NEI 12-04, Guidelines for 10 CFR 72.48 Implementation
Guidelines for 10 CFR 72.48 Implementation
text
NEI 12-04, Revision 2
GUIDELINES FOR
IMPLEMENTATION
September 2018
Nuclear Energy Institute, 1201 F Street N. W., Suite 1100, Washington D.C. (202.739.8000)
NEI 12-04, Revision 2
Nuclear Energy Institute
GUIDELINES FOR
IMPLEMENTATION
September 2018
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This guidance was developed by the NEI 10 CFR 72.48 Guidance Update Issue Team with the
valuable assistance of the NEI Dry Storage Task Force Steering Group. The NEI Licensing
Action Task Force also helped ensure fidelity with 10 CFR 50.59 guidance was maintained,
where appropriate. We also recognize the direct participation of the licensees and CoC holders
who contributed to the development and modification of the guidance. The dedicated and timely
effort of the many participants, including management support of the effort, is greatly
appreciated.
NOTICE
Neither NEI, nor any of its employees, members, supporting organizations, contractors, or
consultants make any warranty, expressed or implied, or assume any legal responsibility for the
accuracy or completeness of, or assume any liability for damages resulting from any use of, any
information apparatus, methods, or process disclosed in this report or that such may not
infringe privately owned rights.
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FORWARD
In 1999, the NRC revised 10 CFR 72.48 to be consistent with the changes being made to 10 CFR
50.59 and to give CoC holders the authority to use 10 CFR 72.48 for the first time. NEI 96-07
was developed to provide guidance for the revised 10 CFR 50.59 regulation. Because of the
intended consistency between 10 CFR 50.59 and 10 CFR 72.48, Appendix B to NEI 96-07 was
developed to provide guidance specific to the implementation of 10 CFR 72.48 by utilizing the
NEI 96-07, Revision 1 guidance to the maximum extent possible. The NRC endorsed NEI 96-07,
Appendix B, in Regulatory Guide 3.72.
After over ten years of experience using the revised 10 CFR 72.48 rule, the industry decided to
revise the guidance to address lessons learned and relocate the 10 CFR 72.48 guidance in a new
document separate from the 10 CFR 50.59 guidance. That decision resulted in this document,
NEI 12-04. A fundamental precept used in preparing this guidance document is to retain
commonality with the 10 CFR 50.59 guidance where there is commonality in the corresponding
rules. The changes to the guidance focus primarily on the aspects of implementing the 10 CFR
72.48 rule by Part 72 specific and general licensees that are necessarily different than 10 CFR
50.59, and the role of the CoC holders, who perform the majority of the activities being
authorized under 10 CFR 72.48, but are not licensees.
References in this document to “specific licensee” include both current Part 72 specific licensees
and applicants for a Part 72 specific license. References to "CoC holder" include both spent fuel
storage cask Certificate of Compliance holders and applicants for a Certificate of Compliance.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
FORWARD ............................................................................................................................i
1 INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................1
1.1 PURPOSE .........................................................................................................................1
1.2 DEFENSE-IN-DEPTH DESIGN PHILOSOPHY AND 10 CFR 72.48.....................................2
1.3 USE OF THE WORD “CHANGE” ......................................................................................4
2 DEFINITIONS................................................................................................................5
2.1 10 CFR 72.48 EVALUATION ...........................................................................................5
2.2 10 CFR 72.212 EVALUATION REPORT (212 REPORT) ..................................................5
2.3 10 CFR 72.48 SCREENING..............................................................................................6
2.4 ACCIDENT PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED) .............................6
2.5 ADOPTION .......................................................................................................................7
2.6 CHANGE ..........................................................................................................................7
2.7 CLASS OF ANALYSIS .......................................................................................................8
2.8 DEPARTURE FROM A METHOD OF EVALUATION DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS
UPDATED) USED IN ESTABLISHING THE DESIGN BASES OR IN THE SAFETY ANALYSES9
2.9 DESIGN BASES (DESIGN BASIS)....................................................................................10
2.10 DESIGN FUNCTION........................................................................................................11
2.11 FACILITY.......................................................................................................................12
2.12 FACILITY OR SPENT FUEL STORAGE CASK DESIGN AS DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS
UPDATED)......................................................................................................................13
2.13 FINAL SAFETY ANALYSIS REPORT (AS UPDATED) (UFSAR) ......................................13
2.14 IMPLEMENTATION OF 10 CFR 72.48-AUTHORIZED ACTIVITY...................................15
2.15 INPUT PARAMETERS .....................................................................................................16
2.16 MALFUNCTION OF AN SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY ...................................................17
2.17 METHOD OF EVALUATION............................................................................................17
2.18 PROCEDURES AS DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)..........................................19
2.19 REFERENCE BOUNDS ....................................................................................................19
2.20 SAFETY ANALYSES .......................................................................................................20
2.21 TESTS OR EXPERIMENTS NOT DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED) .....................20
3 THE 10 CFR 72.48 PROCESS....................................................................................22
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3.1 OVERVIEW OF THE GUIDANCE.....................................................................................22
3.1.1 Possible Outcomes ........................................................................................22
3.1.2 Safety, Compliance and Regulatory Reviews.............................................23
3.1.3 Documentation ..............................................................................................24
3.1.4 Reporting.......................................................................................................26
3.1.5 Miscellaneous Guidance...............................................................................28
3.2 RELATIONSHIP OF 10 CFR 72.48 TO OTHER REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AND
ASSOCIATED CONTROLS ..............................................................................................30
3.2.1 Overview of Other Regulatory Control Processes.....................................30
3.2.2 Quality Assurance Program and 10 CFR 72.48.........................................31
3.2.3 10 CFR 72.48 and the 212 Report ...............................................................31
3.2.4 10 CFR 72.48 AND 10 CFR 50.59 ...............................................................32
4 10 CFR 72.48 APPLICABILITY DETERMINATION.....................................................35
4.1 APPLICABILITY TO LICENSEE AND COC HOLDER ACTIVITIES ..................................36
4.2 MAINTENANCE ACTIVITIES..........................................................................................37
4.3 EDITORIAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE CORRECTIONS......................................................38
4.4 MODIFICATIONS TO PROCEDURES GOVERNING THE CONDUCT OF OPERATIONS .....39
4.5 MODIFICATIONS TO APPROVED FIRE PROTECTION PROGRAMS................................39
4.6 MODIFICATIONS TO WRITTEN EVALUATIONS REQUIRED BY 10 CFR 72.212 ...........39
4.7 CASK DESIGN MODIFICATIONS AND OTHER ACTIVITIES AUTHORIZED BY A COC
HOLDER AND ADOPTED BY A GENERAL LICENSEE .....................................................40
4.8 APPLICABILITY DETERMINATION DOCUMENTATION .................................................41
4.9 APPLYING 10 CFR 72.48 TO COMPENSATORY ACTIONS TO ADDRESS
NONCONFORMING OR DEGRADED CONDITIONS..........................................................42
5 10 CFR 72.48 SCREENING........................................................................................45
5.1 IS THE ACTIVITY A CHANGE TO THE ISFSI FACILITY, SPENT FUEL STORAGE CASK
DESIGN, OR PROCEDURES AS DESCRIBED IN THE UFSAR?........................................47
5.1.1 Introduction...................................................................................................47
5.1.2 Screening for Adverse Effects......................................................................48
5.1.3 Screening of Proposed Activities Affecting the ISFSI Facility or Spent
Fuel Storage Cask Design as Described in the UFSAR.............................50
5.1.4 Screening of Proposed Modifications to Procedures as Described in the
UFSAR...........................................................................................................51
5.1.5 Screening Proposed Modifications to USFAR Methods of Evaluation ...52
5.2 IS THE ACTIVITY A TEST OR EXPERIMENT NOT DESCRIBED IN THE UFSAR?..........59
5.3 SCREENING DOCUMENTATION.....................................................................................59
6 10 CFR 72.48 EVALUATION......................................................................................61
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6.1 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN
THE FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE OF AN ACCIDENT PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN
THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?...........................................................................................62
6.2 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN
THE LIKELIHOOD OF OCCURRENCE OF A MALFUNCTION OF AN SSC IMPORTANT TO
SAFETY PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)? .............................64
6.3 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN
THE CONSEQUENCES OF AN ACCIDENT PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS
UPDATED)? ...................................................................................................................65
6.4 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN
THE CONSEQUENCES OF A MALFUNCTION OF AN SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY
PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?...........................................68
6.5 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY CREATE A POSSIBILITY FOR AN ACCIDENT OF A
DIFFERENT TYPE THAN ANY PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?68
6.6 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY CREATE A POSSIBILITY FOR A MALFUNCTION OF AN
SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY WITH A DIFFERENT RESULT THAN ANY PREVIOUSLY
EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)? .................................................................69
6.7 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN A DESIGN BASIS LIMIT FOR A FISSION
PRODUCT BARRIER AS DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED) BEING EXCEEDED
OR ALTERED? ...............................................................................................................70
6.7.1 Identification of Affected Design Basis Limits for a Fission Product
Barrier ...........................................................................................................71
6.7.2 Exceeded or Altered .....................................................................................73
6.8 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN A DEPARTURE FROM A METHOD OF
EVALUATION DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED) USED IN ESTABLISHING THE
DESIGN BASES OR IN THE SAFETY ANALYSES? ...........................................................74
6.8.1 Guidance for Changing One or More Elements of a Method of
Evaluation......................................................................................................77
6.8.2 Guidance for Changing from One Method of Evaluation to Another.....79
7 FIGURES ....................................................................................................................84
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GUIDELINES FOR 10 CFR 72.48 IMPLEMENTATION
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 PURPOSE
10 CFR 72.48 establishes the conditions under which an independent spent fuel storage
installation (ISFSI) licensee, a monitored retrievable storage installation (MRS) licensee,
or a spent fuel storage cask certificate holder may make changes to the ISFSI facility,
MRS, spent fuel storage cask design, or procedures; and conduct tests or experiments,
without prior NRC approval. Proposed activities that satisfy the definition of change, test,
or experiment included herein and meet one or more of the criteria in the rule must be
reviewed and approved by the NRC before implementation. Thus, 10 CFR 72.48
provides a threshold for regulatory review—not the final determination of safety—for
proposed activities.
The purpose of this document is to:
• Provide for consistent implementation of 10 CFR 72.48 requirements, and
• Assure that relevant aspects of proposed activities are considered.
NOTE: NEI 14-03, “Format, Content, and Implementation Guidance for Dry Cask
Storage Operations-Based Aging Management,” provides 10 CFR 72.48 implementation
guidance for renewed 10 CFR 72 specific licenses and CoCs. NEI 14-03 should be
consulted for additional guidance in applying 10 CFR 72.48 to proposed activities
involving SSCs described in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR that are subject to Aging
Management Programs (AMPs) and Time Limited Aging Analyses (TLAAs).
Recognizing that a diverse population of Part 72 general licensees, specific licensees, and
certificate of compliance (CoC) holders all perform activities under 10 CFR 72.48, an
effort was also made to provide guidance for developing effective and consistent 10 CFR
72.48 implementation processes while allowing flexibility for appropriate needs or
preferences among the parties using the guidance. This guidance document addresses the
implementation of 10 CFR 72.48 by ISFSI licensees and storage cask CoC holders.
Guidance for implementation of 10 CFR 72.48 by an MRS licensee or a wet pool ISFSI
licensee is not specifically included in this document.
In 1999, 10 CFR 72.48 was revised by the NRC to conform to the revised 10 CFR 50.59
to provide for consistent implementation of these two analogous regulations
(64FR53582). NEI 96-07 was subsequently developed to provide guidance to licensees in
implementing 10 CFR 50.59. Appendix B to that document was issued to provide
guidance to those authorized to make changes under 10 CFR 72.48 and retain the
connection to the commonalities in the 10 CFR 50.59 rule and its implementation. That
appendix was created from the guidance of NEI 96-07 for 10 CFR 50.59 with
modifications to the text and figures as needed to apply to 10 CFR 72.48.
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This new guidance document, which replaces NEI 96-07, Appendix B, recognizes that 10
CFR 72 has enough unique elements and diverse users (i.e., specific licensees, general
licensees, and CoC holders) that a separate guidance document is appropriate. A
concerted effort was made in developing this revised guidance to retain information that
is applicable to both 10 CFR 50.59 and 10 CFR 72.48 implementation (for licensees)
while recognizing the unique circumstances and issues that arise solely in implementing
10 CFR 72.48 (for licenses and CoC holders).
Throughout this document, the term “review” means the overall process of considering a
proposed activity for implementation under 10 CFR 72.48, using either a 10 CFR 72.48
screening, a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation, or both. Distinctions are made between the two
where necessary.
1.2 DEFENSE-IN-DEPTH DESIGN PHILOSOPHY AND 10 CFR 72.48
One objective of the NRC’s regulations in Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations is
to establish requirements for protecting the health and safety of the public from the
uncontrolled release of radioactivity. At the design stage for a spent fuel storage cask,
protection of public health and safety is ensured through the robust design of the physical
barriers to guard against the uncontrolled release of radioactivity and through the use of
shielding to minimize radiation dose to the public from both normal and off-normal
conditions of operation. The defense-in-depth philosophy includes reliable design
provisions to (1) prevent criticality, (2) withstand postulated accidents and natural
phenomena, (3) ensure fuel retrievability, and (4) provide heat removal capability. The
two physical barriers that provide defense-in-depth against the release of radioactivity
are:
• Spent Fuel Cask Confinement Boundary
These barriers perform a health and safety protection function. For storage of damaged
fuel, alternative barriers may also need to be utilized to provide functions that would
normally be served by the fuel cladding, such as retrievability and criticality prevention
(configuration of the fuel). The barriers are designed to reliably fulfill their operational
function by meeting all criteria and standards applicable to mechanical components and
pressure components. The public health and safety protection functions are demonstrated
and documented in the CoC holder’s UFSAR for the spent fuel storage cask or the Part
72 specific licensee’s ISFSI UFSAR. Analyses summarized in the UFSAR demonstrate
that under the assumed accident conditions, the consequences of accidents challenging
the integrity of the confinement barrier and/or shielding design features will not exceed
limits established in 10 CFR 72.106.
Analyses in the UFSAR also demonstrate that offsite doses during normal operations and
anticipated occurrences will not exceed the limits of 10 CFR 72.104. In addition, the
confinement barriers and systems must meet the criteria established in 10 CFR 72.122(h)
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for specific and general licensees, and 10 CFR 72.236 for CoC holders. Thus, the UFSAR
analyses provide the final verification of the nuclear safety design phase by documenting
ISFSI facility and/or spent fuel storage cask performance in terms of public protection
from uncontrolled releases of radiation and direct radiation. 10 CFR 72.48 addresses this
aspect of design by requiring prior NRC approval of proposed activities which, although
safe, require a change to the specific license, CoC, or technical specifications, or meet
specific threshold criteria for NRC review.
This protection philosophy pervades the UFSAR accident analyses and Title 10 of the
CFR. To understand and apply 10 CFR 72.48, it is necessary to understand this
perspective of maintaining the integrity of the physical barriers designed to contain
radioactivity and minimize doses to the public. This is because:
• UFSAR accidents and malfunctions are analyzed in terms of their effect on the
physical barriers. There is a relationship between barrier integrity and dose.
• The principal "consequence" that the physical barriers are designed to preclude is the
uncontrolled release of radioactivity. The storage cask design also provides shielding.
Thus, for purposes of 10 CFR 72.48, the term "consequences" means dose to
members of the public.
For many ISFSI licensees and spent fuel storage cask CoC holders, NRC Standard
Review Plan (SRP, including NUREG-1536 or NUREG-1567) guidelines identify the
accidents or malfunctions to be evaluated in the UFSAR. Accident events are considered
to occur infrequently, if ever, during the lifetime of the facility/cask. Consequences
resulting from accidents and malfunctions are analyzed and documented in the UFSAR
and are evaluated against dose acceptance limits of 10 CFR 72.106. In addition, the SRP
identifies anticipated occurrences (also known as off-normal events) to be evaluated in
the UFSAR that are expected to occur with moderate frequency or once per calendar
year. Doses from anticipated occurrences and normal operations must be within the limits
of 10 CFR 72.104.
The design effort and the operational controls necessary to ensure the required
performance of the physical barriers during normal operations, anticipated occurrences,
and accident conditions are extensive. Because 10 CFR 72.48 provides a mechanism for
determining if NRC approval is needed for activities affecting ISFSI facility and spent
fuel storage cask design and operation, it is helpful to briefly review the requirements and
the objectives imposed by the NRC’s regulations on ISFSI facility and spent fuel storage
cask design, construction and operation. The review will define more clearly the extent of
applicability of 10 CFR 72.48.
10 CFR 72, Subpart F establishes extensive requirements on ISFSI and spent fuel storage
cask design, inspection, testing, and operational requirements for the quality of the ISFSI
and spent fuel storage cask. These requirements ensure inherent and engineered
protection of the fission product barriers. Important-to-safety systems, structures, and
components must function under all design-basis conditions without loss of capability to
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perform their safety functions. These conditions include natural phenomena, fire,
operational, and accident-generated environmental conditions.
The following are considered the basic nuclear safety criteria for the design of an ISFSI
installation:
(1) Maintain subcriticality;
(2) Prevent the release of radioactive material above acceptable amounts; and
(3) Ensure radiation doses do not exceed acceptable levels.
(4) Maintain retrievability of the stored radioactive materials
The implementation of the defense-in-depth design philosophy requires extensive
accident analyses to define the correct relationship among nominal operating conditions,
functional and operating limits, and limiting conditions for operations in order to protect
the integrity of the stored fuel or waste container, and to guard against the uncontrolled
release of radioactive materials. The specific license UFSAR, the spent fuel storage cask
UFSAR, and the general licensee’s 10 CFR 72.212 evaluations present the set of limiting
analyses and evaluations required by NRC.
The limiting analyses are utilized to confirm the systems and equipment design, to
identify critical setpoints and operator actions, and to support the establishment of
technical specifications. Therefore, the results of the UFSAR accident analyses reflect
performance of equipment under the conditions specified by NRC regulations or
requirements. Modifications to an ISFSI facility, spent fuel storage cask design or
operation, or general license 10 CFR 72.212 Evaluation Report, and the conduct of new
tests and experiments have the potential to affect the probability and consequences of
accidents, to create new accidents and to impact the integrity of fission product barriers.
Therefore, these activities are subject to review under 10 CFR 72.48.
1.3 USE OF THE WORD “CHANGE”
The word “change” has a unique context for use in implementing 10 CFR 72.48, as
described 10 CFR 72.48(a)(1) and Definition 2.6. A “change” in the context of 10 CFR
72.48 requires an evaluation under the applicable criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2). The 10
CFR 72.48 screening process determines whether a proposed activity involves a “change”
as described in Definition 2.6, or a test or experiment. All proposed activities determined
to be “changes,” by this definition, have an adverse effect on a design function, method
of performing or controlling a design function, or a method of evaluation and require a 10
CFR 72.48 evaluation. Thus, the phrase “adverse change” is redundant and not used in
this guidance. Consistent with this definition of “change,” throughout this document an
effort is made to use terms such as “proposed activity,” “proposed modification,” or
“proposed revision” to indicate an activity that has not yet been determined to be a
change, test, or experiment by the 10 CFR 72.48 screening process.
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2 DEFINITIONS
2.1 10 CFR 72.48 EVALUATION
Definition:
A 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is the documented review against the applicable criteria in 10
CFR 72.48(c)(2) to determine, prior to implementing a proposed change, test or
experiment, if the change, test, or experiment would require NRC approval via license
amendment under 10 CFR 72.56 (specific licensee) or CoC amendment under 10 CFR
72.244 (cask certificate holder, for itself or for a general licensee).
Discussion:
It is important to establish common terminology for use relative to the 10 CFR 72.48
process. The definitions of 10 CFR 72.48 Screening and 10 CFR 72.48 Evaluation are
intended to clearly distinguish between the process and documentation of 10 CFR 72.48
screenings and the further evaluation that may be required of proposed activities against
the applicable criteria in 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2). Section 6 provides guidance for performing
10 CFR 72.48 evaluations. The 10 CFR 72.48 screening process is discussed in Section
5.0.
The phrase “activity implemented under 10 CFR 72.48” (or equivalent) refers to
activities subject to the rule that either screened out (i.e., did not require a 10 CFR 72.48
evaluation) or did not require prior NRC approval based on the results of a 10 CFR 72.48
evaluation. Similarly, the phrases “10 CFR 72.48 applies [to an activity]” or “[an activity]
is subject to 10 CFR 72.48” mean that a 10 CFR 72.48 review (i.e., screening and, if
necessary, a 72.48 evaluation) is required for the activity. The “10 CFR 72.48 process”
includes screening, evaluation, documentation, and reporting to others (e.g., licensees,
CoC holders and the NRC) of activities subject to the rule.
2.2 10 CFR 72.212 EVALUATION REPORT (212 REPORT)
Definition:
The 10 CFR 72.212 Evaluation Report (212 Report) is the compiled set of written
evaluations required by 10 CFR 72.212 (b)(5), (b)(6), and (b)(8). The 212 Report is a
licensing basis document developed and maintained by the general licensee documenting
compliance with the cask CoC and how the generic cask design is suitable for use at that
particular site.
Discussion:
Guidance for applying this definition is provided in Section 3.2.3.
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2.3 10 CFR 72.48 SCREENING
Definition:
10 CFR 72.48 screening is the process for determining whether a proposed activity
requires a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation to be performed.
Discussion:
The 10 CFR 72.48 screening process considers four possible aspects of a proposed
activity:
1. Impact(s) on SSC design functions (Definitions 2.6, 2.9, 2.10, 2.11 and 2.12)
2. Impact(s) on procedures and how SSC design functions are performed and
controlled (Definitions 2.6, 2.10 and 2.18)
3. Impact(s) on Methods of Evaluation (Definition 2.15 and 2.17)
4. Impact(s) on Tests or Experiments (Definitions 2.19 and 2.21)
The referenced definitions contain information for the 10 CFR 72.48 screening process.
Activities that do not meet these criteria are said to “screen out” from further review
under 10 CFR 72.48, i.e., they are not changes, tests, or experiments and may be
implemented without a 10 CFR72.48 evaluation. Engineering and technical information
concerning a proposed activity (e.g., calculations, analyses, design modification
packages, etc.) may be used along with other information as a basis for determining if the
activity screens out or requires a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation.
Further discussion and guidance on screening is provided in Section 5.
2.4 ACCIDENT PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)
Definition:
Accident previously evaluated in the FSAR (as updated) means an anticipated occurrence
(off-normal event) or design basis accident or event described in the ISFSI or spent fuel
storage cask UFSAR, such as those typically analyzed in the accident analyses section(s)
of the UFSAR. It also includes events the ISFSI facility or cask design is required to
withstand such as floods, fires, earthquakes, and other external hazards.
Discussion:
The term "accidents" encompasses man-made and natural phenomenon events for which
the ISFSI facility or cask design is required to cope and which are described in the
UFSAR (e.g., tornado missiles, fire, earthquakes and flooding).
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Accidents also include new anticipated occurrences (off-normal events) or postulated
events added to the licensing basis based on new NRC requirements or unique aspects of
the ISFSI facility or cask design or operations. These events are reflected in the UFSAR
pursuant to 10 CFR 72.70 (specific licensee) or 10 CFR 72.248 (certificate holder and
general licensee).
2.5 ADOPTION
Definition:
Adoption means the process by which a general or specific licensee uses a generic
activity authorized by a CoC holder under 10 CFR 72.48 or a CoC holder uses an activity
authorized by a licensee under 10 CFR 72.48.
Discussion:
A specific licensee would need to perform a 10 CFR 72.48 review of the activity against
its ISFSI UFSAR. A general licensee can adopt a generic activity without performing a
separate 10 CFR 72.48 review. The activity would be reviewed against the site’s 212
Report, procedures, and programs. Revisions required to be made to those documents as a
result of adopting the generic activity may require a 10 CFR 72.48 review under the
licensee’s program. CoC holders would need to perform a 10 CFR 72.48 review of the
activity against the cask UFSAR, as applicable. Additional guidance for applying this
definition is provided in Sections 3.1.5.1, 3.1.5.3, 3.1.5.4, and 3.1.5.5.
2.6 CHANGE
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(1)):
Change means a modification or addition to, or removal from, the ISFSI facility or spent
fuel storage cask design or procedures that affects: (1) a design function, (2) method of
performing or controlling the function, or (3) an evaluation that demonstrates that
intended functions will be accomplished.
Discussion:
Additions to, and removals from the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design or
procedures can adversely affect the performance of SSCs and the bases for the
acceptability of their design and operation. Thus, the definition of change includes
modifications of an existing provision (e.g., SSC design requirement, analysis method or
parameter), additions or removals (physical removals, abandonment, or non-reliance on a
system to meet a requirement) to the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design or
procedures.
The definitions of “change…,” “facility or spent fuel storage cask design…,” (Definition
2.12), and “procedures…” (Definition 2.18) make clear that 10 CFR 72.48 applies to
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changes to underlying analytical bases for the ISFSI facility or cask design and operation,
as well as changes to SSCs and procedures. Thus, 10 CFR 72.48 should be applied to a
change being made to an evaluation for demonstrating adequacy of the ISFSI facility or
cask design even if no physical change to the ISFSI facility or cask design is involved.
Further discussion of the terms in this definition is provided in Definition 2.10 and as
follows:
“Method of performing or controlling a function” means how a design function is
accomplished as credited in the safety analyses, including specific operator actions (e.g.,
manual operation of a valve on a transfer cask) or a procedural step or sequence of steps
used to perform or control the design function.
“Evaluation that demonstrates that intended functions will be accomplished” means the
method(s) used to perform the evaluation (as discussed in Definition 2.17). For example,
a thermodynamic calculation that demonstrates the storage cask design has sufficient heat
removal capacity for responding to a postulated accident.
Temporary modifications to the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design or
procedures, such as placing temporary lead shielding on equipment, removal of barriers
and use of temporary scaffolding and supports, are made to facilitate a range of ISFSI or
cask activities and are subject to 10 CFR 72.48 as follows:
• 10 CFR 72.48 should be applied to temporary modifications proposed as
compensatory measures to address degraded or non-conforming conditions as
discussed in Section 4.9.
• Other temporary modifications to the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design
or procedures are subject to 10 CFR 72.48 in the same manner as permanent
modifications, to determine if prior NRC approval is required. Screening and, as
necessary, evaluation of such temporary modifications may be considered as part of
the screening/evaluation of a proposed permanent modification.
The Maintenance Rule, 10 CFR 50.65, does not apply to activities governed by 10 CFR
Part 72. See Section 4.2 for additional clarifying discussion of the application of 10 CFR
72.48 to ISFSI or cask maintenance activities.
2.7 CLASS OF ANALYSIS
Definition:
The class of analysis is descriptive of the configuration being analyzed. For example, a
cask stack-up seismic stability analysis is a different class of analysis than a cask tornado
missile analysis, even though both are structural analyses.
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Discussion:
Guidance for applying this definition is provided in Section 6.8.
2.8 DEPARTURE FROM A METHOD OF EVALUATION DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)
USED IN ESTABLISHING THE DESIGN BASES OR IN THE SAFETY ANALYSES
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(2)):
Departure from a method of evaluation described in the FSAR (as updated) used in
establishing the design bases or in the safety analyses means (i) changing any of the
elements of the method described in the FSAR (as updated) unless the results of the
analysis are conservative or essentially the same; or (ii) changing from a method
described in the FSAR to another method unless that method has been approved by NRC
for the intended application.
Discussion:
The 10 CFR 72.48 definition of “departure …” provides licensees and CoC holders with
the flexibility to make changes in methods of evaluation that are “conservative” or that
are not important with respect to demonstrating that SSCs can perform their intended
design functions. See also the definition and discussion of “method of evaluation” in
Definition 2.17. Guidance for evaluating changes in methods of evaluation under
criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii) is provided in Section 6.8.
Conservative vs. Non-Conservative Evaluation Results
Gaining margin by revising an element of a method of evaluation is considered to be a
non-conservative change and thus a departure from a method of evaluation for purposes
of 10 CFR 72.48. Such departures require prior NRC approval of the revised method. In
other words, analytical results obtained by changing any element of a method are
“conservative” relative to the previous results, if they are closer to design bases limits or
safety analyses limits (e.g., applicable acceptance guidelines). The licensee or CoC
holder should ensure that this determination holds over the range of applicability of the
MOE for the system being evaluated and that the uncertainties in the MOE are accounted
for.
For example, a change in an element of a method of evaluation that changes the result of
a cask peak pressure analysis from 45 psig to 48 psig (with design basis limit of 50 psig)
would be considered a conservative change for purposes of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii).
This is because results closer to limiting values are considered conservative in the sense
that the new analysis result provides less margin to applicable limits for making future
physical or procedure changes without a license or CoC amendment. See Section 6.8.1
for additional discussion of addressing analysis uncertainty as an element of an MOE.
If use of a modified element of a method of evaluation resulted in a change in calculated
cask peak pressure from 45 psig to 40 psig, this would be non-conservative. This is
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because the change would result in more margin being available (to the design basis limit
of 50 psig) for a licensee or CoC holder to make future changes to the cask design or
procedures that once again reduce the margin.
“Essentially the Same”
Licensees and CoC holders may change one or more elements of a method of evaluation
such that results move in the conservative or non-conservative direction without prior
NRC approval, provided the results are “essentially the same” as the previous results
from the MOE without the modified element(s). Results are “essentially the same” if they
are within the margin of error for the type of analysis being performed. Variation in
results due to routine analysis sensitivities or calculational differences (e.g., rounding
errors and use of different computational platforms) would typically be within the
analysis margin of error and thus considered “essentially the same.” In evaluating a
change to an element of an MOE, it is important that the 10 CFR 72.48 documentation
clearly explain the MOE margin of error used in the determination of results being
“essentially the same,” even if the margin of error is not addressed in the associated
“Approved by the NRC for the Intended Application”
Rather than make a minor change to an existing method of evaluation, a licensee or CoC
holder may also adopt a completely new or different methodology without prior NRC
approval provided the new or different method is approved by the NRC for the intended
application. A new or different method is “approved by the NRC for the intended
application” if it is approved for the type of analysis being conducted and the licensee or
CoC holder satisfies applicable terms and conditions for its use. More detailed guidance
for making this determination is provided in Section 6.8.
2.9 DESIGN BASES (DESIGN BASIS)
Definition (10 CFR 72.3):
Design bases means that information that identifies the specific functions to be performed
by a structure, system, or component of an ISFSI facility or of a spent fuel storage cask
and the specific values or ranges of values chosen for controlling parameters as reference
bounds for design. These values may be restraints derived from generally accepted stateof-the-art practices for achieving functional goals or requirements derived from analysis
(based on calculation or experiments) of the effects of a postulated event under which a
structure, system, or component must meet its functional goals. The values for controlling
parameters for external events include:
1) Estimates of severe natural events to be used for deriving design bases that will be
based on consideration of historical data on the associated parameters, physical data,
or analysis of upper limits of the physical processes involved; and
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2) Estimates of severe external man-induced events to be used for deriving design bases
that will be based on analysis of human activity in the region, taking into account the
site characteristics and the risks associated with the event.
Discussion:
The definition of design bases in 10 CFR 72.3 is analogous to the definition of design
bases in 10 CFR 50.2. Guidance and examples for identifying 10 CFR 50.2 design bases
are provided in Appendix B of NEI 97-04, Design Bases Program Guidelines, Revision 1
and may be useful with implementing 10 CFR 72.48 also. The NRC endorsed Appendix
B to NEI 97-04, Revision 1 in Regulatory Guide (RG) 1.186. NEI 97-04, Appendix B
states the following:
10 CFR 50.2 design bases consist of the following:
• Design bases functions: Functions performed by SSCs that are (1) required to meet
regulations, license or CoC conditions, orders or technical specifications, or (2)
credited in safety analyses to meet NRC requirements.
• Design bases values: Values or ranges of values of controlling parameters established
as reference bounds for design to meet design bases functional requirements. These
values may be (1) established by NRC requirement, (2) derived from or confirmed by
safety analyses, or (3) chosen by the licensee or CoC holder from an applicable code,
standard, or guidance document.
2.10 DESIGN FUNCTION
Definition:
Design functions are UFSAR-described design bases functions and other SSC functions
described in the UFSAR that support or impact design bases functions. Implicitly
included within the meaning of design function are the conditions under which intended
functions are required to be performed, such as equipment response times, process
conditions, equipment qualification and single failure.
Design bases functions are functions performed by SSCs that are (1) required by, or
otherwise necessary to comply with, regulations, license conditions, CoC conditions,
orders or technical specifications, or (2) credited in licensee or CoC holder safety
analyses to meet NRC requirements.
Discussion:
Design functions identify what SSCs are intended to do, when and how design functions
are to be performed, and under what conditions. The UFSAR description of design
functions may identify what SSCs are intended to do, when and how design functions are
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to be performed, and under what conditions. Design functions may be performed by
important-to-safety SSCs or not-important-to-safety SSCs and include functions that, if
not performed, would initiate an accident that the ISFSI or cask design is required to
withstand.
Design functions are also reflected in values or ranges of values of controlling parameters
established as reference bounds for design to meet design bases functional requirements.
For instance, the design pressure of the confinement is a controlling parameter for its
design basis function as a fission product barrier that is credited in the safety analyses.
SSCs that impact confinement pressure have a design function.
As used above, “credited in the safety analyses” means that, if the SSC were not to
perform its design bases function in the manner described, the assumed initial conditions,
mitigative actions or other information in the analyses would no longer be within the
range evaluated (i.e., the analysis results would be called into question). The phrase
“support or impact design bases functions” refers both to those SSCs needed to support
design bases functions (cooling, power, environmental control, etc.) and to SSCs whose
operation or malfunction could adversely affect the performance of design bases
functions (for instance, control systems and physical arrangements). Thus, both
important-to-safety and non- important-to-safety SSCs may perform design functions.
Numerical Values as Design Functions
A UFSAR contains a multitude of numerical values. Some of these numerical values are
classified as input parameters, while others describe a feature, attribute or characteristic
of an SSC. In either case, proposed SSC changes that involve, affect or impact a UFSARdescribed numerical value must be considered in the 10 CFR 72.48 review process.
Design functions identify what SSCs are intended to do, when and how design functions
are to be performed, and under what conditions. For each of these, the constituent may be
described numerically. These may include values such as environmental temperature
where the SSC operates.
2.11 FACILITY
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(3)):
Facility means either an independent spent fuel storage installation (ISFSI) or a
Monitored Retrievable Storage facility (MRS).
Discussion:
In this guidance, references to “facility” address only ISFSIs. For specific licensees, this
is the ISFSI described in the Part 72 UFSAR. For general licensees, this is the ISFSI
described in the site 212 Report.
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2.12 FACILITY OR SPENT FUEL STORAGE CASK DESIGN AS DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS
UPDATED)
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(4)):
Facility or spent fuel storage cask design as described in the final safety analysis report
(FSAR) (as updated) means:
• The structures, systems, and components (SSC) that are described in the FSAR (as
updated),
• The design and performance requirements for such SSCs described in the FSAR (as
updated), and
• The evaluations or methods of evaluation included in the FSAR (as updated) for such
SSCs which demonstrate that their intended function(s) will be accomplished.
Discussion:
The term “facility” as used in this guidance means the ISFSI facility as defined in
Definition 2.11. It does not include the Part 50 facility.
For specific licensees, the scope of information that is the focus of 10 CFR 72.48 is the
information presented in the UFSAR for the ISFSI facility and spent fuel storage cask
design submitted and updated per the requirements of 10 CFR 72.70.
For cask certificate holders, the scope of information that is the focus of 10 CFR 72.48 is
the information presented in the UFSAR for the spent fuel storage cask design submitted
and updated per the requirements of 10 CFR 72.248.
For general licensees, the scope of information that is the focus of 10 CFR 72.48 is the
information presented in the UFSAR revision adopted for the spent fuel storage casks
deployed at the site’s ISFSI, as amended by changes and deviations authorized under 10
See Definition 2.13 for additional clarifying discussion of the UFSAR.
2.13 FINAL SAFETY ANALYSIS REPORT (AS UPDATED) (UFSAR)
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(5)):
Final Safety Analysis Report (as updated) means:
• For specific licensees, the Safety Analysis Report for a facility submitted and updated
in accordance with 10 CFR 72.70;
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• For general licensees, the Safety Analysis Report for a spent fuel storage cask design,
as amended and supplemented; and
• For certificate holders, the Safety Analysis Report for a spent fuel storage cask design
submitted and updated in accordance with 10 CFR 72.248.
Discussion:
As used throughout this guidance document, UFSAR is synonymous with “FSAR (as
updated).” The scope of the UFSAR includes its text, tables, diagrams, etc., as well as
supplemental information explicitly incorporated by reference. References that are
merely listed in the UFSAR and documents that are not explicitly incorporated by
reference are not considered part of the UFSAR and therefore are not subject to control
under 10 CFR 72.48.
For specific licensees, the UFSAR is similar to that for a Part 50 UFSAR. That is, the
specific licensee owns and maintains the ISFSI UFSAR. The applicable revision of the
specific license ISFSI UFSAR is always the latest version submitted to the NRC pursuant
to 10 CFR 72.70, as revised by any modifications (i.e., editorial or administrative
corrections and those approved under a 10 CFR 72.48 screening or evaluation) between
formal revisions.
For CoC holders, the UFSAR is always the latest approved revision plus any
modifications (i.e., editorial or administrative corrections and those approved under a 10
CFR 72.48 screening or evaluation). It is not required, but is recommended that CoC
holders maintain the cask UFSAR in a manner that supports all approved amendments to
the cask CoC. This would allow the general licensees using that cask to have a single
UFSAR of record, even if casks were loaded under several different CoC amendments.
For general licensees, the generic UFSAR is owned and maintained by the CoC holder
for the cask design(s) used at the ISFSI. Therefore, the UFSAR that forms the basis for
10 CFR 72.48 reviews for the general licensee means the UFSAR revision used to load
the particular serial number cask(s) and place them into storage at the ISFSI, as revised
by any applicable modifications (i.e., editorial or administrative corrections and those
approved under a 10 CFR 72.48 screening or evaluation).
Once the casks loaded under a particular cask UFSAR revision are placed into service at
a generally licensed ISFSI, the UFSAR revision applicable to a given serial number cask
remains constant, but may be modified or augmented by changes made pursuant to 10
CFR 72.48, as may be appropriate to address significant safety issues, recertification to a
later CoC amendment, or responsible maintenance of the licensing basis. General
licensees may choose to adopt a later cask UFSAR revision or apply a UFSAR
modification approved under a 10 CFR 72.48 screening or evaluation to casks under a
prior CoC amendment at their discretion.
Because of this unique situation for general licensees, not all casks in service at the same
ISFSI may have the same licensing basis. Thus, the licensing basis for each serial number
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cask should be documented by the general licensee in the 212 Report or other readily
retrievable document to ensure the basis for the 10 CFR 72.48 program is clear for each
cask at the ISFSI.
Modifications and deviations authorized by the general licensee with respect to the cask
UFSAR are documented in the general licensee’s 10 CFR 72.48 records. It is
recommended that general licensee modifications and deviations with respect to the cask
UFSAR be identified (i.e., listed and summarized) in the 212 Report or other readily
retrievable document to ensure the current licensing basis is available to interested
parties, including others performing 10 CFR 72.48 reviews of activities for that ISFSI.
In accordance with 10 CFR 72.48(c)(3), the “FSAR (as updated),” for purposes of 10
CFR 72.48, also includes UFSAR update pages approved by the licensee or certificate
holder since the last required update was submitted per 10 CFR 72.70 or 10 CFR 72.248,
as applicable. The intent of this requirement is to ensure that decisions about proposed
activities are made with the most complete and accurate information available. Pending
UFSAR revisions may be relevant to a future activity that involves that part of the
UFSAR. Therefore, pending UFSAR revisions to reflect completed activities that have
received final licensee or CoC holder approval for incorporation in the next required
update should be considered as part of the UFSAR for purposes of 10 CFR 72.48
screenings and evaluations, as appropriate. General licensees perform a review of CoCholder-approved activities for applicability and adoption at their ISFSI as described in
Section 4.7. If adopted, the approved activity is part of the general licensee’s UFSAR for
the ISFSI.
Appropriate configuration management mechanisms should be in place to identify and
assess interactions between concurrent changes affecting the same SSCs or the same
portion of the UFSAR. The configuration management mechanisms for general licensees
(and specific licensees, as applicable) should ensure that they are notified in a timely
manner of applicable pending UFSAR changes by the certificate holders of the casks they
are using, so that these pending changes will be considered in subsequent 10 CFR 72.48
reviews performed by the licensees.
2.14 IMPLEMENTATION OF 10 CFR 72.48-AUTHORIZED ACTIVITY
Definition:
Implementation of an activity authorized under 10 CFR 72.48 is defined in two different
contexts. For the CoC holder, implementation is deemed to have occurred at the time the
10 CFR 72.48 screening or evaluation document is approved, legally modifying the
licensing basis. This context also applies to licensee activities that are immediately
effective upon approval of the 10 CFR 72.48 review and other associated approval
paperwork is complete (e.g., procedure review package).
For the specific or general licensee, implementation of design modification activities and
other similar activities that may have delayed implementation after approval of the 10
CFR 72.48 review is deemed to have occurred when the activity authorized by 10 CFR
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72.48 is deployed in the field. That is, the affected equipment is placed in service or
declared operational.
Discussion:
Upon implementation of an activity by a CoC holder, the CoC holder then has 60 days to
send a copy of the 10 CFR 72.48 documentation for the activity to affected licensees to
comply with the requirements of 10 CFR 72.48(d)(6)(iii). If the activity (e.g., a physical
cask design change) is revised again before fabrication to modify the original
modification, the authorizing 10 CFR 72.48 review must be revised to recognize the
revision and re-submitted to the licensees. Upon implementation by a licensee, the
licensee then has 60 days to comply with the applicable documentation requirements of
10 CFR 72.48(d)(6)(i) and (ii). Additional guidance for applying this definition is
provided in Section 3.1.4.1.
2.15 INPUT PARAMETERS
Definition:
Input parameters are those values derived directly from the physical characteristics of
SSCs or processes in the ISFSI facility or cask design, including flow rates, temperatures,
pressures, dimensions or measurements (e.g., volume, weight, size, etc.), and system
response times.
Discussion:
The principal intent of this definition is to distinguish methods of evaluation from input
parameters. Changes to methods of evaluation described in the UFSAR (see Definition
2.17) are evaluated under criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii), whereas changes to input
parameters described in the UFSAR are considered changes to the ISFSI facility or cask
design that would be evaluated under the other seven criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2), but
not criterion (c)(2)(viii).
There are two cases in which an input parameter is treated as an element within a method
of evaluation. For guidance regarding these two cases, refer to Definition 2.17. See also
Section 5.1.5.1 for step-by-step guidance in determining if a value is an input parameter
or a part of the MOE.
Assumptions for operator actions (e.g., response time to alarm, or timing of performance
of a measurement or action) are generally considered input parameters because they
describe how a design function is performed or controlled and are normally included in
procedures. However, an assumption for operator action, like any input parameter, can be
considered an element of an MOE if it meets the criteria for an input parameter being an
element of an MOE as discussed in Definition 2.17.
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2.16 MALFUNCTION OF AN SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY
Definition:
Malfunction of SSCs important to safety means the failure of SSCs to perform their
intended design functions described in the UFSAR.
Discussion:
The term “malfunction of an SSC important to safety” refers to the failure of structures,
systems and components (SSCs) to perform their intended design functions. This includes
both important to safety (ITS) SSCs and not-important to safety (NITS) SSCs when the
failure of the NITS SSC to perform its design function could affect the ability of the ITS
SSC to perform its design functions. Guidance for applying this definition is provided in
Sections 5 and 6.
2.17 METHOD OF EVALUATION
Definition:
Method of evaluation means the calculational framework used for evaluating behavior or
response of the ISFSI facility, cask design, or an SSC.
Discussion:
Examples of elements of methods of evaluation are presented below. Proposed activities
involving modifications to such methods of evaluation require evaluation under 10 CFR
72.48(c)(2)(viii) only for methods of evaluation used either in UFSAR safety analyses or
in establishing the design bases, and only if the methods are described, outlined or
summarized in the UFSAR. Proposed activities involving modifications to methods of
evaluation that are subject to 10 CFR 72.48 include changes to elements of existing
methods described in the UFSAR and to changes that involve replacement of existing
methods of evaluation with alternative methodologies.
Elements of Methodology Example
Data correlations • Tipover and end drop analysis based on industryreferenced reports
Means of data reduction • ASME methods for evaluating cask parameters, e.g.,
elastic stress intensity
Physical constants or coefficients • Heat transfer coefficients, boundary conditions,
burnup peaking factors, and cross-section libraries
• Friction coefficient in a tipover analysis
• Fuel assembly burnup profiles
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Methods of evaluation described in the UFSAR subject to criterion 10 CFR
72.48(c)(2)(viii) are:
• Methods of evaluation used in analyses that demonstrate that design basis limits of
fission product barriers are met (i.e., for the parameters subject to criterion 10 CFR
• Methods of evaluation used in UFSAR safety analyses, including cask and accident
analyses typically presented in the accident analyses section(s) of the UFSAR, to
demonstrate that consequences of accidents do not exceed 10 CFR 72.106 dose limits.
• Methods of evaluation used in supporting UFSAR analyses that demonstrate intended
design functions will be accomplished under design basis conditions that the ISFSI
facility and cask design are required to withstand accident, including natural
phenomena, environmental conditions, and man-made events.
• Methods of evaluation used in UFSAR analyses that demonstrate that radioactive
doses from normal operations and anticipated occurrences will be within the limits of
• Methods of evaluation subject to criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii) do not include
methods used to select fuel for loading into the cask (i.e., decay heat and burnup
determinations and classifying fuel as intact, undamaged, or damaged, etc.) unless
those methods are described in the UFSAR.
If a methodology establishes a range of allowable values and permits the licensee or cask
certificate holder to establish the specific value of an input parameter on the basis of
ISFSI facility- or cask design-specific considerations, then that value is an input to the
methodology, not part of the methodology, provided the selected value remains within
Mathematical models • Methods of heat transfer assumed (i.e., conduction,
convection, and radiation), mesh size, material
performance – elastic or plastic
Specific limitations and
assumptions of a computer
program
• Benchmarking and correlation ranges
Specified factors to account for
uncertainty in measurements or
data
• Criticality calculation biases, fuel burnup, percent
fuel burnup uncertainty, and administrative margin
(as applied to criticality analysis)
Statistical treatment of results • Vendor-specific analysis approach (e.g., material
property testing of composite neutron poison, B-10
content validation from blackness testing, confidence
and tolerance limits)
Dose conversion factors and
assumed source terms
• ICRP version and factor set
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that range. On the other hand, an input parameter is considered to be an element of the
methodology if:
• The method of evaluation includes a description of how to select the value of an input
parameter to yield adequately conservative results. However, if a licensee or cask
certificate holder opts to use a value more conservative than that required by the
selection method, reduction in that conservatism should be evaluated as an input
parameter change, not a change in methodology.
• The development or approval of a methodology was predicated on the degree of
conservatism in a particular input parameter or set of input parameters. In other
words, if certain elements of a methodology or model were accepted on the basis of
the conservatism of a selected input value, then that input value is considered an
element of the methodology.
2.18 PROCEDURES AS DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(6)):
Procedures as described in the Final Safety Analysis Report (as updated) means those
procedures that contain information described in the FSAR (as updated) such as how
SSCs are operated and controlled (including assumed operator actions and response
times).
Discussion:
For purposes of 10 CFR 72.48, “procedures” are not limited to procedures specifically
identified in the UFSAR (e.g., operating and emergency procedures). Procedures include
UFSAR descriptions of how actions related to system operation are to be performed and
controls over the performance of design functions. This includes UFSAR descriptions of
operator action sequencing or response times, certain descriptions (text or figure) of SSC
operation and operating modes, operational and radiological controls, and similar
information. For example, if the UFSAR description of the mitigation of an accident
includes an operator taking an action, it would be considered a “procedure.” If
modifications to these activities or controls are made, such modifications are considered
revisions to procedures described in the UFSAR, and the revisions are subject to 10 CFR
10 CFR 72.48 screening of procedures is discussed in Section 5.1.
2.19 REFERENCE BOUNDS
Definition:
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Reference bounds are the limits or requirements (e.g., design, physical, operational, etc.)
imposed by the numerical values or ranges of values for the design described in the
Discussion:
Guidance for applying this definition is provided in Section 5.2.
2.20 SAFETY ANALYSES
Definition:
Safety analyses are analyses performed pursuant to NRC requirements to demonstrate the
design and performance of structures, systems, and components important to safety, with
the objective of assessing the impact on public health and safety, resulting from operation
of the ISFSI and including determination of:
(1) The margins of safety during normal operations and expected operational occurrences
during the life of the ISFSI; and
(2) The adequacy of structures, systems, and components provided for the prevention of
accidents and the mitigation of the consequences of accidents, including natural and
manmade phenomena and events.
Discussion:
Safety analyses are those analyses or evaluations that demonstrate that acceptance criteria
for the ISFSI facility’s or cask design’s capability to withstand or respond to postulated
events are met. Cask accident analyses typically presented in the accident analyses
section(s) of the UFSAR clearly fall within the meaning of “safety analyses” as defined
above. Also within the meaning of this definition for purposes of 10 CFR 72.48 are:
• Supporting UFSAR analyses that demonstrate that SSC design functions (including
not-important-to-safety SSCs that support ITS SSC design functions) will be
accomplished as credited in the accident analyses;
• UFSAR analyses of events that the ISFSI facility or cask design is required to
withstand such as tornado missiles, fires, floods, and earthquakes; and
• UFSAR analyses that demonstrate the design and performance of structures, systems,
and components important to safety during normal operations and expected
operational occurrences.
2.21 TESTS OR EXPERIMENTS NOT DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)
Definition (10 CFR 72.48(a)(7)):
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Tests or experiments not described in the Final Safety Analysis Report (as updated)
means any activity where any SSC is utilized or controlled in a manner which is either:
• Outside the reference bounds of the design bases as described in the UFSAR, or
• Inconsistent with the analyses or descriptions in the UFSAR.
Discussion:
10 CFR 72.48 is applied to tests or experiments not described in the UFSAR. The intent
of the definition is to ensure that any activity that puts the ISFSI facility or cask design in
a situation that has not previously been evaluated (e.g., unanalyzed storage conditions) or
that could affect the capability of SSCs to perform their intended design functions (e.g.,
high stresses, high temperatures) are evaluated before they are conducted to determine if
prior NRC approval is required.
2.22 TYPE OF ANALYSIS
The type of analysis is the discipline of the analysis (i.e., structural, thermal, shielding,
criticality, etc.) and the numeric model (i.e., classical closed form equation, finite
element, finite difference, Monte Carlo, discrete ordinate, etc.).
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3 THE 10 CFR 72.48 PROCESS
3.1 OVERVIEW OF THE GUIDANCE
NEI 12-04 contains six sections:
• Section 1 (Introduction) describes the purpose of 10 CFR 72.48 and NEI 12-04.
• Section 2 (Definitions) defines and discusses the key terms used in 10 CFR 72.48
and this guidance document.
• Section 3 (The 10 CFR 72.48 Process) provides an overview of the 10 CFR 72.48
process and related regulatory requirements and associated documents.
• Section 4 (Applicability Determination) describes and provides guidance on how
to identify the particular change-control regulation(s) that apply to a proposed
activity.
• Section 5 (10 CFR 72.48 Screening) describes and provides guidance for
implementing the 10 CFR 72.48 screening process.
• Section 6 (10 CFR 72.48 Evaluation) describes and provides guidance for
implementing the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation process.
3.1.1 Possible Outcomes
There are two possible conclusions to a 10 CFR 72.48 review:
(1) The proposed activity may be implemented without prior NRC approval.
(2) The proposed activity requires prior NRC approval.
If prior NRC approval of an activity is required, specific licensees would
normally seek a license amendment in accordance with 10 CFR 72.56 and CoC
holders would normally request a cask CoC amendment in accordance with 10
CFR 72.244. Alternatively, specific licensees and CoC holders could seek an
exemption pursuant to 10 CFR 72.7 to allow implementation of a proposed
activity for which the 10 CFR 72.48 review determined prior NRC review and
approval is required. If a general licensee determines that prior NRC approval of
an activity is required pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48, the licensee would need to
request that the CoC holder for their cask system seek a CoC amendment, or the
general licensee could request an exemption pursuant to 10 CFR 72.7. General
licensees may not request a CoC amendment unless they also happen to be the
CoC holder.
The definition of “implemented” varies with respect to 10 CFR 72.48 depending
on the entity performing the activity. See Definition 2.14. This unique provision
for CoC holders is necessary to provide a starting point for the 60-day
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requirement to notify licensees of changes and to ensure general licensees have
sufficient time to make any site-specific changes necessary to implement the
change (i.e., procedures, 212 Report, etc.) if they choose to adopt it as provided in
Definition 2.4. For activities requiring prior NRC approval, a licensee or CoC
holder may design, plan, fabricate, install, and test a modification prior to
receiving the license or CoC amendment at their own risk but may not make it
operational prior to receiving NRC approval.
For proposed activities that are determined to require prior NRC approval based
on the 10 CFR 72.48 review, there are four possible options:
(2) Revise the proposed activity so that it may proceed without prior NRC
approval, if possible.
(3) Apply for and obtain a license or cask CoC amendment under 10 CFR 72.56
or 10 CFR 72.244, as applicable, prior to implementing the activity.
(4) Apply for an exemption pursuant to 10 CFR 72.7.
(5) Cancel the activity.
3.1.2 Safety, Compliance and Regulatory Reviews
It is important to remember that determining if a proposed activity requires prior
NRC approval pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48 does not include a judgment as to
whether the activity is appropriate, safe to do, and otherwise meets all applicable
regulatory requirements and commitments. Certainly, all of these questions
should be answered in the affirmative for any activity being contemplated, prior
to initiating the 10 CFR 72.48 review. It is the responsibility of the ISFSI licensee
or cask CoC holder to ensure that proposed activities are safe and compliant with
all regulations. These elements of approving and implementing an activity are
governed by other programs such as the design control, testing, and inspection
portions of the Quality Assurance program; the commitment control program; and
the regulatory compliance program.
A proposed activity that significantly enhances overall ISFSI facility or cask
safety at the expense of a small adverse effect in a specific area may still need
prior NRC approval because it requires a change to the license/CoC or one of the
criteria in 10 CFR 72.48(c) is met. Thus the 10 CFR 72.48 review is not a “safety
evaluation.” It is a separate, regulatory review to determine if the activity, already
determined by the licensee/CoC holder to be safe and compliant with the
regulations, requires prior NRC review before field use.
Figure 1 is a flow chart of the 10 CFR 72.48 process.
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3.1.3 Documentation
3.1.3.1 Introduction
10 CFR 72.48(d) requires the following documentation and recordkeeping:
(1) “The licensee and certificate holder shall maintain records of changes in the
ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design, of changes in procedures, and
of tests and experiments made pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section. These
records must include a written evaluation which provides the bases for the
determination that the change, test or experiment does not require a license or
CoC amendment pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(2) “The licensee and certificate holder shall submit, as specified in Section 72.4,
a report containing a brief description of any changes, tests, and experiments,
including a summary of the evaluation of each. A report must be submitted at
intervals not to exceed 24 months.
(3) “The records of changes in the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design
shall be maintained until (i) spent fuel is no longer stored in the ISFSI facility
or the spent fuel storage cask design is no longer being used, or (ii) the
Commission terminates the license or CoC issued pursuant to this part.
(4) “Records of changes in procedures and records of tests and experiments must
be maintained for a period of 5 years.
(5) “The holder of a spent fuel storage cask design CoC, who permanently ceases
operation, shall provide the records of changes to the new certificate holder or
to the Commission, as appropriate, in accordance with Sec. 72.234(d)(3).
(6) “(i) A general licensee shall provide a copy of the record for any changes to a
spent fuel storage cask design to the applicable certificate holder within 60
days of implementing the change.
“(ii) A specific licensee using a spent fuel storage cask design, approved
pursuant to subpart L of this part, shall provide a copy of the record for any
changes to a spent fuel storage cask design to the applicable certificate holder
within 60 days of implementing the change.
“(iii) A certificate holder shall provide a copy of the record for any changes to
a spent fuel storage cask design to any general or specific licensee using the
cask design within 60 days of implementing the change.”
The documentation and reporting requirements of 10 CFR 72.48(d) apply to
activities that require evaluation against the applicable criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)
and are determined not to require prior NRC approval. That is, the phrase in 10
CFR 72.48(d)(1), “made pursuant to paragraph (c),” refers to those activities that
were evaluated against the applicable evaluation criteria. Similarly,
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documentation and reporting pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48 are not required for
activities that are canceled or that are determined to require prior NRC approval,
are implemented via the license/CoC amendment request process, or only
required a 10 CFR 72.48 screening but not an evaluation. Notwithstanding the
minimum required documentation requirements discussed above, it is
recommended that documentation for activities that required only 10 CFR 72.48
screenings be retained as QA records as discussed further in Subsection 3.1.3.2
below.
3.1.3.2 Documenting 10 CFR 72.48 Evaluations
In performing a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation of a proposed activity, the evaluator
must address the applicable criteria in 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2) to determine if prior
NRC approval is required. Although the conclusion in each criterion may be
simply “yes,” “no,” or “not applicable,” there must be an accompanying
explanation providing adequate basis for the conclusion. Consistent with the
intent of 10 CFR 72.48, these explanations should be complete in the sense that
another knowledgeable reviewer could draw the same conclusion. Restatement of
the criteria in a negative sense or making overly simple statements of conclusion
is not sufficient and should be avoided. It is recognized, however, that for certain
very simple activities, a statement of the conclusion with identification of
references consulted to support the conclusion would be adequate and the 10 CFR
72.48 evaluation could be very brief.
The importance of the documentation is emphasized by the fact that experience
and engineering knowledge (other than models and experimental data) are often
relied upon in determining whether evaluation criteria are met. Thus the basis for
the engineering judgment and the logic used in the determination should be
documented to a degree commensurate with the safety significance and
complexity of the activity. This type of documentation is of particular importance
in areas where no established consensus methods are available, such as for
software reliability, or the use of commercial-grade hardware and software where
full documentation of the design process is not available. Because an important
goal of the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is completeness, the items considered by the
evaluator must be clearly stated.
Each 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation question is unique. Although each applicable
criterion must be addressed, the questions and considerations listed throughout
this guidance are not necessarily applicable for all evaluations. Some evaluations
may require that none of these questions be addressed in detail while others will
require additional considerations beyond those addressed in this guidance.
Provided that the uniqueness of each 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation question and the
topic addressed therein is recognized, licensees may combine responses to
individual criteria or reference other portions of the evaluation when preparing 10
CFR 72.48 evaluations, as appropriate. If this “combination” and/or “reference”
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approach is utilized, it does not absolve the licensee of addressing the topic/intent
of each evaluation question.
As discussed in Section 5.0, licensees may elect to use screening criteria to
determine for which activities a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation should be performed. A
documented basis should be maintained for determinations that the changes meet
the screening criteria, i.e., screen out. This documentation does not constitute the
record of changes required by 10 CFR 72.48, and thus is not subject to the
recordkeeping requirements of the rule. However, it is recommended that
documentation for activities that required only 10 CFR 72.48 screenings be
retained as QA records. This provides the record explaining the logic the reviewer
used to determine that an activity did not require a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation.
3.1.4 Reporting
A summary of the evaluations for activities implemented under 10 CFR 72.48
must be provided to NRC by both licensees and CoC holders for their respective
activities. Duplicate reporting is not required. Activities that were screened out,
canceled, implemented via license/CoC amendment, or implemented by
exemption need not be included in this report. The 10 CFR 72.48 reporting
requirement (every 24 months) is identical to that for UFSAR updates such that
specific licensees and CoC holders may provide these reports to NRC on the same
schedule as their UFSAR updates.
3.1.4.1 Reporting Changes via 72.48 Evaluations to CoC Holders and Licensees
10 CFR 72.48(d)(6) requires reporting of cask design changes to CoC holders and
licensees (see Figures 2 and 3). The records required to be provided in the 60-day
reports would be those for changes to a spent fuel storage cask design that require
an evaluation against the applicable criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2) and are
determined not to require prior NRC approval. These records must include the
written evaluation which provides the bases for the determination that the change
does not require prior NRC approval pursuant to paragraph 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2).
The records required to be reported by the CoC holders to the licensees are only
those records created by the CoC holders. These would include the records of 10
CFR 72.48 evaluations created by the CoC holders directly and as a result of
adopting site-specific changes that were reported to the CoC holders by the
licensees into the generic licensing basis. Records of changes reported to a CoC
holder by a user but not adopted by the CoC holder do not need to be provided to
other licensees. It is recommended that CoC holders provide the documentation
for all approved cask UFSAR alterations and design modifications to their
licensee users within 60 days of implementation, whether or not a 10 CFR 72.48
evaluation was required for the change. This ensures that licensees have a
complete cask UFSAR, including interim changes, between formal UFSAR
revisions. Likewise, licensees should provide the documentation for all approved
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cask design modifications to the CoC holders within 60 days of implementation,
whether or not a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation was required for the modification.
See Definition 2.14 for the definition of “implementation” for CoC holders and
licensees as it relates to notifying other entities of changes authorized under 10
CFR 72.48. There are two different contexts defining the term “implementation,”
which starts the 60-day reporting “clock” under 10 CFR 72.48(d). These two
contexts recognize the different roles of the CoC holder and the licensee. For
example, a CoC holder may authorize a cask design modification that is
implemented in the fabrication shop or an MOE change without delay. In these
instances, the activity is considered implemented as soon as the 10 CFR 72.48
review is approved and other associated approval paperwork is complete.
Licensee procedure revisions or MOE changes would similarly be considered
implemented when the 10 CFR 72.48 review is approved and other associated
approval paperwork is complete.
On the other hand, a licensee may approve a design modification to the ISFSI that
is not implemented for some period of time (or even canceled). In these cases,
implementation of the modification occurs when the modification is installed in
the field and considered operational.
3.1.4.2 Fabrication Nonconformances Requiring 10 CFR 72.48 Review
10 CFR 72.48 evaluations performed to resolve fabrication non-conformances for
specific storage casks during fabrication also represent a change to a spent fuel
storage cask design even though the change may only affect a single cask or
group of casks. Such evaluations should be reported to the affected licensee(s) in
a 60-day report and included in the routine 10 CFR 72.48 report to the NRC.
3.1.4.3 Activities Approved Without a 10 CFR 72.48 Review
Although records of modifications to the ISFSI facility, cask design, or
procedures are not required to be provided in a 60-day report if a 10 CFR 72.48
evaluation was not required, it is recommended that ISFSI licensees and cask CoC
holders exchange these documents on an agreed-upon schedule. These records aid
the general or specific licensee in complying with 10 CFR 72.48(c)(3). This
requirement states that, for purposes of implementing 10 CFR 72.48, the FSAR
(as updated) is considered to include UFSAR changes resulting from 10 CFR
72.48 reviews and license/CoC amendments approved since the last UFSAR
update. Other configuration management processes may also be used to ensure
compliance with this requirement.
CoC holders should make available to licensees the complete documentation,
including 10 CFR 72.48 screens/evaluations and changes to licensing basis
documents (e.g., licensing drawings and the UFSAR) between the formal UFSAR
updates required by 10 CFR 72.248. Sharing this information is recommended in
order to ensure all parties maintain configuration control over the licensing basis
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for the cask system in real time (i.e., a “living” licensing basis). This is required
for those performing activities that could affect portions of the licensing basis
previously modified under 10 CFR 72.48 but not yet included in an UFSAR
update. Furthermore, CoC holders should make available to general licensees the
UFSAR changes associated with NRC-approved CoC amendments in a timely
manner for the same reason. Because this is a recommendation and not a
requirement, any mutually agreeable means to ensure licensees have access to the
modified information is acceptable.
3.1.5 Miscellaneous Guidance
3.1.5.1 Licensee Actions Upon Receiving CoC Holder-Authored Changes
Licensees are not required to approve generic CoC holder changes implemented
under 10 CFR 72.48 nor do general licensees perform duplicate 10 CFR 72.48
reviews for changes being adopted per Definition 2.4. CoC holders have the
authority to implement changes under 10 CFR 72.48 as the owner of the generic
cask licensing basis. This is not to say licensees should not review the technical
and regulatory documentation of CoC holder changes made pursuant to 10 CFR
72.48. They should do so as part of periodic vendor oversight audits and
assessments, and provide appropriate feedback to improve the CoC holder’s 10
CFR 72.48 program. Guidance for licensees choosing to adopt generic CoC
holder changes is provided in Sections 3.1.5.3 and 3.1.5.4.
3.1.5.2 Reporting of Defects and Deficiencies
Licensees and CoC holders are required to report certain defects or deficiencies in
any spent fuel storage structure, system, or component to the NRC in accordance
with the reporting requirements in 10 CFR 72.75 and 10 CFR 21. Accordingly,
safety significant information related to a specific spent fuel storage system
design will be provided to the NRC in a timely manner and any safety significant
concerns communicated to the licensees via NRC generic correspondence for
disposition. 10 CFR 72.48 would only apply if compensatory actions are taken to
address the defect or deficiency that deviate from the cask or ISFSI UFSAR (see
Section 4.9), or if a procedure or 212 Report revision is required.
3.1.5.3 General Licensee Use of CoC Holder-Generated Modifications
A general licensee reviews the CoC holder activities authorized pursuant to 10
CFR 72.48 for applicability to its site and to determine whether any of the
activities (e.g., design modifications, cask operating changes, etc.) should be
adopted at its site. Licensees are limited in their ability to incorporate
modifications to the cask design after the cask is loaded with spent fuel and
placed into storage. Accordingly, for casks that are already loaded, the general
licensee only needs to review the CoC holder’s generically approved activities for
applicability to their ISFSI and for impact on the site-specific evaluations and
analyses, the 212 Report, and site programs and procedures.
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If a general licensee determines that a generic CoC holder design or UFSAR
modification is applicable and should be adopted at its site ISFSI, the general
licensee would perform an impact evaluation and perform a 10 CFR 72.48 review
as required by their internal change review process for the impacted documents.
Such licensee 10 CFR 72.48 reviews may incorporate the CoC holder’s 10 CFR
72.48 screening/evaluation to the extent it is applicable at the site ISFSI.
A modification that has been reported to the general licensee by the CoC holder
and then used by the general licensee would not need to be reported back to the
CoC holder in a 60-day report because the CoC holder initially generated the
modification and will have already performed the appropriate regulatory reviews
and updated the generic licensing basis documents, as needed. See Section 4.7 for
additional guidance on general licensee processing of CoC holder generic
activities approved under 10 CFR 72.48.
3.1.5.4 Specific Licensee Use of CoC Holder-Generated Modifications
If a specific licensee determines that a CoC holder’s modification should be
adopted on site, they would review their ISFSI UFSAR to determine if a
concomitant change and 10 CFR 72.48 review would be required. Specific
licensees are the sole authority responsible for 10 CFR 72.48 reviews applicable
to their ISFSI licensing basis. Such specific licensee 10 CFR 72.48 reviews may
incorporate the CoC holder’s 10 CFR 72.48 screening/evaluation to the extent it is
applicable at the site ISFSI. A change that has been reported to the specific
licensee by the CoC holder and then incorporated by the specific licensee would
not need to be reported back to the CoC holder in a 60-day report because the
CoC holder initially generated the modification and will have already performed
the appropriate regulatory reviews and updated the generic licensing basis
documents, as needed.
3.1.5.5 CoC Holder Actions Upon Receipt of Licensee-Generated Modifications
When a CoC holder receives records documenting cask design modifications from
a licensee, it should review the record in a timely manner (e.g., within 60 days of
receipt) to determine if they should adopt the change for generic use (see Figure
3). If so, the CoC holder would review the cask UFSAR to determine if a
modification to that document and a 10 CFR 72.48 review is required. The
answers/justification used in the CoC holder’s 10 CFR 72.48 review may
incorporate the licensee’s 10 CFR 72.48 screening/evaluation to the extent it is
applicable to the generic cask design. A cask design modification that has been
reported to the CoC holder by a general or specific licensee and then adopted by
the CoC holder would need to be reported back to all general or specific licensees
using that cask design in the 60-day report.
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3.2 RELATIONSHIP OF 10 CFR 72.48 TO OTHER REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AND
ASSOCIATED CONTROLS
3.2.1 Overview of Other Regulatory Control Processes
10 CFR 72.48 focuses on the effects of proposed activities on the safety analyses
that are contained in the UFSAR for the ISFSI or spent fuel storage cask, and are
the cornerstone of each ISFSI’s or spent fuel storage cask’s licensing basis. In
addition to 10 CFR 72.48 change control for activities affecting the ISFSI facility,
cask design, or procedures as described in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR, there are
several other complementary processes for controlling activities that affect other
aspects of the licensing basis. Where activities affecting the ISFSI, cask design, or
procedures are controlled by more specific regulations (e.g., quality assurance,
security, training, and emergency plan changes), 10 CFR 72.48(c)(4) states that
the more specific regulation applies to that portion of the activity. Examples of
other more specific regulations and associated change processes are:
• 10 CFR 72.56, “Application for Amendment of License,” is used by specific
licensees to request an amendment to a specific ISFSI license (including
terms, conditions, and technical specifications).
• 10 CFR 72.244, “Application for Amendment of a Certificate of
Compliance,” is used by CoC holders to request an amendment to a cask CoC
(including terms, conditions, and technical specifications. (Licensees may not
request amendments to a storage cask CoC unless they are also the CoC
holder.)
• 10 CFR 72.7, “Specific Exemptions,” is used by licensees and CoC holders to
seek an exemption from a regulatory requirement specified elsewhere in 10
• 10 CFR 50.54, “License Conditions,” is used by general licensees and by
specific licensees with a co-located ISFSI that use their Part 50 programs to
govern Part 72 activities to make changes to programs governed by this
regulation. For example, the Quality Assurance Program, Security Program,
and Emergency Plan have change controls processes specified in 10 CFR
Together with 10 CFR 72.48, these regulations and others determined to be
applicable by the licensee or CoC holder in meeting the 10 CFR 72.48(c)(4)
criteria, form the framework of complementary regulatory controls over the ISFSI
or spent fuel storage cask licensing basis. To optimize the effectiveness of these
controls and minimize duplication and undue burden, it is important to understand
the scope of each process within the regulatory framework. This guidance
discusses the scope of 10 CFR 72.48 in relation to other regulations, including
circumstances under which different regulations and associated processes, e.g., 10
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CFR 72.48 and 10 CFR 72.56/72.244, should be applied to different aspects of a
proposed activity.
It is important to note that the “other regulatory processes” discussed above do
not apply equally to general licensees, specific licensees, and CoC holders.
Specific licensees may have programs controlled pursuant to a Part 72 regulation
and a general licensee may have the same program controlled by a Part 50
regulation. CoC holders do not have several of these programs at all. Thus, each
entity’s 10 CFR 72.48 applicability determination program should be customized
appropriately. See Section 4.0 for additional information.
3.2.2 Quality Assurance Program and 10 CFR 72.48
10 CFR Part 72, Subpart G and 10 CFR 50, Appendix B, as applicable, ensure
that the ISFSI facility and spent fuel storage cask design, construction, and
operation meet applicable regulatory requirements, codes, and standards in
accordance with the safety classification of systems, structures and components
(SSCs). Both CoC holders and licensees have NRC-approved QA programs. The
design control provisions of the QA program ensure that, after initial licensing, all
future changes to the ISFSI facility, spent fuel cask design and associated SSCs
continue to meet applicable design and quality requirements. Thus,
implementation of the QA program design control process should ensure that the
change is safe and in compliance with regulatory requirements. Review of the
change pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48 is exclusively a regulatory test to determine if
prior NRC review and approval is required before the change is implemented.
The QA program also addresses corrective action. The application of 10 CFR
72.48 to compensatory measures that address degraded and non-conforming
conditions is described in Section 4.9.
3.2.3 10 CFR 72.48 and the 212 Report
Activities subject to 10 CFR 72.48 that are proposed by the general licensee or by
the CoC holder should be reviewed by the general licensee prior to
implementation of the activity at the ISFSI for impact on the site’s 212 Report and
supporting analyses and evaluations. Modifications to those documents should be
made as required, and reviewed in accordance with 10 CFR 72.212(b)(7) and NEI
The 212 Report documents compliance with the CoC and evaluations performed
pursuant to 10 CFR 72.212(b)(5), (b)(6) and (b)(8). Consistent with guidance in
NRC Regulatory Issue Summary 2012-05 “Clarifying the Relationship between
10 CFR 72.212 and 10 CFR 72.48 Evaluations,” (ML113050537) if any of the
evaluations described in the 212 Report deviate from information in the cask
UFSAR, such evaluations need to be reviewed in accordance with 10 CFR 72.48
to determine if a CoC amendment is required. This includes evaluations described
in the initial version of the 212 Report, which is normally issued prior to loading
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the first cask and placing it into service at an ISFSI. The 212 Report, including the
initial version, is not a substitute for a 10 CFR 72.48 review.
If the initial issuance of the 212 Report contains no deviations from the cask
UFSAR, then no 10 CFR 72.48 review is required. Thereafter, other than editorial
or administrative corrections, any alterations made to the 212 Report require a 10
CFR 72.48 review pursuant to 10 CFR 72.212(b)(7), as applicable.
The following guidance taken from RIS 2012-05 also applies:
Pursuant to 10 CFR 72.212(b)(5), general licensees must perform written
evaluations (1) before using a cask and (2) before applying the changes authorized
by an amended CoC to a previously-loaded cask. In the past, a general licensee
only used the written evaluations to demonstrate the suitability of a selected cask
design at its site before its first use. The current rule, 10 CFR 72.212(b) allows
general licensees to apply changes authorized by a CoC amendment as codified
by NRC in 10 CFR 72.214, “List of Approved Spent Fuel Storage Casks,” to a
previously loaded cask without express NRC approval provided that the licensee
demonstrates through written evaluations, that the loaded cask then conforms to
the CoC amendment codified in the list of approved spent fuel storage casks set
forth in 10 CFR 72.214. Therefore, general licensees can also use the written
evaluations to demonstrate the conformance of a loaded cask to a newer CoC
amendment.
10 CFR 72.212(b)(7) requires the general licensee to evaluate any changes to the
written evaluations required by paragraphs (b)(5) and (b)(6) of 10 CFR 72.212,
using the requirements of 10 CFR 72.48. The change authority granted in 10 CFR
72.48 requires a general licensee to determine whether prior NRC approval is
necessary before modifications can be made to the cask FSAR. A 10 CFR 72.212
evaluation alone is not sufficient to address a needed modification to the (cask)
FSAR. Pursuant to 10 CFR 72.212(b)(7), a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation must also be
performed (for those FSAR modifications that screen in as “changes,” and require
a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation). The modification to the 212 Report may identify the
need to perform additional reviews under 10 CFR 72.48 for modifications to the
cask FSAR. In other words, a general licensee does not satisfy the change
authority requirements in Part 72 if it performs an analysis or written evaluation
to load, store, operate, or accept conditions outside of the FSAR without first
satisfying the criteria of a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation.
3.2.4 10 CFR 72.48 AND 10 CFR 50.59
The Applicability Determination (AD) process described in Section 4.0 is used by
specific and general licensees to determine whether an activity is governed by one
or more change control processes. Because cask loading and preparation activities
take place in or near facilities licensed under 10 CFR 50, these activities can be
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subject to review under 10 CFR 72.48, 10 CFR 50.59, both processes, or neither
(e.g., in the case of programs controlled under 10 CFR 50.54).
Licensees having an operating power plant co-located with an ISFSI need to
consider the activity being proposed and compare it to the information in the
ISFSI or cask UFSAR and the Part 50 UFSAR to determine which change control
process(es) apply. Certain configurations of cask components in or near the Part
50 facility may require an evaluation or analysis, a 10 CFR 50.59 review, and/or a
10 CFR 72.48 review because that arrangement of equipment had not been
contemplated in the plant design or in the cask UFSAR. Depending on the
governing regulations, the method of evaluation used should be reviewed against
those accepted in the Part 50 UFSAR or the Part 72 UFSAR when the 10 CFR
50.59 and/or 10 CFR 72.48 review is performed.
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4 10 CFR 72.48 APPLICABILITY DETERMINATION
ISFSI licensees and CoC holders must determine the applicability of 10 CFR 72.48 to
proposed activities to determine if review under 10 CFR 72.48 is required.
As stated in Section (b) of 10 CFR 72.48, the rule applies to:
• Each holder of a general or specific license issued under Part 72, and
• Each holder of a Certificate of Compliance (CoC) issued under Part 72.
The purpose of the Applicability Determination (AD) is to determine the correct
regulatory change control process, if any, for all or part of a proposed activity by
answering the following questions:
1. Does all or part of the proposed activity involve a modification to the ISFSI or
cask design or procedures in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR or the 212 Report that is
an editorial/administrative correction or a modification to managerial or
administrative procedure governing the conduct of operations?
If the answer to the above question is “yes” for all, or part(s) of the proposed
activity, 10 CFR 72.48 is not applicable to the proposed activity or part(s) thereof,
and the proposed activity or part(s) thereof may accordingly be implemented
without further review under 10 CFR 72.48. If the answer to the above question is
“no” for all, or part(s) of the proposed activity, Question 2 must be answered for
the proposed activity or part(s) thereof not classified as an editorial/administrative
correction or modification to a managerial or administrative procedure. See
Subsections 4.3 and 4.4 for guidance on responding to this question.
2. Does the proposed activity require a change to the ISFSI license or cask CoC,
including appendices?
If the answer to the above question “yes” for all, or part(s) of the proposed
activity, an ISFSI license or CoC amendment is required prior to implementing
the proposed activity or part(s) thereof. If the answer to the above question is “no”
for all, or part(s) of the proposed activity, Question 3 must be answered for the
proposed activity or part(s) thereof not requiring an ISFSI license or CoC
amendment.
3. Does a different regulation provide more specific criteria for accomplishing the
proposed activity?
If the answer to the above question “yes” for all, or part(s) of the proposed activity, the
other regulatory process should be applied prior to implementing the proposed activity or
part(s) thereof. If the answer to the above question is “no” for all, or part(s) of the
proposed activity, a 10 CFR 72.48 screening must be performed for the proposed activity
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or part(s) thereof not subject to a different regulatory process than 10 CFR 72.48. An
example of a proposed activity to which both 10 CFR 72.48 and another regulatory
process may apply could be a modification to a fence surrounding the ISFSI which
affects the facility or cask design as described in the ISFSI UFSAR or the 212 Report and
the security plan for the facility. See Subsections 3.2.1 and 4.1 for additional guidance on
responding to this question.
The subsections below provide additional guidance for responding to the above questions
for a proposed activity.
4.1 APPLICABILITY TO LICENSEE AND COC HOLDER ACTIVITIES
10 CFR 72.48 is applicable to tests or experiments not described in the UFSAR and to
modifications to the ISFSI facility, spent fuel storage cask design, or procedures as
described in the UFSAR, including modifications made in response to new requirements
or generic communications, except as noted below:
• Per 10 CFR 72.48(c)(1)(i) and (ii), proposed activities that require a change to the
ISFSI license or cask CoC must be made via the license amendment or CoC
amendment process, pursuant to 10 CFR 72.56 or 10 CFR 72.244. Aspects of
proposed activities that are not directly related to the required license or CoC
amendment are subject to 10 CFR 72.48 unless they meet other exclusion criteria in
the AD (e.g., editorial and administrative changes).
• To reduce duplication of effort, 10 CFR 72.48(c)(4) specifically excludes from the
scope of 10 CFR 72.48 modifications to the ISFSI facility, spent fuel storage cask
design, or procedures that are controlled by other more specific requirements and
criteria established by regulation. For example, 10 CFR 72.44(e) and (f) specify
criteria and reporting requirements for changing physical security and emergency
plans for ISFSI specific licensees.
Activities controlled and implemented under other regulations may require related
information in the UFSAR to be updated. To the extent the UFSAR modifications are
directly related to the activity implemented via another regulation, applying 10 CFR
72.48 is not required. UFSAR modifications should be identified to the NRC as part of
the required UFSAR update, per 10 CFR 72.70 (specific licensee) or 72.248 (cask CoC
holder). However, there may be certain proposed activities for which a licensee or cask
CoC holder would need to apply both the requirements of 10 CFR 72.48 and the
requirements of another regulation.
It should also be recognized that 10 CFR 72 may describe more specific criteria and
requirements that apply to Part 50 programs that are used to cover Part 72 program
requirements. The set of “other more specific requirements and criteria established by
regulation” to be addressed in the AD are summarized below and may differ among
specific licensees, general licensees, and CoC holders, although some may overlap:
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• Specific licensees: ISFSI license amendments (10 CFR 72.56), exemptions (10 CFR
72.7), security (10 CFR 72.44(e) and 10 CFR 72.186), emergency plan (10 CFR
72.44(f)), quality assurance (10 CFR 72, Subpart G) and radiation protection (10 CFR
20), among others. In addition, specific licensees with ISFSIs at operating reactor
sites may have chosen to address Part 72 activities in their Part 50 programs (e.g., 10
CFR 50.54(p) for the security plan), rather than create a separate program. Specific
licensees at an operating plant would also need to include 10 CFR 50.59 and any
operating license conditions pertaining to change control for the Part 50 license (e.g.,
• General Licensees: CoC amendments (10 CFR 72.244), operating license
amendments (10 CFR 50.90), exemptions (10 CFR 72.7 and 10 CFR 50.12), security
(10 CFR 50.54(p)), emergency plan (10 CFR 50.54(q)), quality assurance (10 CFR
50, Appendix B), changes, tests and experiments (10 CFR 50.59), radiation protection
(10 CFR 20), and any operating license conditions pertaining to change control for
the Part 50 license (e.g., fire protection program), among others.
• CoC Holders: CoC amendments (10 CFR 72.244), exemptions (10 CFR 72.7), quality
assurance (10 CFR 72, Subpart G), and radioactive material transportation (10 CFR
71). For example, a modification to a component of the cask design certified for both
storage under 10 CFR 72 and transportation under 10 CR 71 may be subject to both
10 CFR 72.48 and require a Part 71 CoC amendment1
.
Each of the above entities needs to tailor their 10 CFR 72.48 program applicability
determination process accordingly.
4.2 MAINTENANCE ACTIVITIES
Maintenance activities are activities that restore SSCs to their as-designed condition,
including activities that implement approved design changes. Generally speaking,
maintenance activities affecting the ISFSI or storage cask, other than those specified in
the ISFSI license or cask CoC, are subject to 10 CFR 72.48.
Maintenance activities include troubleshooting, calibration, refurbishment, maintenancerelated testing, identical replacements, housekeeping and similar activities that do not
permanently alter the design, performance requirements, operation, or control of SSCs.
Maintenance activities also include temporary alterations to the ISFSI facility, cask
design, or procedures that directly relate to and are necessary to support the maintenance.
Examples of temporary alterations that support maintenance may include placing
temporary lead shielding on pipes and equipment, removal of barriers, and use of
temporary scaffolding and supports.
1 Note that licensees could also make such a modification to a dual-purpose certified cask design, but the 10 CFR 71
CoC holder would be responsible for addressing impacts under 10 CFR 71.
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The Maintenance Rule for operating power plants, 10 CFR 50.65, does not apply to an
ISFSI or to a spent fuel storage cask licensed or certified under 10 CFR Part 72. Thus, the
guidance of NEI 96-07 for assessing and managing the risk impact of maintenance
activities in accordance with 10 CFR 50.65(a)(4) does not apply to ISFSI/cask activities.
As discussed in Section 4.9, 10 CFR 72.48 should also be applied to temporary
modifications proposed as compensatory measures for degraded or non-conforming
conditions. Corrective maintenance that restores a degraded or non-conforming
component to its as-designed condition as described in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR does
not require a 10 CFR 72.48 review, provided it does not require a temporary or
permanent modification to the ISFSI, cask design, or procedures.
For recurring preventive maintenance that clearly does not modify the ISFSI facility or
storage cask, such as weed trimming, fence repairs, like-for-like replacements, etc.
licensees may wish to consider performing a one-time 10 CFR 72.48 screening to
categorically exclude the procedure or work order from future review under 10 CFR
72.48. Care should be taken to ensure the scope of work in those categorically excluded
procedures or work control documents does not get revised later to change the work or
include new work, which would require a 10 CFR 72.48 review. Thus, the scope of work
should be described clearly in the 10 CFR 72.48 review for the categorical exclusion so it
is clear when a subsequent revision to the procedure may trigger applicability of 10 CFR 72.48.
4.3 EDITORIAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE CORRECTIONS
Purely editorial and administrative corrections are not included in the scope of 10 CFR 72.48 because they clearly do not constitute a change, test, or experiment. However, a
conservative approach should be applied in order not to erroneously classify a document
modification as editorial or administrative and not perform a 10 CFR 72.48 review for the
modification. Documentation modifications that are not clearly editorial or administrative
should be subject to 10 CFR 72.48 screening to determine whether a 10 CFR 72.48
evaluation is required. 10 CFR 72.48 need not be applied to the following types of
activities:
• Editorial corrections to the UFSAR and 212 Report (including referenced procedures,
topical reports, etc.), and implementing procedures, such as the correction of
typographical errors and grammar
• Administrative corrections such as altering procedure step sign-offs, changing
personnel titles, etc.
• Clarifications to improve reader understanding*
• Correction of inconsistencies within the UFSAR (e.g., between sections)*
• Minor corrections to drawings, e.g., correcting mislabeled components*
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• Similar modifications to UFSAR or 212 Report information that do not change or
obscure the meaning or substance of information presented
- Provided the change to the affected information has no impact on the
meaning of the information as described in the ISFSI license, cask CoC, or
associated UFSAR that was used as the basis of approval of the license or
CoC. Consult the SER for the license or CoC in making this determination.
4.4 MODIFICATIONS TO PROCEDURES GOVERNING THE CONDUCT OF OPERATIONS
Even if described in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR, modifications to managerial and
administrative procedures governing the conduct of ISFSI facility operations are
controlled under 10 CFR 72, Subpart G or 10 CFR 50 Appendix B (quality assurance),
and are not subject to control under 10 CFR 72.48. These include, but are not limited to,
procedures in the following areas:
• Administrative controls for creating or modifying procedures
• Training programs
• ISFSI/cask design modification process
• Calculation process
• Procedures governing implementation of the 10 CFR 72.48 program and control of
the 212 Report
4.5 MODIFICATIONS TO APPROVED FIRE PROTECTION PROGRAMS
The guidance of NEI 96-07, Revision 1 for this section in the context of 10 CFR 50.59 is
not applicable to implementation of 10 CFR 72.48, because the standard fire protection
license condition focuses on the capability of a reactor to achieve and maintain safe
shutdown, and does not consider ISFSI or spent fuel storage cask considerations. The
impact of activities that affect the fire protection program (FPP) and/or site fire hazards
analysis (FHA) as applied to ISFSI operations should be evaluated under the plant’s
process for FPP and FHA modifications.
4.6 MODIFICATIONS TO WRITTEN EVALUATIONS REQUIRED BY 10 CFR 72.212
10 CFR 72.212(b)(7) requires that a general licensee evaluate any modifications to the
written evaluations required by 10 CFR 72.212 using the requirements of 10 CFR 72.48(c). This includes modifications to evaluations performed directly in the 212 Report
and evaluations documented separately and incorporated by reference into the 212
Report. See Section 3.2.3 for additional guidance. Also, as discussed in Section 4.3,
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editorial/administrative corrections to the 212 Report are not subject to review under 10 CFR 72.48.
4.7 CASK DESIGN MODIFICATIONS AND OTHER ACTIVITIES AUTHORIZED BY A COC
HOLDER AND ADOPTED BY A GENERAL LICENSEE
The Federal Register notice issuing the final rule for 10 CFR 50.59 and 10 CFR 72.48
(64 FR 53582, October 4, 1999) stated the following in Section O.1 on page 53601:
“The Commission envisioned that a general licensee who wants to adopt a change
to the design of a spent fuel storage cask it possesses - which change was
previously made to the generic design by the certificate holder under the
provisions of Sec. 72.48 - would be required to perform a separate evaluation
under the provisions of Sec. 72.48 to determine the suitability of the change for
itself.”
When the cask CoC holder has implemented a modification under 10 CFR 72.48, general
licensees using that cask system may adopt that modification (Definition 2.4). General
licensees would not necessarily need to perform a separate 10 CFR 72.48
screening/evaluation for the modification if the site-specific 212 Report, supporting
analyses/evaluations or site procedures are not affected by the generic modification being
adopted. The general licensee should review these site documents to determine if any
would require a modification to use the generic change approved by the CoC holder, and,
if so, perform a 10 CFR 72.48 review for the modification to that site document, if
required. The answers and/or justification used in the site document revision 10 CFR 72.48 screening/evaluation may be taken from the CoC holder’s 10 CFR 72.48
screening/evaluation if they could also apply to the site screening/evaluation.
General licensees that receive design modifications, revisions to cask operations, etc.
authorized generically by the CoC holder under the CoC holder’s 10 CFR 72.48 process
should review these documents in a timely manner and make the one of the following
determinations:
1. The modification or revision is not applicable to the ISFSI at that site (e.g., a
modification to a PWR cask design for an ISFSI that exclusively stores BWR
fuel)
2. The modification or revision is applicable to the site ISFSI and has no impact on
the site 212 Report, procedures, calculations or hardware (e.g., a modification of a
cask design detail that has no effect on the generic cask design criteria or use of
the cask in the field)
3. The modification or revision is applicable to the site ISFSI and requires a change
to the site 212 Report, procedures, calculations, or hardware
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Depending on the results of the determination above, general licensees need to implement
the appropriate action, as required, to adopt the generic change. Figure 4 provides a flow
chart for this process.
4.8 APPLICABILITY DETERMINATION DOCUMENTATION
For any proposed activity, the licensee or CoC holder must determine the appropriate
regulatory review process to determine whether a) 10 CFR 72.48 and/or another
regulatory process applies, and b) prior NRC approval is required before the activity may
be implemented. The guidance in this document provides direction for those proposed
activities to which 10 CFR 72.48 applies. Licensees and CoC holders may devise any
process to determine regulatory review process applicability. The two types of AD
processes are:
1. Single portal: In this type of AD process all proposed activities would funnel
through a common AD process (e.g., the 10 CFR 50.59 AD process) to determine
the other applicable regulatory review process(es), if any. The implementation of
the applicable regulatory review process(es) would be governed by the procedure
or guidance for the applicable process(es).
2. Multiple portals: In this type of AD process, the activity reviewer performs the
AD effort in the primary process that most likely applies to the proposed activity.
For example, the 10 CFR 72.48 AD may be the starting point for a licensee cask
loading procedure change and the 10 CFR 50.59 AD may be the starting point for
a security plan change (ultimately governed by 10 CFR 50.54(p)). In any case,
that primary AD process would need to contain a method for the reviewer to
determine the applicability of other regulatory review processes to the proposed
activity in part, or in whole. Implementation of the other applicable regulatory
review process(es) would be governed separately by the procedure or guidance
for the applicable process.
In both AD models, the specific required regulatory reviews would be performed and
documented under the processes established for those reviews for the applicable
portion(s) of the proposed activity. Each proposed activity must be reviewed for the
applicability of one or more regulatory review processes. A given activity may or may
not affect the ISFSI, storage cask design, or procedures, or may be an
administrative/editorial correction. If the activity does not affect the ISFSI or storage
cask, is governed by a different regulation, or is administrative/editorial, 10 CFR 72.48
does not apply and the activity should be either implemented directly or reviewed under
another regulatory review process, as appropriate.
If the activity does affect the ISFSI, storage cask, or procedures, other regulatory
requirements may also apply (e.g., 10 CFR 50.59). In this case the activity is reviewed
under all applicable regulatory review processes.
The first consideration under the 10 CFR 72.48 AD process is whether the activity
requires a change to the specific ISFSI license or cask CoC, including associated
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technical specifications and other requirements considered part of the specific license or
CoC. If so, the activity does not receive a 10 CFR 72.48 screening and is not reviewed
against the criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2). Four options are available:
1. Revise the activity so that a license amendment or CoC amendment is not
required and begin the AD process again;
2. Process the license amendment (specific licensee) or CoC amendment (CoC
holder);
3. Request an exemption in accordance with 10 CFR 72.7; or
4. Cancel the activity.
If the activity is not an editorial or administrative correction, affects the ISFSI, storage
cask design, or procedures, and does not require a change to the specific ISFSI license or
CoC, the activity receives a 10 CFR 72.48 screening in accordance with Section 5 of this
guidance. If required as determined by the 10 CFR 72.48 screening, the activity is
evaluated against the applicable criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2) in accordance with
Section 6 of this guidance to determine if prior NRC review and approval is needed.
4.9 APPLYING 10 CFR 72.48 TO COMPENSATORY ACTIONS TO ADDRESS NONCONFORMING
OR DEGRADED CONDITIONS
Three general courses of action are available to licensees to address non-conforming and
degraded conditions. Whether or not 10 CFR 72.48 must be applied, and the focus of a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation if one is required, depends on the corrective action plan chosen by
the licensee or cask CoC holder, as discussed below:
• If the licensee or cask CoC holder intends to restore the SSC back to its as-designed
condition, then this corrective action should be performed in accordance with 10 CFR 72, Subpart G (i.e., in a timely manner commensurate with safety). This activity is not
subject to 10 CFR 72.48.
• If an interim compensatory action is taken to address the condition and involves a
temporary procedure or ISFSI facility or cask design modification, 10 CFR 72.48
should be applied to the temporary procedure or modification. The intent is to
determine whether the temporary modification/compensatory action itself (not the
degraded condition) impacts other aspects of the ISFSI facility, cask design, or
procedures described in the UFSAR. In considering whether a temporary
modification impacts other aspects of the ISFSI facility or cask design, a licensee or
cask CoC holder should pay particular attention to ancillary aspects of the temporary
procedure or modification that result from actions taken to directly compensate for
the degraded condition.
• If the licensee or cask CoC holder corrective action is either to accept the condition
“as-is” resulting in something different than its as-designed condition, or to modify
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the ISFSI facility, cask design, or procedures, 10 CFR 72.48 should be applied to the
corrective action. Other regulations that establish more specific criteria for reviewing
proposed activities may also apply, in addition to 10 CFR 72.48. In these cases, the
final corrective action becomes the proposed modification that would be subject to 10 CFR 72.48.
In resolving degraded or nonconforming conditions, the need to obtain NRC approval for
a proposed activity does not affect the licensee's authority to operate the ISFSI. The
licensee may load or unload casks, etc., provided that necessary SSCs are operable and
the degraded condition is not in conflict with the technical specifications, the license, or
the CoC.
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5 10 CFR 72.48 SCREENING
Once it has been determined that 10 CFR 72.48 is applicable to a proposed activity via
the AD process, a 10 CFR 72.48 screening is performed to determine if the activity
should be reviewed against the applicable evaluation criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2).
Engineering, design and other technical information concerning the activity and affected
SSCs should be used to perform the 10 CFR 72.48 screening. The 10 CFR 72.48
screening is performed to determine whether the activity or part(s) thereof need to be
evaluated in accordance with 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2) and Section 6 of this guidance. Refer to
Section 1.3 for discussion of the use of the word “change” in the context of 10 CFR 72.48. A 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is required for a proposed activity or part(s) thereof
that involve any one of the following:
• A change to a UFSAR-described design function of an SSC or cask design,
• A change to a UFSAR-described method of performing or controlling a design
function,
• A change to a UFSAR-described method of evaluation or use of an alternative
method of evaluation for demonstrating that intended design functions will be
accomplished, or
• A test or experiment not described in the UFSAR where an SSC is utilized or
controlled in a manner that is outside the reference bounds of the design for that SSC
or is inconsistent with analyses or descriptions in the UFSAR.
Sections 5.1 and 5.2 provide guidance for determining whether an activity is (1) a change
to the ISFSI facility, spent fuel storage cask design, or procedures as described in the
UFSAR or (2) a test or experiment not described in the UFSAR. If an activity is
determined to be neither, then it screens out and may be implemented without further
evaluation under 10 CFR 72.48. Activities that are screened out from further evaluation
under 10 CFR 72.48 should be documented as discussed in Section 3.1.3.
The 10 CFR 72.48 screening is a review of technical information supporting a proposed
activity to determine whether UFSAR-described design functions (including methods of
performing or controlling design functions) would be adversely affected. A determination
that an activity does not adversely affect design functions should be based on a thorough
understanding of affected SSCs and the effects of the proposed activity on them. A
determination that a proposed activity would not cause the UFSAR description of SSC
design functions to be inaccurate is an indicator, but is not the only factor for deciding
that a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is not required. The documented basis for determining
that a proposed activity does not need to be evaluated pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48 should
be expressed in terms of the lack of adverse effect (direct or indirect) that the proposed
activity would have on design functions, not on whether or not the description in the
UFSAR is affected.
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For example, if a proposed modification would reduce the reliability of an SSC
performing a design function, the modification may not cause the UFSAR description to
become inaccurate (unless the UFSAR discusses the reliability of the SSC). However,
this proposed modification should be considered a change and evaluated pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48 (i.e., “screened in”) because there is an adverse effect on a design function.
The 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation of such a change may determine that the reduced reliability
results in a negligible or minimal increase in the likelihood of malfunction. Assuming
none of the other seven 10 CFR 72.48(c) evaluation criteria are met, the change may be
implemented without prior NRC approval.
Focusing 10 CFR 72.48 screening determinations primarily on whether the proposed
activity renders the UFSAR inaccurate may result in unnecessary 10 CFR 72.48
evaluations being performed for proposed activities that do not meet the definition of
“change.” This is because proposed activities that do not adversely affect design
functions are not changes and would not require a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation, but may
nonetheless require the UFSAR to be updated to reflect the activity. The key point in
determining that a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is not required is that no design function,
method of performing or controlling a function, or evaluation that demonstrates intended
functions will be accomplished, is adversely affected. Whether the words in the UFSAR
need to be changed is a secondary matter.
Each element of a proposed activity must be screened except in instances where linking
elements of an activity is appropriate, in which case the linked elements can be
considered together. A test for linking elements of proposed activities is interdependence.
It is appropriate for discrete elements to be considered together if (1) they are
interdependent as in the case where a modification to a system or component necessitates
additional modifications to other systems or procedures; or (2) they are performed
collectively to address a design or operational issue.
If concurrent activities are being made that are not linked (i.e., they do not affect the
same aspect of the design or procedures), each must be screened separately and
independently of each other. Un-linked modifications to separate documents (e.g.,
different procedures) should receive separate 10 CFR 72.48 screenings. For multiple
modifications being made to a single document, such as the 212 Report, it is permissible
to include un-linked modifications within the same 10 CFR 72.48 screening document,
but each modification must be individually discussed in answering the screening
questions.
Multiple activities considered in the same 10 CFR 72.48 screening document may result
in some or all of the activities requiring a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation. Care must be taken
to ensure the documentation is clear in such cases. If the reviewer chooses to document in
a 10 CFR 72.48 screening why a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is required for certain
activities, it is recommended for clarity that a separate 10 CFR 72.48 screening be
performed for those activities.
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Activities that screen out may nonetheless require UFSAR and/or 212 Report information
to be updated. Updated UFSAR information must be provided to the NRC by specific
licensees in accordance with 10 CFR 72.70, and by cask CoC holders in accordance with
10 CFR 72.248. CoC holders should also provide a record of activities that screen out but
result in needed UFSAR updates to licensees within 60 days of implementing the activity.
The 212 Report is updated in accordance with the general licensee’s internal control
process.
5.1 IS THE ACTIVITY A CHANGE TO THE ISFSI FACILITY, SPENT FUEL STORAGE CASK
DESIGN, OR PROCEDURES AS DESCRIBED IN THE UFSAR?
5.1.1 Introduction
To determine whether or not a proposed activity affects a design function, method
of performing or controlling a design function, or an evaluation that demonstrates
that design functions will be accomplished, a thorough understanding of the
proposed activity is essential. A given activity may have both direct and indirect
effects that the screening review must consider. The following questions illustrate
a range of effects that may stem from a proposed activity:
• Does the activity decrease the reliability of the SSC or cask design function,
including functions that are relied upon for prevention of a radioactivity
release?
• Does the activity reduce existing redundancy, diversity or defense-in-depth?
• Does the activity add or delete an automatic or manual design function or
passive design characteristics of the SSC or cask?
• Does the activity convert a feature that was automatic to manual or vice
versa?
• Does the activity introduce an unwanted or previously unreviewed system
interaction?
• Does the activity adversely affect the ability or response time to perform
required actions, e.g., alter equipment access or add steps necessary for
performing tasks?
• Does the activity degrade the seismic, structural, confinement, heat removal,
shielding, or criticality control capability of the SSC or cask?
• Does the activity adversely affect other casks that are in use at the ISFSI?
• Does the activity affect a method of evaluation used in establishing the design
bases or in the safety analyses?
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• For activities affecting SSCs, procedures, or methods of evaluation that are
not described in the UFSAR, does the change have an indirect effect on
structural integrity, environmental conditions or other UFSAR-described
design functions?
The meaning of “change” discussed in Definition 2.6 indicates that 10 CFR 72.48
is applicable to additions as well as to modifications to, and removals from the
ISFSI facility, cask design, or procedures. Additions should be screened for their
effects on the existing facility, cask design, and procedures as described in the
UFSAR and, if required, a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation should be performed.
Consistent with historical practice, proposed activities affecting SSCs or functions
not described in the UFSAR must be screened for their effects (so-called “indirect
effects”) on UFSAR-described design functions. A 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is
required when such activities would adversely affect a UFSAR-described design
function, as described below.
An ISFSI facility or cask design may also contain SSCs not described in the
UFSAR. These can be components, subcomponents of larger components or even
entire systems. Proposed activities affecting SSCs that are not explicitly described
in the UFSAR can have the potential to adversely affect SSC or cask design
functions that are described and thus may require a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation. In
such cases, the approach for determining whether a proposed activity involves a
change to the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design as described in the
UFSAR, is to consider the larger, UFSAR-described SSC of which the SSC being
modified is a part. If for the larger SSC, the activity adversely affects a UFSARdescribed design function, method of performing or controlling the design
function, or an evaluation demonstrating that intended design functions will be
accomplished, then a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is required.
5.1.2 Screening for Adverse Effects
A 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is required for proposed activities that adversely
affect design functions, methods used to perform or control design functions, or
evaluations that demonstrate that intended design functions will be accomplished
(i.e., “changes”). Activities that have none of these effects, or have positive
effects, may generally be screened out. However, any modification that alters a
design basis limit for a fission product barrier – positively or negatively – is
considered adverse and must be screened in because it involves such a
fundamental alteration of the facility or cask design that a change, even in the
conservative direction requires prior NRC review.
Consistent with the definition of “design function,” SSCs may have preventive, as
well as mitigative, design functions. Proposed activities that have adverse effects
on preventive or mitigative design functions are changes, and must be screened in.
Thus, a proposed activity that decreases the reliability of a function whose failure
could initiate an accident would be considered to adversely affect a design
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function and would screen in as a change. In this regard, proposed activities that
would relax the manner in which Code requirements are met for certain SSCs
should be screened for adverse effects on design function. Similarly, proposed
activities that would introduce the possibility of a new type of accident or a
malfunction with a different result as described in the UFSAR would screen in.
This reflects an overlap between the technical/engineering (“safety”) review of
the activity and 10 CFR 72.48. This overlap reflects that these considerations are
important to both the safety and regulatory reviews.
If a proposed activity has both positive and adverse effects, the activity should be
considered a change and be screened in. The 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation should
focus on the adverse effects of the activity that define it as a change pursuant to
Definition 2.6
The screening process is not concerned with the magnitude of adverse effects that
are identified. Any proposed activity that adversely affects a UFSAR-described
design function, method of performing or controlling design functions, or
evaluation that demonstrates that intended design functions will be accomplished,
is a change and is screened in. The magnitude of the adverse effect (i.e., is the
minimal increase standard met?) is the focus of the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation
process. Proposed activities that involve exceeding or altering a design basis limit
for a fission product boundary always screen in.
Screening determinations are made based on the engineering/technical
information supporting the proposed activity. The screening focus on design
functions, etc., ensures the essential distinction between (1) 10 CFR 72.48
screenings, and (2) 10 CFR 72.48 evaluations, which focus on whether changes
meet any of the eight criteria in 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2). Technical/engineering
information, e.g., design evaluations, etc., that demonstrates proposed activities
have no adverse effect on UFSAR-described design functions, methods of
performing or controlling design functions, or evaluations that demonstrate that
intended design functions will be accomplished may be used as basis for
screening out the activity. If the effect of a proposed activity is such that existing
safety analyses would no longer be bounding and therefore UFSAR safety
analyses must be re-run to demonstrate that all required safety functions and
design requirements are met, the activity is considered to be a change and must be
screened in. The revised safety analyses may be used in support of the required 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation of such changes.
Proposed activities that entail updating safety analyses to reflect improved
performance, capacity, timing, etc., resulting from a modification or alteration
(beneficial effects on design functions) are not considered adverse and need not
be screened in, even though the activity calls for safety analyses to be updated.
Specific guidance for identifying adverse effects due to a proposed activity
affecting the facility, a procedure or an evaluation is provided in subsections
5.1.3, 5.1.4 and 5.1.5, respectively.
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5.1.3 Screening of Proposed Activities Affecting the ISFSI Facility or Spent Fuel
Storage Cask Design as Described in the UFSAR
The terms “design function” and “design bases functions” are discussed in
Definition 2.10. “Design bases” is discussed in Definition 2.9. A basic
understanding of the inter-relationship of these terms is helpful in fundamentally
understanding what constitutes the necessary design functions to consider in a 10 CFR 72.48 screening.
The phrase “credited in the safety analysis” as used in characterizing a design
basis function is further explained in the discussion supporting the definition of
“design function.”
The design bases are a subset of the current licensing bases and include the
bounding conditions under which SSCs must perform design bases functions. The
bounding conditions may be derived from normal operation or any accident or
events for which SSCs are required to function, including off-normal events,
accidents, natural phenomena, and other events specifically addressed in the
regulations.
Note that the licensee or CoC holder must also further assess the application of
“design function” to include controlling the appropriate environmental conditions
(temperature, humidity, etc.) for SSCs to assure the equipment can perform its
intended function or provide SSCs that can withstand potentially credible
conditions (tornado missile, seismic, etc.).
This guidance further describes the relationship of design functions to design
bases functions by explaining the phrase “support or impact design basis
functions.” This discussion also helps understand the role of not-important-tosafety (NITS) equipment and design functions of such equipment as well as reemphasizes that the conditions under which equipment is required to function is
within the scope of 10 CFR 72.48.
The phrase “support or impact design bases functions” refers both to those SSCs
needed to support design bases functions (cooling, power, environmental control,
etc.) and to SSCs whose operation or malfunction could adversely affect the
performance of design bases functions (for instance, control systems and physical
arrangements). Thus, both important-to-safety (ITS) and NITS SSCs may perform
design functions.
UFSAR descriptions of design functions may identify what SSCs are intended to
do, when and how design functions are to be performed, and under what
conditions. Design functions may be performed by ITS or NITS SSCs and include
functions that, if not performed, would initiate a transient or accident that the
ISFSI or cask is required to withstand.
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Proposed activities that indirectly as well as directly affect design functions must
be considered within the scope of 10 CFR 72.48 and may require evaluation to
address adverse effects.
Codes and standards may be used in establishing acceptable values or ranges of
values to support the design bases of the facility. The reliability of SSCs is also
within the scope of 10 CFR 72.48 and that relaxation of such codes and standards
should be screened for adverse effects.
Another important consideration is that a modification to NITS SSCs not
described in the UFSAR can indirectly affect the capability of SSCs or a cask to
perform its UFSAR-described design function(s). For example, increasing the
heat generation from NITS equipment near the ISFSI or the cask during loading
operations could compromise the cask’s ability to remove heat from the spent
fuel.
Seismic qualification, missile protection, flooding protection, and fire protection
are some of the areas where alterations to NITS SSCs, whether or not described in
the UFSAR, can affect the UFSAR-described design function of SSCs or casks
through indirect or secondary effects.
Equivalent replacement is a type of activity performed on the ISFSI facility or
spent fuel storage cask design that does not alter the design functions of SSCs.
Licensee/certificate holder equivalence assessments, e.g., consideration of
performance/operating characteristics and other factors, may thus form the basis
for screening determinations that no 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation is required.
Only proposed activities affecting SSCs that would, based on supporting
engineering and technical information, have adverse effects on design functions
require evaluation under 10 CFR 72.48. Proposed activities other than a change
to, or exceedance of design basis limit for a fission product boundary that have
positive or no effect on design functions may be screened out.
5.1.4 Screening of Proposed Modifications to Procedures as Described in the
A procedure modification is any alteration to a procedure. Procedure
modifications that are editorial/administrative or managerial do not require a 10 CFR 72.48 screening per the AD process. Proposed procedure modifications are
screened in (i.e., require a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation) if they adversely affect how
SSC or cask design functions are performed or controlled (including
modifications to UFSAR-described procedures, assumed operator actions and
response times). A modification to a procedure that does not affect how SSC or
cask design functions described in the UFSAR are performed or controlled would
screen out. Proposed modifications that are determined to have a positive, or no
effect on how SSC design functions are performed or controlled may also be
screened out.
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For purposes of 10 CFR 72.48 screening, procedure modifications that
fundamentally alter (replace) the existing means of performing or controlling
design functions should be conservatively treated as adverse and screened in.
Such modifications include replacement of automatic action by manual action (or
vice versa), changing a valve from “locked closed” to “administratively closed”
and similar modifications.
5.1.5 Screening Proposed Modifications to USFAR Methods of Evaluation
Methods of evaluation (MOEs) included in the UFSAR to demonstrate that
intended SSC or cask design functions will be accomplished are considered part
of the “facility or spent fuel storage cask design as described in the UFSAR.”
Thus, use of revised, new, or different MOEs (Definition 2.17) is considered to be
a modification that is controlled by 10 CFR 72.48 and needs to be considered as
part of this screening step. Changes to elements of an MOE included in the
UFSAR, or use of an alternative method, must be evaluated under 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii) to determine if prior NRC approval is required (see Section 6.8).
Changes to MOEs (only) do not require evaluation against the first seven criteria.
Proposed modifications to MOEs not described, outlined, or summarized in the
UFSAR or MOEs described, outlined, or summarized in the UFSAR that are not
used in the safety analyses or to establish design bases would screen out at this
step. Proposed modifications to MOEs described, outlined, or summarized in the
UFSAR (including MOEs incorporated by reference from other sources, such as
technical literature, NRC NUREGs, and ISFSI or cask design UFSARs) that are
used in the safety analyses or to establish design bases are considered “changes”
and require evaluation under 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii), with the exception of
certain minor modifications to elements of a method, explained later in this
subsection.
MOEs that may be identified in references listed at the end of UFSAR sections or
chapters are not subject to control under 10 CFR 72.48 unless the UFSAR states
they were used for specific analyses within the scope of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii).
5.1.5.1 Determining if an Activity Involves an MOE
The following step-by-step guidance may be used to determine if a proposed
activity involves an MOE:
The discussion that follows is organized into four distinct steps:
Step 1 - Distinguish between input parameters and MOEs
Step 2 - Determine if an MOE is “...described, outlined or summarized in the
UFSAR.”
Step 3 - Determine if the MOE is used for one of the three cited purposes cited
below
Step 4 - Identification of intended design functions under design basis conditions
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Each of these steps is discussed in detail below.
Step 1 - Distinguish Between Input Parameters and Methods of Evaluation
This step involves application of two separate definitions. They are:
Definition 2.15 – “Input Parameters”
Definition 2.17 – “Method of Evaluation”
The core definitions for each, along with explanatory paragraphs are provided
below, with emphasis added:
Input Parameters:
Input parameters are those values derived directly from the physical
characteristics of SSCs or processes in the ISFSI facility or cask design,
including flow rates, temperatures, pressures, dimensions or
measurements (e.g., volume, weight, size, etc.), and system response times.
The principal intent of this definition is to distinguish methods of
evaluation and elements of an MOE from evaluation input parameters.
Changes to methods of evaluation described in the UFSAR are evaluated
under criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii), whereas changes to input
parameters described in the UFSAR are considered changes to the ISFSI
facility or cask design that would be evaluated under the other seven
criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2), but not criterion (c)(2)(viii).
Method of Evaluation:
Method of evaluation means the calculational framework used for
evaluating behavior or response of the ISFSI facility, cask or an SSC.
...an input parameter is considered to be an element of the methodology if:
• The method of evaluation includes a methodology describing how to
select the value of an input parameter to yield adequately conservative
results. However, if a licensee opts to use a value more conservative
than that required by the selection method, reduction in that
conservatism should be evaluated as an input parameter change, not a
change in methodology.
• The development or approval of a methodology was predicated on the
degree of conservatism in a particular input parameter or set of input
parameters. In other words, if certain elements of a methodology or
model were accepted on the basis of the conservatism of a selected
input value, then that input value is considered an element of the
methodology.
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There are examples and an extended discussion provided for each of the above
elsewhere in this guidance. However, a few points/observations may be useful:
• Input parameters are values. Those values are derived from physical
characteristics of SSCs or a process.
• MOEs are the "calculational framework.” The examples in Definition 2.17
illustrate that MOEs tend to involve some type of mathematical equations or
are related to physical constants of nature.
So, in many cases, a simple inspection of whether the topic of consideration is a
value, a constant of nature, or some form of a mathematical expression would be
insightful.
The two definitions, 2.15 and 2.17, must be read in their entirety. The stated
purpose is to distinguish input parameters from MOEs. This is because the
treatment under 10 CFR 72.48 is entirely different for input parameters and
elements of MOEs. The screening criteria are different and, as noted above, the 10 CFR 72.48 criteria to be answered are mutually exclusive.
Criteria 1 through 7 of 10 CFR 72.48(c) are answered for changes to input
parameters but not for changes to MOEs. Criterion 8 is solely for changes to
MOEs that require such a review, including the two cases in which an input
parameter is considered to be an element of the MOE. The remaining three steps
described next will determine if a given modification to an MOE requires a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation.
Note that any calculational framework could potentially satisfy the meaning of
“Method of Evaluation” in Definition 2.17. This creates a possible source of
confusion because it is common to use the term “MOE change" to mean that any
modification to an MOE requires a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation. However, Steps 2
and 3 indicate that two more attributes are required to achieve that status as
described in the “Discussion” section of Definition 2.17. They are:
• The MOE is described in the UFSAR (Step 2)
• The MOE is subject to 10 CFR 72.48 criterion (c)(2)(viii) review (Step 3)
Step 2 - Determine if an MOE is “...described, outlined or summarized in the
UFSAR”
The paragraph entitled "Discussion" from Definition 2.17 is provided below, with
emphasis added:
Examples of methods of evaluation are presented below. Proposed
activities involving modifications to such methods of evaluation require
evaluation under 10 CFR72.48(c)(2)(viii) only for methods of evaluation
used either in UFSAR safety analyses or in establishing the design
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bases, and only if the methods are described, outlined or summarized in
the UFSAR. Proposed activities involving modifications to methods of
evaluation that are subject to 10 CFR 72.48 include changes to elements
of existing methods described in the UFSAR and to changes that involve
replacement of existing methods of evaluation with alternative
methodologies.
Proposed modifications to such methods of evaluation require evaluation under 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii): only for:
• evaluations used either in UFSAR safety analyses or in establishing the design
bases, and
• only if the methods are described, outlined or summarized in the UFSAR.
Step #2 simply identifies if the method is "... described, outlined or summarized in
the UFSAR."
The intention here is if the MOE was discussed in any fashion, then the MOE is
considered to be “described in the UFSAR.”
Step 3 - Determine if the MOE is used for one of the three cited purposes
The second required feature is that the MOE must be “…used either in UFSAR
safety analyses or in establishing the design bases….”
These purposes correspond to the language used in the defined term of 10 CFR 72.48(a)(2), which is repeated here:
Departure from a method of evaluation described in the FSAR (as
updated) used in establishing the design bases or in the safety analyses
Definition 2.17 expands upon the meaning of these purposes. The following
phrases explicitly describe these three purposes:
Methods of evaluation described in the UFSAR subject to criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii) are:
• Methods of evaluation used in analyses that demonstrate that design
basis limits of fission product barriers are met (i.e., for the
parameters subject to criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(vii))
• Methods of evaluation used in UFSAR safety analyses, including
confinement and accident analyses, to demonstrate that consequences
of normal operations, off-normal events, and accidents do not exceed
10 CFR 72.104 or 10 CFR 72.106 dose limits, as applicable
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• Methods of evaluation used in supporting UFSAR analyses that
demonstrate intended design functions will be accomplished under
design basis conditions that the ISFSI or cask is required to
withstand, including natural phenomena, environmental conditions,
and dynamic effects.
The three purposes can be summarized as MOEs:
1. Results demonstrate that design basis limits of fission product barriers
are met
2. Used to calculate consequences (off-site accident dose, including that
from natural phenomena events)
3. That demonstrate intended design functions will be accomplished
under design basis conditions
Items 1 and 2 above should be self-evident to any 10 CFR 72.48 evaluator
involved in such activities. Item 3 includes two embedded terms, each with their
own extended source of guidance. Identification of this usage is the subject of
Step 4.
Step 4 - Identification of Intended Design Functions under Design Basis
Conditions.
Design function is a critical concept that is used throughout this guidance
(Definition 2.10).
There are two points to be made here:
1. The definition for design function is rather lengthy and is heavily
oriented around design bases functions and those functions that support
or impact design bases functions.
2. The term design bases functions comes from NEI 97-04, which is
endorsed in Regulatory Guide 1.186.
This discussion will not expand further on the meaning of these two critical terms,
design function and design bases functions, other than to note that a complete
understanding of both is required to fully understand the identification of MOEs
subject to review under 10 CFR 72.48. The meanings of design function and
design bases functions are included in Definition 2.10.
5.1.5.2 Software Revisions Associated with an MOE
This section discusses a revision to existing software that implements an MOE. A
change to the software that implements an MOE does not necessarily cause a
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departure from an MOE, requiring prior NRC approval. Therefore, it is critical to
understand the scope and type of software changes that were made.
NOTE: This discussion does NOT address the replacement of, or implementation
of new or different MOEs or software.
Step 1 - Does the Software Need to be Considered?
The first step in determining the impact of the software revision is to determine if
the software fits the definition of an MOE and is, therefore, within the scope of
consideration. A discussion of the identification of applicable MOEs is included
in Section 5.1.5.1.
Step 2 - Performing the Screening Review
If the software does meet the criteria for an MOE, then the next step is to
understand the scope and type of modification(s) involved. There are many
elements to a software package. Determining exactly which elements are being
revised is critical. Examples of elements of methodology are given in Definition
2.17. A simple statement regarding the “revision,” “version,” or “modification”
identifier as the basis for a 10 CFR 72.48 screening response is inadequate.
One licensee or CoC holder may use several “versions” of a computer code
revision to address errors and minor improvements, thereby saving a new revision
for major modeling updates, while another licensee or CoC holder may change
“revisions” of a computer code to address a number of minor errors (across the
spectrum of the code’s applicability) without changing any analytical modeling.
Use of a later version or release of a software program that is utilized as part of an
MOE described in the UFSAR would typically be evaluated as a change to an
element of an MOE. However, licensees and CoC holders are cautioned that
some new versions or releases of computer codes (e.g., SCALE) can be so
fundamentally changed that they are a new or different MOE. Technical judgment
should be used appropriately by personnel familiar with the use of the code as an
MOE to make this determination. See Section 6.8.1 for additional guidance.
5.1.5.3 Additional Concerns
A proposed activity involving an MOE is a change (i.e., screens in) if the
modification is not in strict accordance with the constraints and limitations
outlined in an NRC Safety Evaluation Report (SER), topical report, or the
UFSAR (hereafter referred to as “source documents”). A proposed activity to
replace an MOE with an alternate MOE (i.e., different software package) always
screens in.
The technical description of the MOE in the source documents defines any
constraints and limitations on use of the MOE. For example, if a source document
for a lattice physics analytical model describes its application to a particular fuel
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design (e.g., Westinghouse 15x15), the specific reference to the Westinghouse
15x15 fuel design shall be viewed as a constraint or limitation on the use of the
analytical model unless the source document states that the analytical model may
be used for other fuel designs.
For a proposed modification to an element of an MOE, it is essential to identify
and understand the details of the modification.
For each modification, the pertinent constraints and limitations associated with
the MOE, if any, need to be identified.
Modifications to more than one element of the MOE need to consider the
cumulative impact of all the modifications on the constraints and limitations. In
these cases, the modifications to the MOE may be a “replacement MOE” rather
than a “modification to an element of an MOE.”
The 10 CFR 72.48 screening should identify if a proposed modification to one or
more elements of an MOE that is not consistent with the constraints and
limitations affects an element of the MOE or effectively causes the MOE to
become an alternative MOE. This distinction is necessary to correctly apply the
Evaluation guidance in Section 6.8.
• Modifications to an element of an MOE that are administrative, such as
changing input/output descriptive labels, changing output table titles,
adding/deleting intermediate output results, re-sequencing output tables,
adding non-executable comments in the computer coding, etc., would not be
considered changes and would not require a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation. Note
that although these types of modifications to an MOE might be considered
editorial or administrative and not require a 10 CFR 72.48 screening (per
Subsection 4.3 of this guidance), it is recommended that a 10 CFR 72.48
screening be performed to provide the explanation that the changes are indeed
editorial or administrative and have no impact on the MOE.
• Modifications to an element of an MOE that are within the constraints and
limitations require case-specific consideration to determine if the modification
is a change to an element of an MOE or a new or different MOE. Typical
constraints and limitations may include the following:
- Breathing rate of 3.47 E-4 m3/sec from an NRC regulatory guide for
inhalation dose calculations
- Use of dose conversion factors from a specific ICRP standard (e.g.,
- Fractional release values for confinement analysis from NUREG-1536
- Heat transfer correlations
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- Analysis performed in the manner described in a cited topical report
- Neutron absorber performance is appropriately modeled as described
in a cited topical report
- A subroutine iterates to a specified convergence limit
- A boundary condition is set to a specified value.
- Cross sections were obtained by collapsing the library from “x” groups
to “y” groups.
If the pertinent constraints and limitations for an MOE are not known or cannot be
identified, then the modification to the element of the MOE screens in.
If a source document identifies that a particular feature is included in an MOE,
but does not describe how the feature is modeled, a modification to the specific
modeling of the feature is not a modification to an element of the MOE because
the modification is consistent with the terms (and level of detail) of the approved
MOE. A 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation would not be required. However, if a source
document states that a particular feature is modeled, a modification to eliminate
that feature would not be consistent with the description in the source document
and would screen in, requiring a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation.
See Section 6.8 for guidance on completing the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation to
determine if a departure from a method of evaluation is involved for a change to
an element of an MOE or the use of a new or different MOE.
5.2 IS THE ACTIVITY A TEST OR EXPERIMENT NOT DESCRIBED IN THE UFSAR?
Tests or experiments not described in the UFSAR are activities where an SSC or cask is
utilized or controlled in a manner that is outside the reference bounds (Definition 2.19) of
the design for that SSC or cask or inconsistent with analyses or description in the
UFSAR. For example, the use of an approved operating procedure for accomplishing an
objective other than that contemplated in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR requires evaluation
under 10 CFR 72.48 as a test or experiment.
Tests and experiments that are described in the UFSAR may be screened out at this step.
Tests and experiments that are not described in the UFSAR may be screened out provided
the test or experiment is bounded by tests and experiments that are described.
5.3 SCREENING DOCUMENTATION
10 CFR 72.48 record-keeping requirements apply to 10 CFR 72.48 evaluations
performed for activities that screened in, not to screening records for activities that
screened out. However, documentation should be maintained of screenings that conclude
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a proposed activity may be screened out (i.e., that a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation was not
required). The basis for the conclusion should be documented to a degree commensurate
with the safety significance of the change. For proposed modifications or revisions, the
documentation should include the basis for determining that there would be no adverse
effect on design functions, etc. Typically, the screening documentation is retained as part
of the modification or revision package.
Screening documentation does not constitute the “record of changes” required by 10 CFR 72.48, and thus is not subject to 10 CFR 72.48 documentation and reporting
requirements. However, screening documentation that supports modifications to the
ISFSI or cask UFSAR and the UFSAR revisions themselves should be retained in
accordance with the licensee’s or CoC holder’s QA program. It is recommended that in
addition to including cask UFSAR revisions in a future UFSAR update per 10 CFR 72.248, the revisions also be made available by CoC holders to general licensees in a
timely manner after each individual change is approved. This ensures the general
licensees have a current cask UFSAR document between formal updates to the UFSAR
and the supporting documentation for the revisions. Screening records need not be
retained for activities that were never implemented.
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6 10 CFR 72.48 EVALUATION
Once it has been determined that a proposed activity is a change, test, or experiment and
requires a 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation, the written evaluation must address the applicable
criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2). These eight criteria are used to evaluate the effects of
proposed activities on accidents and malfunctions previously evaluated in the UFSAR
and their potential to cause accidents or malfunctions whose effects are not bounded by
previous analyses.
Criteria (c)(2)(i - vii) of 10 CFR 72.48(c) are applicable to activities other than changes in
methods of evaluation. Criterion (c)(2)(viii) is applicable to changes in methods of
evaluation. Each activity must be evaluated against each applicable criterion. If any of the
applicable criteria are met, a specific licensee must apply for and obtain a license
amendment per 10 CFR 72.56, and a CoC holder must apply for and obtain a CoC
amendment per 10 CFR 72.244 (for itself or for a general licensee) before implementing
the activity unless the activity is canceled, modified, or an exemption is sought.
Subsections 6.1 through 6.8 provide guidance for evaluating proposed activities against
the eight criteria.
Each element of a proposed activity must be addressed in the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation,
except in instances where linking elements of an activity is appropriate, in which case the
linked elements can be evaluated together. A test for linking elements of proposed
changes is interdependence. A thorough evaluation is necessary to determine whether or
not proposed activities are linked.
It is appropriate for discrete elements to be evaluated together if (1) they are
interdependent as in the case where a modification to a system or component necessitates
additional changes to other systems or procedures; or (2) they are performed collectively
to address a design or operational issue.
If concurrent changes are being made that are not linked, each must be evaluated
separately and independently of each other. Un-linked changes in separate documents
(e.g., different procedures, directions, design change packages, etc.) should receive
separate 10 CFR 72.48 evaluations. For multiple changes being made to a single
document, such as in a revision to the 212 Report, it is permissible to include un-linked
changes within the same 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation document, but each change must be
individually discussed in answering the evaluation questions. Multiple changes
considered in the same 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation may result in some or all of the unlinked changes requiring prior NRC approval. Care must be taken to ensure the
documentation is clear in such cases.
The effects of a proposed activity being evaluated under 10 CFR 72.48 should be
assessed against each of the applicable evaluation criteria separately. For example, an
increase in frequency/likelihood of occurrence cannot be compensated for by additional
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mitigation of consequences. Evaluations should consider the effects of the proposed
activity on operator actions.
6.1 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN THE
FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE OF AN ACCIDENT PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR
(AS UPDATED)?
In answering this question, the first step is to identify the accidents that have been
evaluated in the UFSAR that are affected by the proposed activity. Then a determination
should be made as to whether the frequency of these accidents occurring would be more
than minimally increased.
ISFSI design events have been divided into categories based upon a qualitative
assessment of frequency. The frequency categories for design events, as discussed in
NUREG-1567 and ANSI/ANS-57.9, are:
• Design Event I - Normal Operations: Events that are expected to occur regularly or
frequently in the course of normal operation of the ISFSI.
• Design Event II - Anticipated Occurrences (Off-normal Events): Events that can
be expected to occur with moderate frequency or on the order of once per calendar
year of ISFSI operation.
• Design Events III and IV - Accident Events: Events considered to occur
infrequently, if ever, during the lifetime of the ISFSI.
During initial ISFSI facility licensing or spent fuel storage cask certification, design
events were assessed in relative frequencies, as described above. Minimal increases in the
frequency of occurrence of an accident resulting from subsequent licensee or cask
certificate holder activities do not significantly change the licensing basis of the ISFSI
facility or cask and do not impact the conclusions reached about acceptability of the
ISFSI facility or cask design.
Because accident frequencies were considered in a broad sense as described above, a
change from one frequency category to a more frequent category is clearly an example of
a change that results in more than a minimal increase in the frequency of occurrence of an
accident.
Changes within a frequency category could also result in more than a minimal increase in
the frequency of occurrence of an accident. Normally, the determination of a frequency
increase is based upon a qualitative assessment using engineering evaluations consistent
with the UFSAR analysis assumptions. However, an ISFSI- or spent fuel storage caskspecific accident frequency calculation may be used to evaluate a proposed activity in a
quantitative sense.
Reasonable engineering practices and engineering judgment, as appropriate, should be
used in determining whether the frequency of occurrence of an accident would more than
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minimally increase as a result of implementing a proposed activity. While there have
been probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) studies of dry cask storage operations
performed by both the NRC and the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), they are
not focused on design basis events such as those to be considered in answering this
question. Thus, the ISFSI or cask UFSAR description of the event’s cause(s) should be
primarily used in determining what constitutes more than a minimal increase in the
frequency of occurrence of an accident previously evaluated in the UFSAR.
The effect of a proposed activity on the frequency of an accident must be discernible and
attributable to the proposed activity in order to exceed the more than minimal increase
standard. A proposed activity is considered to have a negligible effect on the frequency of
an accident when a change in frequency is so small or the uncertainties in determining
whether a change in frequency has occurred are such that it cannot be reasonably
concluded that the frequency has actually changed (i.e., there is no clear trend towards
increasing the frequency). A proposed activity that has a negligible effect satisfies the
minimal increase standard.
Although this criterion allows minimal increases, licensees and CoC holders must still
meet applicable regulatory requirements and other acceptance criteria to which they are
committed (such as contained in Regulatory Guides and nationally recognized industry
consensus standards, e.g., the ASME B&PV Code). Further, departures from the design,
fabrication, construction, testing, and performance standards as outlined in the General
Design Criteria (Subpart F to Part 72) are not compatible with a “no more than minimal
increase” standard.
Frequencies of occurrence of natural phenomena were established as part of initial
licensing for specific licensees. Frequencies of occurrence of natural phenomena were not
established as part of the generic storage cask certification because no particular
geographic location is considered in the generic certification. An assumed set of design
criteria for natural phenomena were chosen for cask design, but the frequency of
occurrence was not defined. The likelihood of natural phenomena events is necessarily
site-specific. In either case, the frequency of occurrence of environmental phenomena at
any particular site are not expected to change, unless a specific effort is undertaken by the
ISFSI owner to update the information pertaining to meteorological or seismic event
occurrence that forms the design basis for the facility. Thus, changes in design
requirements for natural phenomena, such as earthquakes, tornadoes, snow, flooding, and
lightning strikes, should be treated as potentially affecting the likelihood of a malfunction
rather than the frequency of occurrence of an accident.
For some accidents, the change in frequency of occurrence of an accident can be
calculated to support the evaluation of the proposed activity, and compared to the
following criteria:
• The increase in the pre-change accident or transient frequency does not exceed 10
percent.
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• The resultant frequency of occurrence remains below 1E-6 per year or applicable
ISFSI site-specific threshold.
In cases where the frequency of the accident is calculated, if the proposed activity would
not meet either of the above criteria, the change is considered to involve more than a
minimal increase in the frequency of occurrence of an accident, and prior NRC approval
is required.
6.2 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN THE
LIKELIHOOD OF OCCURRENCE OF A MALFUNCTION OF AN SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY
PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?
The term “malfunction of an SSC important to safety” refers to the failure of structures,
systems and components (SSCs) to perform their intended design functions— including
both important to safety (ITS) SSCs and not-important to safety (NITS) SSCs when the
failure of the NITS SSCs to perform their design functions could affect the ability of the
ITS SSCs to perform their design functions. The cause and mode of a malfunction should
be considered in determining whether there is a change in the likelihood of a malfunction.
The effect or result of a malfunction should be considered in determining whether a
malfunction with a different result is involved per Section 6.6.
In determining whether there is more than a minimal increase in the likelihood of
occurrence of a malfunction of a SSC to perform its design function as described in the
UFSAR, the first step is to determine what SSCs are affected by the proposed activity.
Next, the effects of the proposed activity on the affected SSCs should be determined.
This evaluation should include both direct and indirect effects.
Direct effects are those where the proposed activity affects the SSCs. Indirect effects are
those where the proposed activity affects one SSC and this SSC affects the capability of
another SSC to perform its UFSAR-described design function. Indirect effects also
include the effects of proposed activities on the design functions of SSCs credited in the
safety analyses. The safety analysis assumes certain design functions of SSCs in
demonstrating the adequacy of design. Thus, certain design functions, while not
specifically identified in the safety analysis, are credited in an indirect sense.
After determining the effect of the proposed activity on the important-to-safety SSCs, a
determination is made of whether the likelihood of a malfunction of the important-tosafety SSCs has increased more than minimally. Qualitative engineering judgment and/or
an industry precedent is typically used to determine if there is more than a minimal
increase in the likelihood of occurrence of a malfunction. An appropriate calculation can
be used to demonstrate the change in likelihood in a quantitative sense, if available and
practical. The effect of a proposed activity on the likelihood of malfunction must be
discernible and attributable to the proposed activity in order to exceed the more than
minimal increase standard. A proposed activity is considered to have a negligible effect
on the likelihood of a malfunction when a change in likelihood is so small or the
uncertainties in determining whether a change in likelihood has occurred are such that it
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cannot be reasonably concluded that the likelihood has actually changed (i.e., there is no
clear trend towards increasing the likelihood). A proposed activity that has a negligible
effect satisfies the minimal increase standard.
Evaluations of a proposed activity for its effect on likelihood of a malfunction would be
performed at level of detail that is described in the UFSAR. The determination of
whether the likelihood of malfunction is more than minimally increased is made at a level
consistent with existing UFSAR-described failure modes and effects analyses. While the
evaluation should take into account the level that was previously evaluated, it also needs
to consider the nature of the proposed activity. If, for example, the change in likelihood
of occurrence of a malfunction is calculated in support of the evaluation, and is less than
or equal to two times, this would not exceed the “more than a minimal increase” standard
and would not require prior NRC approval. (Note: The factor of two should be applied at
the component level.)
Changes in design requirements for earthquakes, tornadoes, and other natural phenomena
should be treated as potentially affecting the likelihood of malfunction.
Although this criterion allows minimal increases, licensees must still meet applicable
regulatory requirements and other acceptance criteria to which they are committed (such
as contained in Regulatory Guides and nationally recognized industry consensus
standards, e.g., the ASME B&PV Code). Further, departures from the design, fabrication,
construction, testing, and performance standards as outlined in the General Design
Criteria (Subpart F to Part 72) are not compatible with a “no more than minimal increase”
standard because such departures would be non-compliant with the regulations.
6.3 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN THE
CONSEQUENCES OF AN ACCIDENT PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS
UPDATED)?
The UFSAR, based on logic similar to ANSI standards, provides an acceptance criterion
and frequency relationship for “conditions for design.” When determining which
activities represent “more than a minimal increase in consequences” pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48, it must be recognized that “consequences” means dose. Therefore, an increase in
consequences must involve an increase in radiological doses to the public, i.e., at the
ISFSI controlled area boundary. Changes in barrier performance or other outcomes of the
proposed activity that do not result in increased radiological dose to the public are
addressed under Section 6.7, concerning integrity of fission product barriers, or the other
criteria of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2).
NRC regulates compliance with the provisions of 10 CFR 72 to assure adequate
protection of the public health and safety. Activities affecting onsite dose consequences
that may require prior NRC approval are those that impede required actions to mitigate
the consequences of accidents involving an ISFSI or a cask.
The consequences covered include dose resulting from any accident evaluated in the
UFSAR. The accidents include those typically covered in the accident analyses section(s)
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of the UFSAR and other events with which the cask is designed to cope and are described
in the UFSAR (e.g., tornado missiles and flooding). The consequences referred to in 10 CFR 72.48 do not apply to occupational exposures resulting from routine operations,
maintenance, testing, etc. Occupational doses are controlled and maintained As Low As
Reasonably Achievable (ALARA) through formal licensee programs.
10 CFR Part 20 and 10 CFR 72.104 establish requirements for protection against
radiation during normal operations and anticipated occurrences (off-normal events),
including dose criteria relative to radioactive waste handling and effluents. 10 CFR 72.48
accident dose consequence criteria and evaluation guidance are not applicable to
proposed activities affecting normal operations governed by 10 CFR Part 20 and 10 CFR 72.104 requirements. Operation of an ISFSI, including cask loading and unloading, must
not result in doses exceeding the limits of 10 CFR 20 or 10 CFR 72.104 as a result of a
proposed activity. Regulatory limits can never be exceeded. Proposed activities resulting
in doses exceeding regulatory limits must be canceled or revised such that the doses do
not exceed regulatory limits.
The dose consequences referred to in 10 CFR 72.48 are those calculated by licensees or
certificate holders—not the results of independent, confirmatory dose analyses by the
NRC that may be documented in Safety Evaluation Reports.
The evaluation should determine the dose at the ISFSI controlled area boundary that
would likely result from accidents associated with the proposed activity. If a proposed
activity would result in more than a minimal increase in the controlled area boundary
dose from the existing calculated dose for any accident, then the activity would require
prior NRC approval. Where a change in consequences is so small or the uncertainties in
determining whether a change in consequences has occurred are such that it cannot be
reasonably concluded that the consequences have actually changed (i.e., there is no clear
trend towards increasing the consequences), the change need not be considered an
increase in consequences.
10 CFR 72.106 establishes the controlled area boundary dose limits for ISFSI design
basis accidents. The calculated dose values for a given accident would be identified in the
UFSAR. If a general licensee has calculated a lower offsite dose consequence and
reported that value in their 212 Report, the higher cask UFSAR value would remain the
value used for the purposes of the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation. Likewise, the analysis
method and assumptions from the UFSAR should be used in determining the change in
consequences of an accident as a result of a proposed activity. These dose values must be
within the 10 CFR 72.106 limits, as applicable. An increase in accident consequences
from a proposed activity is defined to be not more than minimal if the increase is less
than or equal to 10 percent of the difference between the current cask UFSAR dose value
and the regulatory limit (10 CFR 72.106). The current calculated dose values are those
documented in the most up-to-date UFSAR of record. See Section 6.8.1 for additional
discussion of addressing analysis uncertainty as an element of an MOE.
10 CFR 72.104 establishes the annual dose limits for ISFSI anticipated occurrences (offnormal events) combined with normal ISFSI operations and other site operations (e.g., 25
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mrem whole body to any real individual beyond the controlled area). In order to comply
with 10 CFR 72.104, no activity would be allowed to result in the ISFSI exceeding the 10 CFR 72.104 limits. For anticipated occurrences, a minimal increase would include any
increase up to the 10 CFR 72.104 limits. 10 CFR 72.104 dose limits are not the subject of
10 CFR 72.48. Thus, any increase in consequences of an anticipated occurrence
previously evaluated in the UFSAR that is still within the 10 CFR 72.104 limits would
always be less than a minimal increase in consequences. The nature of the proposed
activity and its potential effect on normal, off-normal, and/or accident doses will
determine whether a new or revised evaluation or analysis is required to compute the
dose impact for comparison to the limits specified in 10 CFR 72.104 or 10 CFR 106.
In determining if there is more than a minimal increase in consequences, the first step is
to determine which accidents evaluated in the UFSAR are associated with the proposed
activity. Examples of questions that assist in this determination are:
(1) Will the proposed activity change, prevent or degrade the effectiveness of actions
described or assumed in an accident discussed in the UFSAR?
(2) Will the proposed activity alter assumptions previously made in evaluating the
radiological consequences of an accident described in the UFSAR?
(3) Will the proposed activity play a direct role in mitigating the radiological
consequences of an accident described in the UFSAR?
The next step is to determine if the proposed activity does, in fact, increase the offsite
radiological consequences of any of the accidents evaluated in the UFSAR. If it is
determined that the proposed activity does have an effect on the offsite radiological
consequences of any accident analysis described in the UFSAR, then either:
(1) Demonstrate and document that the off-site radiological consequences of the
accident described in the UFSAR are bounding for the proposed activity (e.g., by
showing that the results of the UFSAR analysis bound those that would be
associated with the proposed activity), or
(2) Revise and document the analysis taking into account the proposed activity and
determine if more than a minimal increase has occurred as described above.
In summary, the impact of proposed activities on the accident consequences (doses)
computed to determine compliance with the limit specified in 10 CFR 72.106, if any,
must be considered and dose evaluations/analyses performed, as required. While
compliance with 10 CFR 72.106 is the subject of responding to this question, it must be
remembered that no activity is permitted that would cause the normal/off-normal dose
limits in 10 CFR 72.104 to be exceeded.
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6.4 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN MORE THAN A MINIMAL INCREASE IN THE
CONSEQUENCES OF A MALFUNCTION OF AN SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY PREVIOUSLY
EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?
In determining if there is more than a minimal increase in consequences, the first step is
to determine which malfunctions evaluated in the UFSAR are associated with the
proposed activity. The next step is to determine if the proposed activity does, in fact,
increase the radiological consequences and, if so, are they more than minimally
increased. The guidance for determining whether a proposed activity results in more than
a minimal increase in the consequences of a malfunction is the same as that for accidents.
Operation of an ISFSI, including cask loading and unloading, must not result in doses
exceeding the limits of 10 CFR 20 or 10 CFR 72.104 as a result of a proposed activity.
Proposed activities resulting in doses exceeding regulatory limits must be canceled or
revised such that the doses do not exceed regulatory limits. Refer to Section 6.3.
In summary, the impact of proposed activities on the accident consequences (doses)
computed to determine compliance with the limit specified in 10 CFR 72.106, if any,
must be considered and dose evaluations/analyses performed, as required. While
compliance with 10 CFR 72.106 is the subject of responding to this question, it must be
remembered that no activity is permitted that would cause the normal/off-normal dose
limits in 10 CFR 72.104 to be exceeded.
6.5 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY CREATE A POSSIBILITY FOR AN ACCIDENT OF A
DIFFERENT TYPE THAN ANY PREVIOUSLY EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?
The set of accidents that an ISFSI facility or cask design must postulate for purposes of
UFSAR safety analyses, typically including explosion, fire, earthquake, flood, etc., are
often referred to as “design basis accidents.” The terms accidents and off-normal events
are often used in regulatory documents (e.g., in the accident analyses section(s) of the
Standard Review Plan), where off-normal events are viewed as the more likely, low
consequence events governed by the dose limits of 10 CFR 72.104, and accidents as less
likely but more serious. This criterion deals with creating the possibility for accidents of
similar or higher frequency and significance to those already included in the licensing
basis for the ISFSI facility or dry storage cask. Thus, accidents that would require
multiple independent failures or other circumstances in order to “be created” would not
meet this criterion.
Certain accidents are not discussed in the UFSAR because their effects are bounded by
other related events that are analyzed. For example, a postulated cask drop of a certain
distance may not be specifically evaluated in the UFSAR because it has been determined
to be less limiting than the evaluated cask drop. Therefore, if a proposed design or ISFSI
facility change would introduce a cask drop of a distance less than the evaluated cask
drop, the postulated cask drop need not be considered an accident of a different type.
The possible accidents of a different type are limited to those that are as likely to happen
as those previously evaluated in the UFSAR. The accident must be credible in the sense
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of having been created within the range of assumptions previously considered in the
licensing basis. The evaluation for possible different accidents must consider that the
proposed activity may create the possibility for accidents beyond those described in the
UFSAR. A new initiator of an accident previously evaluated in the UFSAR is not a
different type of accident. Such a change or activity, however, that increases the
frequency of an accident previously thought to be incredible to the point where it
becomes as likely as the accidents in the UFSAR, creates the possibility of an accident of
a different type.
In evaluating whether the proposed change or activity creates the possibility of an
accident of a different type, the first step is to determine the types of accidents that have
been evaluated in the UFSAR. The types of credible accidents that the proposed activity
could create that are not bounded by UFSAR-evaluated accidents are accidents of a
different type.
6.6 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY CREATE A POSSIBILITY FOR A MALFUNCTION OF AN
SSC IMPORTANT TO SAFETY WITH A DIFFERENT RESULT THAN ANY PREVIOUSLY
EVALUATED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED)?
Malfunctions of SSCs are generally postulated as potential component or system failures
in order to evaluate the performance of an ISFSI facility or cask design. The focus of the
evaluation is on the result or effect of the malfunction rather than the cause or type of
malfunction. A malfunction that involves an initiator or failure whose effects are not
bounded by those explicitly described in the UFSAR is a malfunction with a different
result. A new failure mechanism is not a malfunction with a different result if the result
or effect is the same as, or is bounded by, that previously evaluated in the UFSAR. If the
proposed activity identifies a new malfunction result or effect, the response to this
question should clearly discuss and compare the new malfunction result or effect with
those previously evaluated in the UFSAR. The purpose of this comparison is to justify
the determination as to whether the new result or effects are “different” (i.e., not bounded
by the results of a previously-evaluated malfunction) and require a “yes” response to this
question.
The possible malfunctions with a different result are limited to those that are as likely to
happen as those described in the UFSAR. For example, a seismic induced failure of a
component that has been designed to the appropriate seismic criteria will not cause a
malfunction with a different result. However, a proposed change or activity that increases
the likelihood of a malfunction previously thought to be incredible to the point where it
becomes as likely as the malfunctions assumed in the UFSAR, could create a possible
malfunction with a different result. This determination would be made when the results
of the now-credible malfunction are defined and compared to the results of other
previously-evaluated malfunctions.
In evaluating a proposed activity against this criterion, the types and results of failure
modes of SSCs that have previously been evaluated in the UFSAR and that are affected
by the proposed activity should be identified. Attention must be given to whether the
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malfunction was evaluated in the accident analyses at the component level or the overall
ISFSI facility level. While the evaluation should take into account the level that was
previously evaluated in terms of malfunctions and resulting mitigation impacts, it also
needs to consider the nature of the proposed activity. Thus, for instance, if a single failure
proof lifting device were to be replaced with a non-single failure proof lifting device, but
the lift height is within the cask drop analysis, the consequences should still be evaluated
to determine if any new outcomes are introduced.
Once the malfunctions previously evaluated in the UFSAR and the results of these
malfunctions have been determined, then the types and results of failure modes that the
proposed activity could create are identified. Comparing the two lists can provide the
answer to the criterion question.
6.7 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN A DESIGN BASIS LIMIT FOR A FISSION
PRODUCT BARRIER AS DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED) BEING EXCEEDED OR
ALTERED?
For the purposes of 10 CFR 72.48, the fission product barriers for a spent fuel storage
cask system include the fuel cladding of undamaged fuel and the confinement boundary
for the storage system. Dry spent fuel storage systems are designed in accordance with
NRC requirements to preserve both fuel cladding integrity (for undamaged fuel) and
confinement capability during all credible normal, off-normal, and accident events.
Integrity of undamaged fuel cladding may be required to preserve the assumptions of the
criticality analysis and ensure sub-criticality of the stored spent fuel. Fuel cladding is not
typically credited in the UFSAR as a confinement boundary, but it is considered a fission
product barrier. This is because gross rupture of the fuel cladding of undamaged fuel is
prohibited as a result of storage by 10 CFR 72.122(h)(1) and must be considered when
addressing the 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(vii) criterion. Damaged, failed fuel, fuel debris, and
certain other stored material (as defined in the ISFSI license or cask CoC) is required to
be confined by canning or other appropriate means in accordance with 10 CFR 72.122(h).
However, such damaged fuel cans or other means are not considered a fission product
barrier in the context of 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(vii).
Preservation of the confinement boundary is required to ensure against the uncontrolled
release of radioactive materials. The makeup of the confinement boundary depends upon
the storage system design as described in the UFSAR.
10 CFR 72.48 evaluation under criterion (c)(2)(vii) focuses on the fission product barriers
and on the critical design information that supports their continued integrity. Guidance
for applying this criterion is structured around a two-step approach:
• Identification of affected design basis limits for a fission product barrier
• Determination of when those limits are exceeded or altered.
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6.7.1 Identification of Affected Design Basis Limits for a Fission Product Barrier
The first step is to identify the fission product barrier design basis limits, if any,
that are affected by a proposed activity. Design basis limits for a fission product
barrier are the controlling numerical values established during the licensing
review as presented in the UFSAR for any parameter(s) used to determine the
integrity of the fission product barrier. These limits have three key attributes:
1. The parameter is fundamental to the barrier’s integrity. Design basis limits for
fission product barriers establish the reference bounds for design of the
barriers, as defined in 10 CFR 72.3. They are the limiting values for
parameters that directly determine the performance of a fission product
barrier. That is, design bases limits are fundamental to barrier integrity and
may be thought of as the point at which confidence in the barrier begins to
decrease.
For purposes of this evaluation, design bases parameters that are used to
directly determine fission product barrier integrity should be distinguished
from subordinate parameters that can indirectly affect fission product barrier
performance. Indirect effects of changes to subordinate parameters are
evaluated in terms of their effect on the more fundamental design bases
parameters/limits that ensure fission product barrier integrity. For example, a
heat transfer pathway is a subordinate parameter for purposes of this
evaluation, not a design bases parameter/limit. The acceptability of a
reduction in a heat transfer pathway would be determined based on its effect
on design bases limits for the fuel clad and the canister (e.g., clad integrity and
canister pressure).
2. The limit is expressed numerically. Design basis limits are numerical values
used in the overall design process, not descriptions of functional requirements.
Design basis limits are typically the numerical acceptance criteria utilized in
the analysis methodology. The ISFSI facility’s or cask’s design and operation
associated with these parameters as described in the UFSAR will be at or
below (more conservative than) the design basis limit.
3. The limit is identified in the ISFSI or cask UFSAR. As required by 10 CFR 72.24(c) or 10 CFR 72.230, design basis limits are presented in the original
FSAR and continue to reside in the UFSAR. They may be located in a vendor
topical report that is incorporated by reference in the UFSAR.
Consistent with the discussion of 10 CFR 72.48 applicability in Section 4.0, any
design basis limit for a fission product barrier that is controlled by another, more
specific regulation or Technical Specification would not require evaluation under
Criterion (c)(2)(vii). The effect of the proposed activity on those parameters
would be evaluated in accordance with the more specific regulation. Effects
(either direct or indirect—see discussion below) on design basis parameters
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covered by another regulation or Technical Specification need not be considered
as part of evaluations under this criterion.
Examples of typical fission product barrier design basis limits are identified in the
following table:
- Changes cannot cause these limits to be exceeded nor can these limits be altered without prior NRC
approval.
Barrier Design Bases Parameter Typical Design Basis Limit*
of Undamaged
Fuel
Protection against gross rupture Thermal:
Maximum Fuel Cladding Temperature
Maximum Fuel Cladding Thermal Cycles
Structural:
Maximum Fuel Cladding Stress
Maximum deceleration or g-load
Criticality:
Maximum K-effective
Confinement
boundary
Preservation of confinement boundary Structural:
Maximum Canister/Cask Design Pressure
Stresses:
Allowable values determined by Code compliance as
described in the UFSAR
Maximum deceleration or g-load
Leak Rate:
Maximum UFSAR-specified leak rate for the cask
and/or canister
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The list above may vary for a given ISFSI facility/cask design and/or cask vendor
and may include other parameters for specific accidents. For example, the design
of a particular cask system may utilize a methodology for criticality control that
credits partial burnup. If a given ISFSI facility/cask design has this or other
parameters incorporated into the UFSAR as a design basis limit for a fission
product barrier, then changes affecting it should be evaluated under this criterion.
Two of the ways that a licensee/certificate holder can evaluate proposed activities
against this criterion are as follows. The licensee/certificate holder may identify
all design bases parameters for fission product barriers and include them
explicitly in the procedure for performing 10 CFR 72.48 evaluations.
Alternatively, the effects of a proposed activity could be evaluated first to
determine if the change affects design bases parameters for fission product
barriers. The results of these two approaches are equivalent provided the guidance
for “exceeded or altered” described below is followed. In all cases, the direct and
indirect effects of proposed activities must be included in the evaluation.
6.7.2 Exceeded or Altered
A specific proposed activity requires a license or cask CoC amendment if the
design basis limit for a fission product barrier is “exceeded or altered.” The term
“exceeded” means that as a result of the proposed activity, the ISFSI facility’s or
cask’s predicted response would be less conservative than the numerical design
basis limit identified above. For example, if, as a result of a proposed activity, the
calculated peak fuel cladding temperature for normal operation is in excess of
400o
F, a design basis limit for a fission product barrier would be exceeded, and
the response to this question would be “yes.” The term “altered” means the design
basis limit itself is changed (e.g., the 400o
C fuel cladding temperature limit is
increased or decreased) and would also require a “yes” answer to this question.
The effect of the proposed activity includes both direct and indirect effects. A
reduction in the shell thickness (confinement boundary) that increases internal
stresses beyond code allowables is a direct effect that would require a license
amendment. Indirect effects provide for another parameter or effect to cascade
from the proposed activity to the design basis limit. For example, increasing the
size of structural components for greater strength in the internal fuel basket could
decrease the free volume within the storage cask. That effect could increase the
internal pressure, resulting in an increase in the shell (confinement boundary)
stresses. The 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(vii) evaluation of this change would focus on
whether the design basis ASME code allowables and pressure limits would be
exceeded.
Evaluations performed under this criterion may incorporate a number of
refinements to simplify the review. For example, if an engineering evaluation
demonstrates that no parameters are affected that have design basis limits for
fission product barriers associated with them, the response to criterion 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(vii) may be simply stated that no fission product boundary is affected
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either directly or indirectly, with appropriate justification that identifies the fission
product barriers and clearly explains why none are affected. Similarly, most
parameters that require evaluation under this criterion have calculations or
analyses supporting the ISFSI facility’s or cask’s design. If an engineering
evaluation demonstrates that the analysis presented in the UFSAR remains
bounding, then no 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(vii) evaluation is required. When using
these techniques, both indirect and direct effects must be considered to ensure that
important interactions are not overlooked.
6.8 DOES THE PROPOSED ACTIVITY RESULT IN A DEPARTURE FROM A METHOD OF
EVALUATION DESCRIBED IN THE FSAR (AS UPDATED) USED IN ESTABLISHING THE
DESIGN BASES OR IN THE SAFETY ANALYSES?
The ISFSI or cask UFSAR contains design and licensing basis information for an ISFSI
facility or spent fuel storage cask design, including descriptions of how regulatory
requirements for design are met (such as the requirements governing normal operations
and off-normal operations), and the adequacy of structures, systems, and components
provided for the prevention of accidents and the mitigation of the consequences of
accidents. Analytical methods are a fundamental part of demonstrating how the design
meets regulatory requirements and why the ISFSI facility’s or cask’s response to
accidents and events is acceptable. As such, in cases where the analytical methodology
was considered to be an important part of the conclusion that the ISFSI facility or cask
met the required design bases, these analytical methods were described in the UFSAR
and received varying levels of NRC review and approval during licensing.
Because 10 CFR 72.48 provides a process for determining if prior NRC approval is
required before making changes to the ISFSI facility or spent fuel storage cask design as
described in the UFSAR, changes to the methods of evaluation (MOEs) described in the
UFSAR also fall under the provisions of the 10 CFR 72.48 process, specifically criterion
(c)(2)(viii). In general, licensees or CoC holders can make changes to MOEs without first
obtaining a license amendment or cask CoC amendment in two ways:
1. Changing one or more elements of the MOE, provided the results are essentially
the same as, or more conservative than, previous results or
2. Using a new or different MOE, if the MOE has been approved by the NRC for the
intended application.
The responsibility and authority for performing the 10 CFR 72.48 review for a cask
design approved under a CoC can be either the general licensee or the CoC holder. 10 CFR 72.48 responsibility and authority for a specific license are solely the specific
licensee’s. In both cases, however, it is typically the cask designer (i.e., the MOE owner)
that utilizes MOEs to perform the safety analyses or establish the cask design basis and
would have the need to modify an element of an MOE or use a new or different MOE.
As such, the licensee and MOE owner must coordinate efforts to ensure roles and
responsibilities are clearly delineated and information is shared appropriately to ensure
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that a complete and comprehensive 10 CFR 72.48 review is performed for any change to
an MOE.
If the 10 CFR 72.48 screening for the proposed activity concludes that a change to an
MOE is not involved, then the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation should reflect that 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii) is not applicable. If the 10 CFR 72.48 screening determines that the
proposed activity involves only a change to an MOE, then the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation
should reflect that criteria 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(i) through (vii) are not applicable.
If a proposed activity (e.g., a physical modification or procedure change) also involves a
modified MOE element or a new or different MOE to analyze that physical modification
or procedure change, the MOE change should be evaluated first, against 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(viii), before the physical modification or procedure change is evaluated
against 10 CFR 72.48(c)(2)(i) through (vii). This is recommended because if the MOE
change requires NRC approval, the licensee or CoC holder may wish to reconsider the
physical modification or procedure change. If the MOE change is determined not to
require NRC approval, these two separate evaluations may be documented in the same, or
separate overall 10 CFR 72.48 reviews, at the discretion of the licensee or CoC holder.
The first step in applying this criterion is to identify the MOEs that are affected by the
change. This is accomplished during application of the screening criteria as described in
Section 5.1.5.
Next, the licensee or cask CoC holder must determine whether the change constitutes a
departure from a method of evaluation that would require prior NRC approval. As
discussed further below, for purposes of evaluations under this criterion, the following
changes are considered a departure from a method of evaluation described, outlined, or
summarized in the UFSAR and used in the safety analysis or establish design bases:
• Changes to any element of an MOE that yield results that are not conservative or not
essentially the same as the results from the analyses of record.
• Use of a new or different MOE that is not approved by NRC for the intended
application.
By way of contrast, the following changes are not considered departures from a method
of evaluation:
• Departures from methods of evaluation that are not described, outlined or
summarized in the UFSAR (such changes will have been screened out as discussed in
Section 5.1.5);
• Use of a new or different methodology approved by the NRC for the intended
application (e.g., upgraded computer code) to reduce uncertainty, provide more
precise results, or other reason, provided such use is (a) based on sound engineering
practice, (b) technically appropriate for the intended application, and (c) within the
limitations of the applicable SER. The basis for this determination should be
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documented in the licensee or cask CoC holder evaluation. See Subsection 6.8.2 for
additional guidance on interpreting whether an MOE is approved for the intended
application.
• Use of a methodology revision that is documented as providing results that are
essentially the same as or more conservative than either the previous revision of the
same methodology or with another methodology previously accepted by NRC
through issuance of an SER.
Subsection 6.8.1 provides guidance for making changes to one or more elements of an
existing MOE. Subsection 6.8.2 provides guidance for adopting a new or different MOE
to replace an existing one.
It should be noted that the NRC staff, in reviewing dry cask storage designs, does not
generically approve methodologies described or referenced in UFSARs. (“Generic”
approval as used in NEI 12-04 means approved for use by any licensee or CoC holder.)
Instead, the NRC states in its SERs, following the guidance in the Standard Review Plan,
that the design has been found to be acceptable in each review discipline area for the
particular licensing action reviewed and approved (i.e., initial ISFSI license, cask CoC, or
amendment thereto). See Subsection 6.8.2.1 for additional guidance on NRC approval of
methods.
If, however, a licensee or CoC holder chooses to submit detailed methodologies to the
NRC for generic review and approval as part of applications for design approval or as
separate topical reports, the staff may document NRC endorsement or approval in
appropriate SERs on a broader basis. Such endorsements or approval will facilitate
licensees and CoC holders to use the 10 CFR 72.48 process that deals with approved
methodologies.
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6.8.1 Guidance for Changing One or More Elements of a Method of Evaluation
The definition of “departure …” provides licensees and CoC holders with the
flexibility to make changes under 10 CFR 72.48 to elements of MOEs whose
results are “conservative” or that are not important with respect to the
demonstrations of performance that the analyses provide. Changes to elements of
MOEs that yield conservative results or results that are essentially the same over
the entire range of use for the method would not be departures from approved
MOEs.
The guidance is summarized in the following table.
Margin Results Prior NRC Approval
Lost Conservative No
Gained Non-Conservative Yes
~Same Essentially The Same No
One common use of this part of the MOE evaluation is the adoption of a later
version or release of computer software previously considered an MOE as
described in the ISFSI or cask FSAR. In such cases, this proposed change to the
MOE must be reviewed to understand the breadth and depth of the later version or
release of the software and a determination made as to whether the later version or
release is truly a change to an element of the method or is so fundamental a
change that it constitutes a new or different MOE, governed by the guidance in
Subsection 6.8.2 rather than Subsection 6.8.1. A fundamental change would be a
new or different code version that computes the results in a completely different
way than the previous version. The change from MCNP-4 to MCNP-5 is an
example of a code version change that should be considered a new or different
MOE.
If it is determined that the later version or release of the software is a change to an
element of an MOE, the software revision must first be verified and validated as
acceptable for use, and code users must be qualified as required by the governing
Quality Assurance program. Then, the revised software must be used to reanalyze one or more representative cases that were analyzed using the previous
version of the software. The results of the old and new sets of representative
cases are then compared to determine if the revised software produces results that
are conservative, non-conservative, or essentially the same.
The 10 CFR 72.48 documentation should clearly and thoroughly discuss the
impact on all elements of the method either directly or indirectly affected by the
change. Analysis uncertainty, if addressed in the MOE, is considered an element
of the MOE. Uncertainty may be affected either directly as part of the primary
MOE element being changed, or indirectly because another MOE element used in
determining the uncertainty is being changed.
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To determine if the new results are conservative, non-conservative or essentially
the same, the guidance in Sections 6.8.1.1 and 6.8.1.2 is applied.
6.8.1.1 Conservative versus Non-Conservative Results
Gaining margin by changing one or more elements of an MOE is considered to be
a non-conservative change and thus a departure from an MOE for purposes of 10 CFR 72.48. Such departures require prior NRC approval of the revised MOE.
Analytical results obtained by changing any element of an MOE are
“conservative” relative to the previous results, if they are closer to design bases
limits or safety analyses limits (e.g., applicable acceptance guidelines). For
example, a change from 45 psig to 48 psig in the result of a cask peak pressure
analysis (with design basis limit of 50 psig) using a revised MOE would be
considered a conservative change when applying this criterion. In other words, the
revised MOE is more conservative if it predicts more severe conditions given the
same set of inputs. This is because results closer to limiting values are considered
conservative in the sense that the new analysis result provides less margin to
applicable limits for making potential physical or procedure changes without a
license/CoC amendment.
In contrast, if the use of a modified MOE resulted in a change in calculated cask
peak pressure from 45 psig to 40 psig, this would be a non-conservative change.
That is because the change would result in more margin being available (to the
design basis limit of 50 psig) for the licensee to make more significant changes to
the physical ISFSI facility, cask design, or procedures.
6.8.1.2 “Essentially the Same” Results
Licensees or cask CoC holders may change one or more elements of an MOE
such that results move slightly in the non-conservative direction without prior
NRC approval, provided the revised result is “essentially the same” as the
previous result. Results are “essentially the same” if they are within the margin of
error for the type of analysis being performed. Variation in results due to routine
analysis sensitivities or calculational differences (e.g., rounding errors and use of
different computational platforms) would typically be within the analysis margin
of error and thus considered “essentially the same.” For example, when an MOE
is applied using a different computational platform (mainframe vs. workstation),
results of cases run on the two platforms differed by less than 1%, which is the
margin of error for this type of calculation. Thus, the results are essentially the
same, and do not constitute a departure from an MOE that requires prior NRC
approval.
The determination of whether a new analysis result would be considered
“essentially the same” as the previous result can be made through benchmarking
the revised MOE to the existing one, or may be apparent from the nature of the
differences between the MOEs. When benchmarking a revised MOE to determine
how it compares to the previous one, the analyses that are done must be for the
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same set of conditions to ensure that the results are comparable, and the revised
MOE should only be used where the benchmarking has demonstrated it to be
conservative or essentially the same. Comparison of analysis MOEs should
consider both the peak values and time behavior of results, and engineering
judgment should be applied in determining whether two MOEs yield results that
are essentially the same.
6.8.2 Guidance for Changing from One Method of Evaluation to Another
6.8.2.1 NRC Approval of Methods
The definition of “departure …” provides licensees and CoC holders with the
flexibility to make changes under 10 CFR 72.48 from one MOE to another
provided that the new or different MOE has been approved by the NRC for the
intended application. A new or different MOE has been approved by the NRC for
intended application if it is approved for the type of analysis (Definition 2.22)
being conducted, and the applicable terms, conditions and limitations for its use as
described in the FSAR are satisfied.
Methodologies published by the NRC in NUREGs or NUREG-CRs are not
necessarily “approved by the NRC for the intended application” because they may
lack suitable ISFSI- or cask-specific context. To be considered “approved by the
NRC for the intended application,” such methods must be approved in an SER or
otherwise accepted by the NRC as part of the ISFSI facility’s or cask’s licensing
basis.
NRC approval of an MOE would typically follow one of two paths. Some
licensees and CoC holders may prepare and obtain NRC approval of topical
reports that describe MOEs for the performance of a given type or class of
analysis (Definitions 2.22 and 2.7). Through a SER, the NRC would approve the
use of the MOEs for a given class of ISFSIs or spent fuel storage casks. In some
cases, the NRC would accord “generic” approval of analysis MOEs. Terms,
conditions and limitations relating to the application of the MOEs would usually
be documented in the topical reports, the SER, and correspondence between the
NRC and the MOE owner that is referenced in the SER or associated
correspondence.
The second path is the acceptance of a specific analysis as part of a licensing
action rather than generic approval of an MOE. In these cases, the NRC’s
acceptance would typically be part of an ISFSI or cask design’s licensing basis
and limited to a given ISFSI or spent fuel storage cask design and a given
application. Again, a thorough understanding of the terms, conditions and
limitations relating to the application of the MOE is essential.
Regardless of the level of NRC review/approval for a given analysis
methodology, MOEs described in the ISFSI UFSAR or the cask UFSAR (i.e., the
current licensing basis) are considered approved by the NRC for the intended
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application, but not generically approved for use by all ISFSI licensees or CoC
holders.
6.8.2.2 Considerations for Determining if New or Different MOEs may be
Considered “Approved by the NRC for the Intended Application
It is incumbent upon the user of a new or different MOE - even one generically
approved by the NRC - to ensure that they have a thorough understanding of the
MOE in question, the terms of its existing application and conditions/limitations
on its use. A range of considerations is identified below that may be applicable to
determining whether new or different MOEs are technically appropriate for the
intended application. The licensee/CoC holder should address these and similar
considerations, as applicable, and document in the 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation the
basis for determining that an MOE is appropriate and approved for the intended
application. To obtain an adequate understanding of the MOE and basis for
determining that it is approved for use in the intended application, the licensee or
CoC holder should consult various sources, as appropriate. These include SERs,
topical reports, licensee correspondence with the NRC and licensee or CoC holder
personnel familiar with the existing application of the MOE.
The 10 CFR 72.48 evaluation documentation should provide a technical
justification to demonstrate that the new or different MOE is technically
applicable. This should include describing the MOE, conditions of applicability,
limitations, restrictions, etc. If adequate information cannot be found on which to
base the intended application of the MOE and described in the 10 CFR 72.48
evaluation, the MOE should not be considered “approved by the NRC for the
intended application.”
When considering the application of an MOE, it is necessary to adopt the MOE in
its entirety and apply it consistent with applicable terms, conditions and
limitations. Mixing attributes of new or different and existing MOEs is considered
a change to an element of an MOE and must be evaluated as such per the
guidance in Section 6.8.1. A new or different MOE may be considered approved
for the intended application under another license, CoC, or amendment thereto,
with certain restrictions. In addition, the uncertainties and margins/assumptions of
a particular ISFSI facility or cask design that used a MOE must be considered
when deciding whether to apply it to a different ISFSI facility or cask design.
The guidance for determining when a new or different MOE, which has not been
generically approved by the NRC, is "approved for the intended application," per
criterion (viii) of 10 CFR 72.48, would include the following restrictions
(Reference 6.8.1):
• The new or different MOE must be used only by the same entity as the
originally approved MOE (i.e., the “MOE owner”) or a successor entity who
has become the CoC holder for that cask design.
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• There must be a Generic Letter (GL) 83-11, Supplement 1-type qualification
process for the user of the new or different method (Reference 2). (Note that
GL 83-11 is intended for power plant licensees who wish to perform safety
analyses that had customarily been performed by nuclear steam supply system
vendors. Cask design authorities should have this type of qualification
process embedded in their NRC-approved QA programs required as part of
the cask design approval.)
• The licensee or CoC holder is able to identify all conditions and limitations
under which the MOE received NRC approval. Conditions and limitations
include, among other things, the type of analysis, the manner in which the
analysis was applied, the physical configuration of the ISFSI facility or cask
design, and any licensing basis restrictions. The licensee or CoC holder must
assure that all limitations and restrictions are applicable to the ISFSI facility or
cask design in question and the MOE is then applied within all conditions and
limitations. For example:
o An MOE that is approved for one ISFSI facility or cask design for a
particular transient cannot be applied to another ISFSI facility or cask
design for a different transient because it was not approved for the
other transient.
o A licensee or CoC holder is not permitted to adopt different aspects of
different approved MOEs (i.e., mix and match) because the MOE is
not being applied in the manner it was approved.
o An MOE that is approved for a particular ISFSI facility or cask design
cannot be applied to another ISFSI facility or cask design that has
relevant design differences because the method was not approved for
the different design configuration.
o An ISFSI or cask design whose licensing basis postulates a loss of
power event may not use a new or different MOE to eliminate the loss
of power event from the licensing basis because the MOE is not being
applied for the conditions it was approved.
• The licensee or CoC holder is not permitted to adopt less restrictive licensing
basis analysis assumptions even if they have been approved for a different
ISFSI facility or cask design (e.g., it is not acceptable to credit not-importantto-safety components in accident analyses, or assume different fractions of
radioactive materials available for release from spent fuel even if it is
approved for another ISFSI facility or cask design).
6.8.2.3 Additional Considerations
The following questions highlight important additional considerations for
determining that a particular application of a new or different MOE is technically
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appropriate for the intended application, within the bounds of what has been
found acceptable by NRC, and does not require prior NRC approval.
• Is the application of the MOE consistent with the ISFSI facility’s or cask
design’s licensing basis (e.g., NUREG-1536, NUREG-1567, or other ISFSI or
cask design-specific commitments)? Will the MOE supersede an MOE
addressed by other regulations or the ISFSI or cask Technical Specifications?
Is the MOE consistent with relevant industry standards?
If application of the new or different MOE requires exemptions from
regulations or ISFSI- or cask-specific commitments, exceptions to relevant
industry standards and guidelines, or is otherwise inconsistent with an ISFSI
facility’s or cask’s licensing basis, then prior NRC approval may be required.
The applicable change process must be followed to make the ISFSI facility’s
or cask’s licensing basis consistent with the requirements of the new or
different MOE.
• If a computer code is involved, has the code been installed in accordance with
applicable software Quality Assurance requirements? Has the ISFSI- or cask
design-specific model been adequately qualified through benchmark
comparisons against test data, empirical data, or approved engineering
analyses? Is the application consistent with the capabilities and limitations of
the computer code? Has industry experience with the computer code been
appropriately considered?
The computer code installation and ISFSI or cask design-specific model
qualification is not directly transferable from one organization to another. The
installation and qualification should be in accordance with the licensee’s or
cask CoC holder’s Quality Assurance program.
• Is the ISFSI facility or cask design for which the MOE has been approved
designed and operated in the same manner as the ISFSI facility or cask design
to which the MOE is to be applied? Is the relevant equipment the same? Does
the equipment have the same pedigree? Are the relevant failure modes and
effects analyses the same? If the ISFSI facility or cask design is designed and
operated in a similar, but not identical, manner, the following types of
considerations should be addressed to assess the applicability of the MOE:
- How could those differences affect the MOE?
- Are additional sensitivity studies required?
- Should additional single failure scenarios be considered?
- Are analyses of limiting scenarios, effects of equipment failures,
etc., applicable for the specific ISFSI or cask design?
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- Can analyses be made while maintaining compliance with both the
intent and literal definition of the MOE?
• Differences in the ISFSI or cask design configurations and licensing bases
could invalidate the application of a particular MOE. For example, the
licensing basis of older vintage cask designs may not have been required to
consider the same isotopes for offsite dose calculations as those in the
licensing basis for more recent vintage cask designs. The existence of these
differences does not preclude application of a new or different MOE to an
ISFSI facility or cask design; however, differences must be identified,
understood and the basis documented for concluding that the differences are
not relevant to determining that the new application is technically appropriate.
6.8.3 References for Section 6.8
6.8.1. USNRC Memorandum from E. McKenna to C. Carpenter, “Summary of
November 2, 1999 meeting with the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) on
Revision to NEI 96-07 on Implementation of 10 CFR 50.59 – Methods of
Evaluation,” dated November 10, 1999 (ML993260078).
6.8.2. USNRC Generic Letter 83-11, “Licensee Qualification for Performing
Safety Analyses in Support of Licensing Actions,” dated February 8, 1983
and Supplement 1, dated June 24, 1999.
6.8.3. NEI letter to USNRC, “NEI Comments on Draft Regulatory Guide (DG),
DG-1334, ‘Guidance for Implementation of 10 CFR 50.59, Changes,
Tests, and Experiments,’ 81 Fed. Reg. 94275; Docket ID NRC–2016–
0270,” dated February 21, 2017 (ML17059D122).
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7 FIGURES
1. Figure 1: 10 CFR 72.48 Process
2. Figure 2: General or Specific Licensee 60-Day reports to CoC Holder
3. Figure 3: CoC Holder 60-Day Reports to Licensees
4. Figure 4: General Licensee Processing of Activities Approved by CoC
Holders Pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48
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No
Proposed Activity
Evaluate Activity to Ensure it is Safe, Compliant, and Effective
(QA Program)
Perform Applicability Determination per Guidance
Section 4.0
(non-editorial/administrative changes)
Does 10 CFR 72.48
apply?
Evaluation Required?
Perform 10 CFR 72.48 Evaluation per
Guidance Section 6.0
NRC Approval
Required?
Apply Specific Regulation/Process, e.g.,
• 10 CFR 50.54, 10 CFR 50.12, 10 CFR 50.90
• 10 CFR 72.7, 10 CFR 72.56, 10 CFR 72.244
• Operating License Condition
Figure 1
10 CFR 72.48 Process for Licensees
and CoC Holders
Document 10 CFR 72.48 Screen; Revise Activity or
Submit ISFSI License Amendment per §72.56 or
Amend CoC per 10 CFR 72.244
Document 10 CFR 72.48 Evaluation; Revise
ISFSI or cask UFSAR and 212 Report as
required, and Implement the Activity
No
Yes
No
Yes
Perform 10 CFR 72.48 Screening per
Guidance Section 5.0
Change to the ISFSI
license or DCSS
CoC/TS?
Document 10 CFR 72.48 Evaluation; Revise Activity or
Submit ISFSI License Amendment per 10 CFR 72.56 or
Amend CoC per 10 CFR 72.244
No
sN
Document 10 CFR 72.48 Screen; Revise ISFSI or cask
UFSAR and 212 Report as required, and Implement the
Activity
Yes
Yes
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Record of cask
design change
evaluated and
approved under
Licensee to provide record to CoC holder within 60
days of implementing the change
Change adopted by
CoC holder?
No further action
required.
Review/revise cask UFSAR
as necessary under §72.48
and §72.248.
Report record of change to
other licensees as shown in
Figure 3.
bo
Yes
Licensee
/o/ Holder
Figure 2
General or Specific Licensee
60-Day Reports to CoC Holder
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Figure 3
CoC Holder 60-Day
Reports to Licensees
CoC holder to provide record to
licensees within 60 days of
implementing the change
Review CoC holder change for
applicability to plant and effect
on 212 Report, dry storage
procedures, and site-specific
analyses and evaluations. Revise
212 Report and other
documents, as required, prior to
loading casks affected by the 10 CFR 72.48 change. See Figure 4
for additional guidance.
CoC Holder
Each Licensee
Record of cask
design change
evaluated and
approved under 10 CFR 72.48*
- Note: 10 CFR 72.48 screens and evaluations
performed to resolve non-conformances during
fabrication of specific serial number components
(rather than generic changes) do not need to be
provided to all users. Only affected licensees should
receive these types of 10 CFR 72.48 screens and
evaluations.
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Figure 4
General Licensee Processing of
Activities Approved by CoC
Holders Pursuant to 10 CFR 72.48
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