee to depart from Tier 1, as provided in paragraph A.3; or (2) an applicant or licensee may request an exemption from Tier 1, as provided in paragraph A.4. If )

i the Commission seeks to order a licensee to depart from Tier 1, paragraph A.3 requires that the Commission find both that the departure is necessary for adequate protection or for compliance, and that special circumstances are present. Paragraph A.4 provides that exemptions from Tier 1 requested by an applicant or licensee are governed by the requirements of 10 CFR 52.63(b)(1) and 52.97(b), which provide an opportunity for a hearing. In addition, the Commission will not grant requests for exemptions that may result in a significant decrease in the level of safety otherwise provided by the design.

Tier 2 information The change processes for the three different categories of Tier 2 information, viz., Tier 2, Tier 2*, and Tier 2* with a time of expiration, are set forth in paragraph Vill.B. The change process for Tier 2 has the same elements as the Tier 1 change process, but some of the standards for plant-specific orders and exemptions are different. The Commission adopted a

'50.59-like' change process for Tier 2 information, in accordance with its SRMs on SECY 377 and SECY-92-287A. The Commission is currently considering revisions to 10 CFR 50.59.

After the Section 50.59 rulemaking is complete, the Commission will determine whether any comparable revisions should be made to the "50.59-like" portion of the Tier 2 change process (see Section Vill.B.5 of this appendix). As stated at the beginning of Section lil,"Section-by-section discussion of design certification rule," it is the Commission's intent that this appendix emulate Appendices A and B to 10 CFR Part 52, at this time. Therefore, the Commission will consider updating 10 CFR Part 52, including the Appendices, in an upcoming Part 52 50

I rulemaking (see SECY-98-282) and it will also consider any Section 50.59 revisions, as they may apply to the three design certification rules. However, any backfitting implications for Section Vill.B.5 of the design certification rules will be covered in the Section 50.59 rulemaking.

The process for generic Tier 2 changes (including changes to Tier 2* and Tier 2* with a time of expiration) tracks thu process for generic Tier 1 changes. A's set forth in paragraph B.1, generic Tier 2 changes are accomplished by rulemaking amending the generic DCD, and are governed by the standards in 10 CFR 52.63(a)(1). This provision provides that the Commission may not modify, change, rescind or impose new requirements by rulemaking except where necessary either to bring the certification into compliance with the Commission's regulations i applicable and in effect at the time of approval of the design certification or to assure adequate protection of the public heaith and safety or common defense and security, if a generic change is made to Tier 2* information, then the category and expiration, if necessary, of the new information would also be determined in the rulemaking and the appropriate change process for that new information would apply.

Departures from Tier 2 may occur in five ways: (1) the Commission may order a plant-specific departure, as set forth in paragraph B.3; (2) an applicant or licensee 'may request an exemption from a Tier 2 requirement as set forth in paragraph B.4; (3) a licensee may make a departure without prior NRC approval in accordance with paragraph B.5 (the "50.59-like" process]; (4) the licensee may request NRC approval for proposed departures which do not meet the requirements in paragraph B.5 as provided in paragraph B.5.d; and (5) the licensee may request NRC approval for a departure from Tier 2* information under paragraph B.6.

Sirnilar to Commission-order'ed Tier 1 departures and generic Tier 2 changes, Commission-ordered Tier 2 departures cannot be imposed except where necessary either to bring the certification into compliance with the Commission's regulations applicable and in effect 51

at the time of approval of the design certification or to ensure adequate protection of the public l

health and safety or common defense and security, as set forth in paragraph B.3. However, the special circumstances for the Commission-ordered Tier 2 departures do not have to outweigh any decrease in safety that may result from the reduction in standardization caused by the plant-specific order, as required by 10 CFR 52.63(a)(3). The Commission determined that it i'

was not necessary to impose an additional limitation similar to that imposed on Tier 1 departures by 10 CFR 52.63(a)(3) and (b)(1). This type of additionallimitation for standardization would unnecessarily restrict the flexibility of applicants and licensees with respect to Tier 2, which by its nature is not as safety significant as Tier 1.

An applicant or licensee may request an exemption from Tier 2 information as set forth in paragraph B.4. The applicant or licensee must demonstrate that the exemption complies with one of the special circumstances in 10 CFR 50.12(a). In addition, the Commission will not grant requests for exemptions that may result in a significant decrease in the level of safety i

otherwise provided by the design. However, the special circumstances for the exemption do not have to outweigh any decrease in safety that may result from the reduction in l standardization caused by the exemption. If the exemption is requested by an applicant for a license, the exemption is subject to litigation in the same manner as other issues in the license hearing, consistent with 10 CFR 52.63(b)(1). If the exemption is requested by a licensee, then the exemption is subject to litigation in the same manner as a license amendment.

Paragraph B.5 allows an applicant or licensee to depart from Tier 2 information, without prior NRC approval, if the proposed departure does not involve a change to or departure from Tier 1 or Tier i!* information, technical specifications, or involves an unreviewed safety question (USO) as defined in B.5.b and B.5.c of this paragraph. The technical specifications referred to in B.5.a and B.S.b of this paragraph are the technical specifications in Section 16.1 of the

. 52

generic DCD, including bases, for departures made prior to issuance of the COL. After issuance of the COL, the plant-specific technical specifications are controlling under paragraph B.S. The bases for the plant-specific technical specifications will be controlled by the bases control procedures for the plant-specific technical specifications (analogous to the bases control provision in the improved Standard Technical Specifications). The definition of a USO in paragraph B.S.b is similar to the definition in 10 CFR 50.59 and it applies to all information in Tier 2 except for the information that resolves the severe accident issues. The process for evaluating proposed tests or experiments not described in Tier 2 will be incorporated into the change process for the portion of the design that is outside the scope of this design certification. Although paragraph B.5 does not specifically state, the Commission has determined that departures must also comply with all applicable regulations unless an exemption or other relief is obtained.

The Commission believes that it is important to preserve and maintain the resolutiori of severe accident issues just like all other safety issues that were resolved during the design certification review (refer to SRM on SECY-90-377). However, because of the increased uncertainty in severe accident issue resolutions, the Commission has adopted separate criteria in B.S.c for determining whether a departure from information that resolves severe accident issues constitutes a USQ. For purposes of applying the special criteria in B.S.c, severe accident resolutions are limited to design features when the intended function of the design feature is relied upon to resolve postulated accidents where the reactor core has melted and exited the reactor vessel and the containment is being challenged (severe accidents). These design features are identified in Section 1.9.5 of the DCD, with other issues, and are described in other sections of the DCD. Therefore, the location of design information in the DCD is not important to the application of this special procedure for severe accident issues. However, the 53

1 special procedure in B.5.c does not apply to design features that resolve so-called beyond J design basis accidents or other low probability events. The important aspect of this special i procedure is that it is limited solely to severe accident design features, as defined above. Some i design features may have intended functions to meet " design basis" requirements and to i

resolve " severe accidents." If these design features are reviewed undar paragraph Vill.B.5, l then the appropriate criteria from either B.S.b or B.5.c are selected depending upon the function being char.ged.

1 An applicant or licensee that plans to depart from Tier 2 information, under Vill.B.5, must prepare a safety evaluation which provides the bases for the determination that the proposed change dcu not involve an unreviewed safety question, a change to Tier 1 or Tier 2*

I information, or a cha':ge to the technical specifications, as explained above. in order to achieve the Commission's goals for design certification, the evaluation needs to consider all of the matters ' hat were resolved in the DCD, such as generic issue resolutions that are relevant to ,

the proposed departure. The benefits of the early resolution of safety issues would be lost if 1 4

departures from tne DCD were made that violated these resolutions without appropriate review.

The evaluation of the relevant matters needs to consider the proposed departure over the full range of power operation from startup to shutdown, as it relates to anticipated operational )

occurrences, transients, design basis accidents, and severe accidents. The evaluation must also include a review of all relevant secondary references from the DCD because Tier 2 information intended to be treated as requirements is contained in the secondary references.

The evaluation should consider Tables 14.3 I through i4.3-8 and 19.59-29 of the generic DCD to ensure that the proposed change does rr : impact Tier 1. These tables contain various cross-references from the safety analys.es and probabilistic risk assessment in Tier 2 to the important parameters that were included in Tier 1. Although many issues and analyses could i

54

have been cross-referenced, the listings in these tables were developed only for key analyses for the AP600 design. Westinghouse provided more detailed cross-references for important analysis assumptions that are included in Tier 1 in its revised response to RAI 640.60

_ (DCP/NRC 1440 - September 15,1998).

If a proposed departure from Tier 2 involves a change to or departure from Tier 1 or Tier 2* information, technical specifications, or otherwise constitutes a USQ, then the applicant or licensee must obtain NRC approval through the appropriate process set forth in this appendix before implementing the proposed departure. The NRC does not endorse NSAC-125,

" Guidelines for 10 CFR 50.59 Safety Evaluations," for performing safety evaluations required by Vlli.B.5 of this appendix. However, the NRC will work with industry, if it is desired, to develop _

an appropriate guidance document for processing proposed changes under Vill.B of this appendix.

A party to an adjudicatory proceeding (e.g., for issuance of a combined license) who believes that an applicant or licensee has not complied with Vill.B.5 when departing from Tier 2 information, may petition to admit such a contention into the proceeding under B.5.f. This provision /was included because an incorrect departure from the requirements of this appendix essentially places the departure outside of the scope of the Commission's safety finding in the design certification rulemaking.- Therefore, it follows that properly-founded contentions alleging such incorrectly-implemented departures cannot be considered " resolved' by this rulemaking.  !

l As set forth in B.5.f, the petition must comply with the requirements of 6 2.714(b)(2) and show that the departure does not comply with paragraph B.S. Any other party may file a response to the petition. If on the basis of the petition and any responses, the presiding officer in the )

I proceeding determines that the required showing has been made, the matter shall be certified 1

to the Commission for its final determination. In the absence of a proceeding, petitions alleging l 55 l

t non-conformance with paragraph B.5 requirements applicable to Tier 2 departures will be treated as petitions for enforcement action under 10 CFR 2.206.

Paragraph B.6 provides a process for departing from Tier 2* information. The creation of and restrictions on changing Tier 2* information resulted from the development of the Tier 1 information for the ABWR design. During this development process, the applicants for design certification requested that the amount of information in Tier 1 be minimized to provide additional flexibility for an applicant or licensee who references this appendix. Also, many .

codes, standards, and design processes, which were not specified in Tier 1, that are acceptable for meeting ITAAC were specified in Tier 2. The result of these actions is that certain significant information only exists in Tier 2 and the Commission does not want this significant information to be changed without prior NRC approval. This Tier 2* information is identified in the generic DCD with italicized text and brackets.

Although the Tier 2* designation was originally intended to last for the lifetime of the

. facility, like Tier 1 information, the NRC determined that some of the Tier 2* information could expire when the plant first achieves full (100%) power, after the finding required by 10 CFR 52.103(g), while other Tier 2* information must remain in effect throughout the life of the facility.

The determining factors were the Tier 1 information that would govern these areas after first full

' power ar;d the NRC's judgement on whether prior approval was required before implementation of the change due to the significance of the information. Therefore, certain Tier 2* Information listed in paragraph B.6.c ceases to retain its Tier 2* designation after full power operation is first achieved following the Commission finding in 10 CFR 52.103(g). Thereafter, that information is deemed to be Tier 2 information that is subject to the departure requirements in paragraph B.5.

By contrast, the Tier 2* information identified in paragraph B.6.b retains its Tier 2* designation throughout the duration of the license, including any period of renewal.

56

Certain preoperational tests in paragraph B.6.c are designated to be performed only for the first plant or first three plants that reference this appendix. Westinghouse's tiasis for i performing these "first-plant-only" and "first-three-plants-only" preoperational tests is provided in ,

Section 14.2.5 of the DCD. The NRC staff found Westinghouse's basis for performing these l

tests and its justification for only performing the tests on the first-plant or first-three-plants acceptable. The NRC staff's decision was based on the need to verify that plant-specific manufacturing and/or construction variations do not adversely impact the predicted performance of certain passive safety systems, while recognizing that these special tests will result in significant thermal transients being applied to critical plant components. The NRC staff I believes that the range of manufacturing or construction variations that could adversely affect l

the relevant passive safety systems will be adequately disclosed after performing the designated tests on the first plant, or the first three plants, as applicable. The COL action item l in Section 14.4.6 of the DCD states that subsequent plants shall either perform these l

preopera , nal tests or justify that the results of the first-plant-only or first-three-plant-only tests are applicat ie to the subsequent plant. The Tier 2* designation for these tests will expire after the first plant or first three plants complete these tests, as indicated in paragraph B.6.c.

If Tier 2* Information is changed in a generic rulemaking, the designation of the new .

l

[ information (Tier 1,2*, or 2) would also be determined in the rulemaking and the appropriate l l l process for future changes would apply. If a plant-specific departure is made from Tier 2* l information, then the new designation would apply only to that plant. If an applicant who references this design certification makes a departure from Tier 2* information, the new informatiori is subject to litigation in the same manner as other plant-specific issues in the licensing hearing. If a licensee makes a departure, it will be treated as a license amendment under 10 CFR 50.90 and the finality is in accordance with paragraph VI.B.5 of this appendix.

57

Any requests for departures from Tier 2* information that affect Tier 1 must also comply with the requirements in Vill.A of this appendix.

l Operational Requirements The change process for technical specifications and other operational requirements in the DCD is set forth in paragraph Vill.C. This change process has elements similar to the Tier 4'

1 and Tier 2 change process in paragraphs Vill.A and Vill.B, but with significantly different change standards. Because of the different finality status for technical specifications and other operational requirements (refer to Ill.F of this SOC), the Commission decided to designate a special category of information, consisting of the technical specifications and other operational requirements, with its own change process in paragraph Vill.C. The key to using the change processes in Section Vill is to determine if the proposed change or departure requires a change to a design feature described in the generic DCD. If a design change is required, then the appropriate change process in paragraph Vill.A or Vill.B applies. However, if a proposed change to the technical specifications or other operational requirements does not require a change to a design feature in the generic DCD, then paragraph Vill.C applies. The language in paragraph Vill.C also distinguishes between generic (Section 16.1 of DCD) and plant-specific technical specifications to account fo'r the different treatment and finality accorded technical specifications before and after a license is issued.

The process in C.1 for making generic changes to the generic technical specifications in Section 16.1 of the DCD or other operational requirements in the generic DCD is accomplished by rulemaking and governed by the backfit standards in 10'CFR 50.109. The determination of whether the generic technical specifications and other operational requirements were .

completely reviewed and approved in the design certification rulemaking is based upon the 58

{

l

-_d

extent to which an f:RC safety conclusion in the FSER is being modified or changed. If it cannot be determined that the technical specification or operational requirement was comprehensively reviewed and finalized in the design certification rulemaking, then there is no backfit restriction under 10 CFR 50.109 because no prior position was taken on this safety matter. Some generic technical specifications contain bracketed values, which clearly indicate that the NRC staff's review was not complete. Generic changes made under Vill.C.1 are applicable to all applicants or licensees (refer to Vill.C.2), unless the change is irrelevant because of a plant-specific departure.

Plant-specific departures may occur by either a Commission order under Vill.C.3 or an applicant's exemption request under Vill.C.4. The basis for determining if the technical specification or operational requirement was completely reviewed and approved for these processes is the same as for Vill.C.1 above. If the technical specification or operational requirement was comprehensively reviewed and finalized in the design certification rulemaking, then the Commission must demonstrate that special circumstances arei present before ordering a plant-specific departure. If not, there is no restriction on plant specific changes to the technical specifications or operational requirements, prior to issuance of a license, provided a design change is not required. Although the generic technical specifications were reviewed by the NRC staff to facilitate the design certification review, the Commission intends to consider the lessons leamed from subsequent operating experience during its licensing review of the plant-specific technical specifications. The process for petitioning to intervene on a technical specification or operational requirement is similar to other issues in a licensing hearing, except

. that the petitioner must also demonstrate why special circumstances are present (Vill.C.5).

Finally, the generic technical specifications will have no further effect on the plant-specific technical specifications after the issuance of a license that references this appendix.

59

I The bases for the generic technical specifications will be controlled by the change process in Section Vill.C of this appendix. After a license is issued, the bases will be controlled by the bases change provision set fortn in the administrative controls section of the plant-specific technical specifications.

I. Inspections, tests, analyses, and acceptance criteria (ITAAC).

The purpose of Section IX of this appendix is to set forth how the ITAAC in Tier 1 of this design certification rule are to be treated in a license proceeding. Paragraph A restates the responsibilities of an applicant or licensee for performing and successfully completing ITAAC, and notifying the NRC of such completion. Paragraph A.1 makes it clear that an applicant may proceed at its own risk with design and procurement activities subject to ITAAC, and that a licensee may proceed at its own risk with design, procurement, construction, and preoperational testing activities subject to an ITAAC, even though the NRC may not have found that any particular ITAAC has been successfully completed. Paragraph A.2 requires the licensee to -

notify the NRC that the required inspections, tests, and analyses in the ITAAC have been completed and that the acceptance criteria have been met.

Paragraphs B.1 and B.2 essentially reiterate the NRC's responsibilities with respect to ITAAC as set forth in 10 CFR 52.99 and 52.103(g). Finally, paragraph B.3 states that ITAAC do not, by virtue of their inclusion in the DCD, constitute regulatory requirements after the licensee has received authorization to load fuel or for renewal of the license. However, subsequent modifications must comply with the design descriptions in the DCD unless the applicable requirements in 10 CFR 52.97 and Section Vill of this appendix have been complied with. -~As discussed in Ill.D of this SOC, the Commission will defer a determination of the applicability of ITAAC and their effect in terms of issue resolution in 10 CFR Part 50 licensing 60

proceedings to such time that a Part 50 applicant decides to reference this appendix.

J. Records and Reporting.

The purpose of Section X of this appendix is to set forth the requirements for maintaining records of changes to and departures from the generic DCD, which are to be reflected in the plant-specific DCD.Section X also sets forth the requirements for submitting reports (including updates to the plant-specific DCD) to the NRC. This section of the appendix l Is similar to the requirements for records and reports in 10 CFR Part 50, except for minor 1

1 differences in information collection and reporting requir9ments, as discussed in V of this SOC.

l Paragraph X.A.,1 of this appendix requires that a generic DCD and the proprietary and l safeguards information referenced in the generic DCD be maintained by the applicant for this l

rule. The generic DCD was developed, in part, to meet the requirements for incorporation by l _ reference, including availability requirements. Therefore, the proprietary and safeguards information could not be included in the generic DCD because it is not publicly available.

l However, the proprietary and safeguards information was reviewed by the NRC and, as stated 1

in paragraph VI.B.2 of this appendix, the Commission considers the information to be resolved I within the meaning of 10 CFR 52.63(a)(4). Because this information is not in the generic DCD, the proprietary and safeguards information, or its equivalent, is required to be provided by an applicant for a license. Therefore, to ensure that this information will be available, a requirement for the design certification applicant to maintain the proprietary and safeguards l

information was added to paragraph X.A.1 of this appendix. The acceptable version of the proprietary and safeguards information is identified (referenced) in the version of the DCD that is incorporated into this rule. The generic DCD and the acceptable version of the proprietary and safeguards information must be maintained for the period of time that this appendix may be 61 L

referenced.

Paragraphs A.2 and A.3 place record-keeping requirements on the applicant or licensee that references this design certification to maintain its plant-specific DCD to accurately reflect both generic changes to the generic DCD and plant-specific departures made pursuant to Section Vill of this appendix. The term " plant-specific" was added to paragraph A.2 and other Sections of this appendix to distinguish between the generic DCD that is incorporated by reference into this appendix, and the plant-specific DCD that the applicant is required to submit under IV.A of this appendix. The requirement to maintain the generic changes to the generic DCD is explicitly stated to ensure that these changes are not only reflected in the generic DCD, which will be maintained by the applicant for design certification, but that the changes are also reflected in the plant-specific DCD. Therefore, records of generic changes to the DCD will be f required to be maintained by both entities to ensure that both entities have up-to-date DCDs.

Section X.A of this appendix does not place record-keeping requirements on site-specific information that is outside the scope of this rule. As discussed in Ill.D of this SOC, the final safety analysis report required by 10 CFR 52.79 will contain the plant-specific DCD and the site-specific information for a facility that references this rule. The phrase " site-specific portion of the final safety analysis report" in paragraph X.B.3.d of this appendix refers to the information that is contained in the final safety analysis report for a facility (required by 10 CFR 52.79) but is not part of the plant-specific DCD (required by IV.A of this appendix). Therefore, this rule does not require that duplicate documentation be maintained by an applicant or licensee that references this rule, because the plant-specific DCD is part of the final safety analysis report for the facility. j Paragraphs B.1 and B.2 establish reporting requirements for applicants or licensees that reference this rule that are similar to the reporting requirements in 10 CFR Part 50. For 62 l i

1 1

1 currently operating plants, a licensee is required to maintain records of the basis for any design changes to the facility made under 10 CFR 50.59. Section 50.59(b)(2) requires a licensee to provide a summary report of these changes to the NRC annually, or along with updates to the 4

facility final safety analysis report under 10 CFR 50.71(e). Section 50.71(e)(4) requires that these updates be submitted annually, or 6 months after each refueling outage if the interval between successive updates does not exceed 24 months.

The reporting requirements in paragraph B.3 vary according to four different time periods during a facilities' lifetime. Paragraph B.3.a requires that if an applicant that references 4

this rule decides to make departures from the generic DCD, then the departures and any apdates to the plant-specific DCD must be submitted with the initial application for a license.

l Under B.3.b, the applicant may submit any subsequent reports and updates along with its I amendments to the application provided that the submittals are made at least once per year.

Because amendments to an application are typically made more frequently than once a year, this should not be an excessive burden on the applicant. Paragraph B.3.c requires that summary reports be submitted quarterly during the period of facility construction. This increase in frequency of summary reports of departures from the plant-specific DCD is in response to the Commission's guidance on reporting frequency in its SRM on SECY-90-377, dated February 15,1991.

Quarterly reporting of design changes during the period of construction is necessary to closely monitor the status and progress of the construction of the plant. To make its finding under 10 CFR 52.99, the NRC must monitor the design changes made in accordance with -

Section Vllt of this appendix. The ITAAC verify that the as-built facility conforms with the approved design and emphasizes design reconciliation and design verification. Quarterly reporting of design changes is particular!/ important in times where the number of design 63

changes could be significant, such as during the procurement of components and equipment, detailed design of the plant at the start of construction, and during preoperational testing. The frequency of updates to the plant-specific DCD is not increased during facility construction.

After the facility begins operation, the frequency of reporting reverts to the requirement in X.B.3.d, which is consistent with the requirement for plants licensed under 10 CFR Part 50.

IV. FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT: AVAILABILITY The Commission has determined under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended (NEPA), and the Commission's regulations in 10 CFR Part 51, Subpart A, that this proposed design certification rule, if adopted, would not be a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment and, therefore, an environmental impact statement (EIS) is not required. The basis for this determination, as documented in the environmental assessment, is that this amendment to 10 CFR Part 52 would not authorize the h

siting, construction, or operation of a facility using the AP600 design; it would only codify the AP600 design in a rule. The NRC will evaluate the environmentalimpacts and issue an EIS as appropriate in accordance with NEPA as part of the application (s) for the construction and operation of a facility.

In addition, as part of the environmental assessment for the AP600 design, the NRC reviewed Westinghouse's evaluation of various design alternatives to prevent and mitigate ,

severe accidents in Appendix 1B of the AP600 Standard Safety Analysis Report (SSAR). The Commission finds that Westinghouse's evaluation provides a reasonable assurance that t l

certifying the AP600 design will not exclude severe accident mitigation design alternatives for a future facility that would prove cost beneficial had they been considered as part of the original design certification application. These issues are considered resolved for the AP600 design.

64

4 The environmental assessment (EA), upon which the Commission's finding of no significant impact is based, and AP600 SSAR are available for examination and copying at the NRC Public Document Room,2120 L Street, NW. (Lower Level), Washington, DC. Single copies of the EA are also available from Jerry N. Wilson, Mailstop O-12 G15, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555.

i V. PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT STATEMENT q This proposed rule amends information collection requirements that are subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). This rule has been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget for review and approval of the information collection l

requirements.

The public reporting burden for this information collection is estimated to average 8

)

person-hours per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing l I

data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the information collection. The NRC is seeking public comment on the potential impact of the information collections contained in the proposed rule and on the following issues:

1. Is the proposed information collection necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the NRC, including whether the information will have practical utility?

l

2. Is the estimate of burden accurate?
3. Is there a way to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected? '

65

4. How can the burden of the information collection be minimized, including the use of automated collection techniques?

Send comments on any aspect of this proposed information collection, including suggestions for reducing the burden, to the Records Management Branch (T-6 E6), U.S.

Nuclear Hegulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, or by Internet electronic mail at BJS1 @NRC. GOV; and to the Desk Officer, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, NEOB-10202. (3150-0151), Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC 20503.

Comments to OMB on the information collections or or, the above issues should be submitted by (insert date 30 days after publication in the Federal Reaister). Comments received after this date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but assurance of consideration cannot be given to comments received after this date.

Public Protection Notification If a means used to impose an information collection does not display a currently valid OMB control number, the NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, the information collection.

VI. REGULATORY ANALYSIS The NRC has not prepared a regulatory analysis for this proposed rule. The NRC prepares regulatory analyses for rulemakings inat establish generic regulatory requirements applicable to all licensees. Design certifications are not generic rulemakings in the sense that design certifications do not establish standards or requirements with which alllicensees must comply. Rather, design certifications are Commiscion approvals of specific nuclear power plant 66 L- - - .

designs by rulemaking. Furthermore, design certification rulemakings are initiated by an applicant for a design certification, rather than the NRC. Preparation of a regulatory analysis in this circumstance would not be useful because the design to be certified is proposed by the l applicant rather than the NRC. For these reasons, the Commission concludes that preparation of a regulatory analysis is neither required nor appropriate.

Vll. REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ACT CERTIFICATION In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980,5 U.S.C. 605(b), the Commission certifies that this proposed rulemaking will not have a significant economic impact upon a substantial number of small entities. This proposed rule provides for certification of a nuclear power plant design. Neither the design certification applicant, nor prospective nuclear power plant licensees who reference this design certification rule, fall within the scope of the definition of "small entities" set forth in the Regulatory Flexibility Act,15 U.S.C. 632, or the Small Business Size Standards set out in regulations issued by the Small Business Administration in 13 CFR Part 121. Thus, this rule does not fall within the purview of the act.

Vill. BACKFIT ANALYSIS The Commission has determined that the backfit rule,10 CFR 50.109, does not apply to this proposed rule because this amendment does not impose new or changed requirements on existing 10 CFR Part 50 licensees. Therefore, a backfit analysis was not prepared for this rule.

IX. CONSENSUS STANDARDS The National Technology and Transfer Act of 1995 (Act), Public Law 104-113, requires that Federal agencies use technical standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary 67

consensus standards bodies unless the use of such a standard is inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. This proposed rule provides for certification of a nuclear power plant design. Design certifications are not generic rulemakings in the sense that design certifications do not establish standards or requirements with which all licensees must comply.

Rather, design certifications are Commission approvals of specific nuclear power plant designs by rulemaking. Furthermore, design certification rulemakings are initiated by an applicant for a design certification, rather than the NRC. For these reasons, the Commie. ion concludes that the Act does not apply to this proposed rule.

List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 52 Part 52 - Administrative practice and procedure, Antitrust, Backfitting, Combined license, Early site permit, Emergency planning, Fees, Incorporation by reference, inspection, Limited work authorization, Nuclear power plants and reactors, Probabilistic risk assessment, Prototype, Reactor siting criteria, Redress of site, Reporting and record keeping requirements, Standard design, Standard design certification.

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. 553; the NRC is proposing to adopt the following amendment to 10 CFR Part 52.

Early Site Permits; Standard Design Certifications; and Combined Licenses for Nuclear Power Plants

1. The authority citation for 10 CFR Part 52 continues to read as follows:

AUTHORITY: Secs. 103,104,161,182,183,186,189, 68 Stat. 936, 948, 953, 954. 955,  !

956, as amended, sec. 234,83 Stat.1244, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2133,2201,2232,2233, 2236, 2239, 2282); secs. 201, 202,' 206, 88 Stat.1243,1244,1246,1246, as amended (42  ;

l i

. U.S.C, 5841, 5842, 5846).

68 I

i

2. In 52.8, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:

$ 52.8 Information collection requirements: OMB approval.

(b) The approved information collection requirements contained in this part appear in @@

52.15. 52.17,52.29,52.35,52.45,52.47,52.51,52.57,52.63,52.75,52.77,52.78,52.79, 52.89,52.91,52.99, and appendices A, B, and C.

3. A new Appendix C to 10 CFR Part 52 is added to read as follows:

Appendix C To Part 52 - Design Certification Rule for the AP600 Design

1. INTRODUCTION Appendix C constitutes the standard design certification for the AP600' design, in accordance with 10 CFR Part 52, Subpart B. The applicant for certification of the AP600 design is Westinghouse Electric Company LLC.

II. DEFINITIONS I A. Generic design control document (generic DCD) means the document containing the Tier 1 and Tier 2 information and generic technical specifications that is incorporated by reference into this appendix.

B. Generic technical specifications means the information, required by 10 CFR 50.36 and 50.36a, for the portion of the plant that is within the scope of this appendix.

C. Plant-specific DCD means the document, maintained by an applicant or licensee who 2A P600 is a trademark of Westinghouse Electric Company LLC 69

references this appendix, consisting of the information in the generic DCD, as modified and supplemented by the plant-specific departures and exemptions made under Section Vill of this appendix.

D. Tier f means the portion of the design-related information contained in the generic DCD that is approved and certified by this appendix (hereinafter Tier 1 information). The design descriptions, interface requirements, and site parameters are derived from Tier 2 isformation. Tier 1 information includes:

1. Definitions and general provisions;
2. Design descriptions;
3. Inspections, tests, analyses, and acceptance criteria (ITAAC);
4. Significant site parameters; and
5. Significant interface requirements.

E. Tier 2 means the portion of the design-related information contained in the generic DCD that is approved but not certified by this appendix (hereinafter Tier 2 information).

Compliance with Tier 2 is required, but generic changes to and plant-specific departures from Tier 2 are govemed by Section Vill of this appendix. Compliance with Tier 2 provides a sufficient, but not the only acceptable, method for complying with Tier 1. Compliance methods differing from Tier 2 must satisfy the change process in Section Vill of this appendix.

Regardless of these differences, an applicant or licensee must meet the requirement in Section 111.B to reference Tier 2 when referencing Tier 1. Tier 2 information includes:

1. Information required by 10 CFR,52.47, with the exception of generic technical specifications and conceptual design information;
2. Information required for a final safety analysis report under 10 CFR 50.34;
3. Supporting information on the inspections, tests, and analyses that will be performed 70

i ,

to demonstrate that the acceptance criteria in the ITAAC have been met; and

' 4. Combined license (COL) action items (combined license information), which identify certain matters that shall be addressed in the site specific portion of the final safety analysis a report (FSAR) by an applicant who references this appendix. These items constitute

, information requirements but are not the only acceptable set of information in the FSAR. An applicant may depart from or omit these items, provided that the departure or omission is identified and justified in the FSAR. After issuance of a construction permit or COL, these items are not requirements for the licensee unless such items are restated in the FSAR.

5. The investment protection short-term availability controls in Section 16.3 of the DCD.

F. Tier 2* means the portion of the Tier 2 information, designated as such in the generic l

DCD, which is subject to the change process in Vill.B.6 of this appendix. This designation expires for some Tier 2* information under Vill.B.6.

G. All other terms in this appendix have the meaning set out in 10 CFR 50.2,10 CFR

i. 52.3, or Section 11 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, as applicable.

111. SCOPE AND CONTENTS A. Tier 1, Tier 2 (including the investment protection short-term availability controls in Section 16.3), and the generic technical specifications in the AP600 DCD, Revision 2 (3/99),

are approved for incorporation by reference by the Director of the Office of the Federal Register on (Insert date of approval) in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR Part 51. Copies of 1

the generic DCD may be obtained from Mr. Brian A. McIntyre, Manager, Advanced Plant Safety I and Licensing, Westinghouse Electric Company, P.O. Box 355, Pittsburgh, PA 15230-0355. A 1

copy is also available for examination and copying at the NRC Public Document Room,2120 L Street NW. (Lower Level), Washington, DC 20555-0001.

71 l

B. An applicant or licensee referencing this appendix, in accordance with Section IV of this appendix, shallincorporate by reference and comply with the requirements of this appendix, including Tier 1, Tier 2 (including the investment protection short-term availability controls in Section 16.3), and the generic technical specifications except as otherwise provided in this appendix. Conceptual design information in the generic DCD arid the evaluation of severe accident mitigation design alternatives in Appendix 1B of the generic DCD are not part of this appendix.

C. If there is a conflict between Tier 1 and Tier 2 of the DCD, then Tier 1 controls.

D. If there is a conflict between the generic DCD and either the application for design certification of the AP600 design or NUREG-1512. " Final Safety Evaluation Report Related to Certification of the AP600 Standard Design," (FSER), then the generic DCD controls.

E. Design activities for structures, systems, and components that are wholly outside the scope of this appendix may be performed using site-specific design parameters, provided the design activities do not affect the DCD or conflict with the interface requirements.

IV. ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS AND RESTRICTIONS A. An applicant for a license that wishes to reference this appendix shall, in addition to complying with the requirements of 10 CFR 52.77,52.78, and 52.79, comply with the following requirements:

1. Incorporate by reference, as part of its application, this appendix.
2. Include, as part of its application:
a. A plant-specific DCD containing the seine information and utilizing the same organization and numbering as the AP600 DCD, as modified and supplemented by the

- applicant's exemptions and departures; 72 l

I

b. The reports on departures from and updates to the plant-specific DCD required by X.B of this appendix;
c. Plant-specific technical specifications, consisting of the generic and site-specific technical specifications, that are required by 10 CFR 50.36 and 50.36a; i
d. Information demonstrating compliance with the site parameters and interface i requirements;
e. Information that addresses the COL action items; and
f. Information required by 10 CFR 52.47(a) that is not within the scope of this appendix. ,

i

3. Physically include, in the plant-specific DCD, the proprietary and safeguards information referenced in the AP600 DCD.

I B. The Commission reserves the right to determine in what manner this appendix may  ;

be referenced by an applicant for a enstruction permit or operating license under Part 50.

V. APPLICABLE REGULATIONS A. Except as indicated in paragraph B of this section, the regulations that apply to the AP600 design are in 10 CFR Parts 20,50,73, and 100, codified as of (insert date final rule signed], that are applicable and technically relevant, as described in the FSER (NUREG-1512).

B. The AP600 design is exempt from portions of the following regulations:

1. Paragraph (a)(1) of 10 CFR 50.34 - whole body dose criterion;
2. Paragraph (f)(2)(iv) of 10 CFR 50.34 - Plant Safety Parameter Display Console;
3. Paragraphs (f)(2)(vii), (viii), (xxvi), and (xxviii) of 10 CFR 50.34 - Accident Source Term in TID 14844;
4. Paragraph (c)(1) of 10 CFR 50.62 - Auxiliary (or emergency) feedwater system;
5. Appendix A to 10 CFR Part 50, GDC 17 - Offsite Power Sources; and 73
6. Appendix A 'o 10 CFR Part 50, GDC 19 - whole body dose criterion.

VI. ISSUE RESOLUTION A. The Commission has determined that the structures, systems, components, and design features of the AP600 design comply with the provisions of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the applicable regulations identified in Section V of this appendix; and therefore, provide adequate protection to the health and safety of the public. A conclusion that a matter is resolved includes the finding that additional or alternative structures, systems, components, design features, design criteria, testing, analyses, acceptance criteria, or justifications are not necessary for the AP600 design.

B. The Commission considers the following matters resolved within the meaning of 10 CFR 52.63(a)(4) in subsequent proceedings for issuance of a combined license, amendment of a combined license, or renewal of a combined license, proceedings held pursuant to 10 CFR 52.103, and enforcement proceedings involving plants referencing this appendix:

1. All nuclear safety issues, except for the generic technical specifications and other operational requirements, associated with the information in the FSER, Tier 1, Tier 2 (including referenced information, which the context indicates is intended as requirements, and the investment protection short-term availability controls in Section 16.3), and the rulemaking record for certification of the AP600 design;
2. All nuclear safety and safeguards issues associated with the information in proprietary and safeguards documents, referenced and in context, are intended as requirements in the generic DCD for the AP600 design;
3. All generic changes to the DCD pursuant to and in compliance with the change processes in Sections Vill.A.1 and Vill.B.1 of this appendix; 74
4. All exemptions from the DCD pursuant to and in compliance with the change processes in Sections Vill.A.4 and Vill.B.4 of this' appendix, but only for that proceeding;
5. All departures from the DCD that are approved by license amendment, but only for that proceeding;
6. Except as provided in Vill.B.5.f of this appendix, all departures from Tier 2 pursuant to and in compliance with the change processes in Vill.B.5 of this appendix that do not require prior NRC approval;
7. All environmentalissues concerning severe accident mitigation design alternatives (SAMDAs) associated with the information in the NRC's environmental assessment for the AP600 design and Appendix 1B of the generic DCD, for plants referencing this appendix whose site parameters are within those specified in the SAMDA evaluation.

C. The Commission does not consider operational requirements for an applicant or licensee who references this appendix to be matters resolved within the meaning of 10 CFR 52.63(a)(4). The Commission reserves the right to require operational requirements for an applicant or licensee who references this appendix by rule, regulation, order, or license condition.

D. Except in accordance with the change processes in Section Vill of this appendix, the Commission may not require an applicant or licensee who references this appendix to:

1. Modify structures, systems, components, or design features as described in the generic DCD;
2. Provide additional or alternative structures, systems, components, or design features not discussed in the generic DCD; or
3. Provide additional or alternative design criteria, testing, analyses, acceptance criteria, or justification for structures, systems, components, or design features discussed in the generic 75

4 DCD.

E.1. Persons who wish to review proprietary and safeguards information or other secondary references in the AP600 DCD, in order to request or participate in the hearing required by 10 CFR 52.85 or the hearing provided under 10 CFR 52.103, or to request or participate in any other hearing relating to this appendix in which interested persons have adjudicatory hearing rights, shall first request access to such information from Westinghouse.

The request must state with particularity,

a. The nature of the proprietary or other information sought;
b. The reason why the information currently available to the public in the NRC's public document room is insufficient;
c. The relevance of the requested information to the hearing issue (s) which the person proposes to raise; and
d. A showing that the requesting person has the capability to understand and utilize the requested information.
2. If a person claims that the information is necessary to prepare a request for hearing, the request must be filed no later than 15 days after publication in the Federal Register of the j l

notice required either by 10 CFR 52.85 or 10 CFR 52.103. If Westinghouse declines to provide j the information sought, Westinghouse shall send a written response within ten (10) days of receiving the request to the requesting person setting forth with particularity the reasons for its refusal. The person may then request the Commission (or presiding officer, if a proceeding has been established) to order disclosure. The person shall include copies of the original request (and any subsequent clarifying information provided by the requesting party to the applicant)

~

and the applicant's response. The Commission and presiding officer shall base their decisions sofe!y on the person's original request (including any clarifying information provided by the 76

requesting person to Westinghouse), and Westinghouse's response. The Commission and presiding officer may order Westinghouse to provide access to some or all of the requested information, subject to an appropriate non-disclosure agreement.

Vll. DURATION OF THIS APPENDIX' This appendix may be referenced for a period of 15 years from (Insert date 30 days after publication of the final rule in the Federal Register), except as provided for in 10 CFR 52.55(b) and 52.57(b). This appendix remains valid for an applicant or licensee who references this appendix until the application is withdrawn or the license expires, including any period of extended operation under a renewed license.

Vill. PROCESSES FOR CHANGES AND DEPARTURES A. Tier 1 information.

1. Generic changes to Tier 1 information are governed by the requirements in 10 CFR 52.63(a)(1).
2. Generic changes to Tier 1 information are applicable to all applicants or licensees who reference this appendix, except those for which the change has been rendered technically irrelevant by action taken under paragraphs A.3 or A.4 of this section.
3. Departures from Tier 1 information that are required by the Commission through plant-specific orders are governed by the requirements in 10 CFR 52.63(a)(3).
4. Exempticos from Tier 1 information are governed by the requirements in 10 CFR 52.63(b)(1) and $ 52.97(b). The Commission will deny a request for an exemption from Tier 1, if it finds that the design change will result in a significant decrease in the level of safety otherwise provided by the design.

77

4 B. Tier 2 information.

1. Generic changes to Tier 2 information are governed by the requirements in 10 CFR 52.63(a)(1).
2. Generic changes to Tier 2 information are applicable to all applicants or licensees who reference this appendix, except those for which the change has been rendered technically irrelevant by action taken under paragraphs B.3, B.4, B.5, or B.6 of this section.
3. The Commission may not require new requirements on Tier 2 information by plant-specific order while this appendix is in effect under G 52.55 or 52.61, unless:
a. A modification is necessary to secure compliance with the Commission's regulations applicable and in effect at the time this appendix was approved, as set forth in Section V of this appendix, or to assure adequate protection of the public health and safety or the common defense and security; and
b. Special circumstances as defined in 10 CFR 50.12(a) are present.
4. An applicant or licensee who references this appendix may request an exemption from Tier 2 information. The Commission may grant such a request only if it determines that the exemption will comply with the requirements of 10 CFR 50.12(a). The Commission will deny a request for an exemption from Tier 2, if it finds that the design change will result in a significant decrease in the level of safety otherwise provided by the design. The grant of an exemption to an applicant must be subject to litigation in the same manner as other issues material to the license hearing. The grant of an exemption to a licensee must be subject to an opportunity for a hearing in the same manner as license amendments.

5.a. An applicant or licensee who references this appendix may depart from Tier 2 information, without prior NRC approval, unless the proposed departure involves a change to or departure from Tier 1 information, Tier 2* information, or the technical specifications, or involves 78

I an unreviewed safety question as defined in paragraphs B.S.b and B.S.c of this section. When evaluating the proposed departure, an applicant or licensee shall consider all matters described in the plant specific DCD.

b. A proposed departure from Tier 2, other than one affecting resolution of a severe accident issue identified in the plant-specific DCD, involves an unreviewed safety question if --

(1) The probability of occurrence or the consequences of an accident or malfunction of equipment important to safety previously evaluated in the plant-specific DCD may be increased; (2) A possibility for an accident or malfunction of a different type than any evaluated previously in the plant-specific DCD may be created; or (3) The margin of safety as defined in the basis for any technical specification is reduced.

c. A proposed departure from Tier 2 affecting resolution of a severe accident issue identified in the plant-specific DCD, involves an unreviewed safety question if --

(1) There is a substantial increase in the probability of a severe accident such that a particular severe accident previously reviewed and determined to be not credible ~ could become credible; or -

(2) There is a substantial increase in the consequences to the public of a particular severe accident previously reviewed.

d. If a departure involves an unreviewed safety question as defined in paragraph B.5 of this section, it is governed by 10 CFR 50.90.
e. A departure from Tier 2 information that is made under paragraph B.5 of this section does not require an exemption from this appendix.
f. A party to an adjudicatory proceeding for either the issuance, amendment, or renewal of a license or for operation under 10 CFR 52.103(a), who believes that an applicant or licensee 79

s I

who references this appendix has not complied with Vill.B.5 of this appendix when departing from Tier 2 information, may petition to admit into the proceeding such a contention. In addition to compliance with the general requirements of 10 CFR 2.714(b)(2), the petition must demonstrate that the departure does not comply with Vill.B.5 of this appendix. Further, the petition must demonstrate that the change bears on an asserted noncompliance with an ITAAC acceptance criterion in the case of a 10 CFR 52.103 preoperational hearing, or that the change bears directly on the amendment request in the case of a hearing on a license amendment.

Any other party may file a response. If, on the basis of the petition and any response, the presiding officer determines that a sufficient showing has been made, the presiding officer shall f certify the matter directly to the Commission for determination of the admissibility of the 1

contention. The Commission may admit such a contention if it determines the petition raises a ,

! genuine issue of fact regarding compliance with Vill.B.5 of this appendix.

6.a. An applicant who references this appendix may not depart from Tier 2* information, which is designated with italicized text or brackets and an asterisk in the generic DCD, without NRC approval. The departure will not be considered a resolved issue, within the meaning of j

{ Section VI of this appendix and 10 CFR 52.63(a)(4).

b. A licensee who references this appendix may not depart from the following Tier 2*

matters without prior NRC approval. A request for a departure will be treated as a request for a 1

( license amendment under 10 019 50.90.

l (1) Maximum fuel rod average burn-up.

(2) Fuel principal design requirements.

(3) Fuel criteria evaluation process.

l (4) Fire areas.

(5) Human factors engineering.

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c. A licensee who references this appendix may not, before the plant first achieves full power following the finding required by 10 CFR 52.103(g), depart from the following Tier 2*

matters except in accordance with paragraph B.6.b of this section. After the plant first achieves full power, the following Tier 2* matters revert to Tier 2 status and are thereafter subject to the departure provisions in paragraph B.5 of this section.

(1) Nuclear Island structural dimensions.

(2) ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code, Section 111, and Code Case N-284.

(3) Design Summary of Critical Sections.

(4) ACI 318, ACI 349, and ANSI /AISC --690.

(5) Definition of criticallocations and thicknesses.

(6) Seismic qualification methods and standards. ,

(7) Nuclear design of fuel and reactivity control system, except burn-up limit.

(8) Motor-operated and power-operated valves.

(9) instrumentation & control system design processes, methods, and standards, i (10) PRHR natural circulation test (first plant only).

(11) ADS and CMT verification tests (first three plants only).

d. Departures from Tier 2* information that are made under paragraph B.6 of this  ;

section do not require an exemption from this appendix.

C. Operational requirements.

1. Generic changes to generic technical specifications and other operational requirements that were completely reviewed and approved in the design certification rulemaking and do not require a change to a design feature in the generic DCD are governed by the requirements in 10 CFR 50.109. Generic changes that do require a change to a design feature in the generic DCD are governed by the requirements in paragraphs A or B of this 81

section.

2. Generic changes to generic technical specifications and other operational requirements are applicable to all applicants or licensees who reference this appendix, except those for which the change has been rendered technically irrelevant by action taken under paragraphs C.3 or C.4 of this section.
3. The Commission may require plant-specific departures on generic technical specifications and other operational requirements that were completely reviewed and approved, provided a change to a design feature in the generic DCD is not required and special circumstances as defined in 10 CFR 2.758(b) are present. The Commission may modify or supplement generic technical specifications and other operational requirements that were not completely reviewed and approved or require additional technical specifications and other operational requirements on a plant-specific basis, provided a change to a design feature in the generic DCD is not required.
4. An applicant who references this appendix may request an exemption from the generic technical specifications or other operational requirements. The Commission may grant such a request only if it determines that the exemption will comply with the requirements of 10 CFR 50.12(a). The grant of an exemption must be subject to litigation in the same manner as other issues material to the license hearing.
5. A party to an adjudicatory proceeding for either the issuance, amendment, or renewal of a license or for operation under 10 CFR 52.103(a), who believes that an operational requirement approved in the DCD or a technical specification derived from the generic technical specifications must be changed may petition to admit into the proceeding such a contention.

Such petition must comply with the general requirements of 10 CFR 2.714(b)(2) and must demonstrate why special circumstances as defined in 10 CFR 2.758(b) are present, or for 82

4 compliance with the Commission's regulations in effect at the time this appendix was approved, as set forth in Section V of this appendix. Any other party may file a response thereto, if, on the basis of the petition and any response, the presiding officer determines that a sufficient showing has been made, the presiding officer shall certify the matter directly to the Commission for determination of the admissibility of the contention. All other issues with respect to the plant-specific technical specifications or other operational requirements are subject to a hearing as part of the license proceeding.

6. After issuance of a license, the generic technical specifications have no further effect on the plant-specific technical specifications and changes to the plant-specific technical specifications will be treated as license amendments under 10 CFR 50.90.

IX. INSPECTIONS, TESTS, ANALYSES, AND ACCEPTANCE CRITERIA (ITAAC)

A.1 An applicant or licensee who references this appendix shall perform and demonstrate conformance with the ITAAC before fuel load. With respect to activities subject to an ITAAC, an applicant for a license may proceed at its own risk with design and procurement activities, and a licensee may proceed at its own risk with design, procurement, construction, and preoperational activities, even though the NRC may not have found that any particular ITAAC has been satisfied.

2. The licensee who references this appendix shall notify the NRC that the required inspections, tests, and analyses in the ITAAC have been successfully completed and that the corresponding acceptance criteria have been met.
3. In the event that an activity is subject to an ITAAC, and the applicant or licensee who references this appendix has not demonstrated that the ITAAC has been satisfied, the applicant or licensee may either take corrective actions to successfully complete that ITAAC, request an 83

exemption from the ITAAC in accordance with Section Vill of this appendix and 10 CFR 52.97(b), or petition for rulemaking to amend this appendix by changing the requirements of the l

ITAAC, under 10 CFR 2.802 and 52.97(b). Such rulemaking changes to the ITAAC must meet

- the requirements of paragraph Vill.A.1 of this appendix.

B.1 The NRC shall ensure that the required inspections, tests, and analyses in the ITAAC are performed.' The NRC shall verify that the inspections, tests, and analyses referenced by the licensee have been successfully completed and, based solely thereon, find the prescribed acceptance criteria have been met. At appropriate intervals during construction, the NRC shall publish notices of the successful completion of ITAAC in the Federal Register.

2. In accordance with 10 CFR 52.99 and 52.103(g), the Commission shall find that the acceptance criteria in the ITAAC for the license are met before fuel load.
3. After the Commission has made the finding required by 10 CFR 52.103(g), the ITAAC do not, by virtue of their inclusion within the DCD, constitute regulatory requirements either for licensees or for renewal of the license; except for specific ITAAC, which are the subject of a Section 103(a) hearing, their expiration will occur upon final Commission action in such proceeding. However, subsequent modifications must comply with the Tier 1 and Tier 2 design descriptions in the plant-specific DCD unless the licensee has complied with the applicable requirements of 10 CFR 52.97 and Section Vill of this appendix.

X. RECORDS AND REPORTING A. Records.

1. The applicant for this appendix shall maintain a copy of the generic DCD that includes all generic changes to Tier 1 and Tier 2. The applicant shall maintain the proprietary and -

safeguards information referenced in the generic DCD for the period that this appendix may be 84

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referenced, as specified in Section Vll of this appendix.

2. An applicant or licensee who references this apper: dix shall maintain the plant-specific DCD to accurately reflect both generic changes to the generic DCD and plant-specific departures made pursuant to Section Vill of this appendix throughout the period of application and for the term of the license (including any period of renewal). i i
3. An applicant or licensee who references this appendix shall prepare and maintain written safety evaluations which provide the bases for the determinations required by Section Vill of this appendix. These evaluations must be retained throughout the period of application and for the term of the license (including any period of renewal). j B. Reporting.

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1. An applicant or licensee who references this appendix shall submit a report to the NRC containing a brief description of any departures from the plant-specific DCD, including a summary of the s'afety evaluation of each. This report must be filed in accordance with the filing requirements applicable to reports in 10 CFR 50.4.
2. An applicant or licensee who references this appendix shall submit updates to its l l

plant specific DCD, which reflect the generic changes to the generic DCD and the plant specific departures made pursuant to Section Vill of this appendix. These updates shall be filed in accordance with the filing requirements applicable to final safety analysis report updates in 10 CFR 50.4 and 50.71(e).

3. The reports and updates required by paragraphs B.1 and B.2 of this section n"Jst be submitted as follows:

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a. On the date that an application for a license referencing this appendix is submitted, the application shall include the report and any updates to the plant specific DCD.

l b. During the interval from the date of application to the date of issuance of a license, l

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the report and any updates to the plant-specific DCD must be submitted annually and may be submitted along with amendments to the application.

c. During the interval from the date of issuance of a license to the date the Commission makes its findings under 10 CFR 52.103(g), the report must be submitted quarterly. Updates to the plant-specific DCD must be submitted annually.
d. After the Commission has made its finding under 10 CFR 52.103(g), reports and updates to the plant-specific DCD may be submitted annually or along with updates to the site-specific portion of the final safety analysis report for the facility at the intervals required by 10 CFR 50.71(e), or at shorter intervals as specified in the license.

Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this/S day of 1999.

For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

- L. k &

Annette L. Vietti-Cook, Secretary of the Commission l

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