ML15020A740: Difference between revisions

From kanterella
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
(Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:
| issue date = 01/20/2015
| issue date = 01/20/2015
| title = Petitioners' Combined Reply in Support of Amended Petition to Intervene and for a Public Adjudication Hearing of Entergy License Amendment Request for Authorization to Implement 10 CFR Section 50.61a, 'Alternate Fracture Toughness Requireme
| title = Petitioners' Combined Reply in Support of Amended Petition to Intervene and for a Public Adjudication Hearing of Entergy License Amendment Request for Authorization to Implement 10 CFR Section 50.61a, 'Alternate Fracture Toughness Requireme
| author name = Lodge T J
| author name = Lodge T
| author affiliation = Beyond Nuclear, Don't Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future - Shoreline Chapter (MSEF), Nuclear Energy Information Service
| author affiliation = Beyond Nuclear, Don't Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future - Shoreline Chapter (MSEF), Nuclear Energy Information Service
| addressee name =  
| addressee name =  
Line 13: Line 13:
| document type = Legal-Motion
| document type = Legal-Motion
| page count = 20
| page count = 20
| project =
| stage = Request
}}
}}


=Text=
=Text=
{{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STAT ES OF AMERICANUCLEAR REG ULATORY COMMISSION Before the At omic Safety and Licensin g BoardIn the Matter of
{{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board In the Matter of:                                     )      Docket No. 50-255 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.                     )
:Entergy Nuclear Operations, I nc.(Palisades Nuc lear Plant)Operating License Amendment Reque st)  Docket No. 50-255
(Palisades Nuclear Plant)
))           January 20, 2015
                                                      )       January 20, 2015 Operating License Amendment Request
)     *****PETITIONERS' COMB INED REPLY IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PETITION TO INTERVENE AND FOR A PUBLIC ADJUDICATION HEA RING OF ENTERGY LICENSE AMENDMENT RE QUEST FOR A UTHORIZATION TO IMPLEMENT 10 CFR
                                                      )
§50.61a, 'ALTERNATE F RACTURE TOUGHNESS R EQUIREMENTS FORPROTECTION AGAINST PR ESSURIZED  THER MAL SHOCK EVENTS'Now come Beyond Nuclea r ("BN"), Don't Waste Michig an ("DWM"), Michig an SafeEnergy Future - Shoreline Chapte r ("MSEF"), and the Nuc lear Energy Information Servic e("NEIS") (hereafter collectively called "
PETITIONERS COMBINED REPLY IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PETITION TO INTERVENE AND FOR A PUBLIC ADJUDICATION HEARING OF ENTERGY LICENSE AMENDMENT REQUEST FOR AUTHORIZATION TO IMPLEMENT 10 CFR
Petitioners"), a nd reply in support of their "A mendedPetition t o Intervene and for a Public Adjudica tion Hear ing of Entergy License Request for Authorization to I mplement 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, 'A lternate Fracture Toughness Requireme nts forProtection Ag ainst Pressurized Therma l Shock Events.'" Spec ifically, Petitioners respond in opposition t o "Entergy's Answer Opposing Petition t o Intervene and Re quest for H earing"("Entergy Answer") and the "NRC Staff Answ er to Petition to I ntervene and Re quest for a Hearing Filed by Beyond Nuclea r, Don't Waste Michig an, Michig an Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter
        §50.61a, ALTERNATE FRACTURE TOUGHNESS REQUIREMENTS FOR PROTECTION AGAINST PRESSURIZED THERMAL SHOCK EVENTS Now come Beyond Nuclear (BN), Dont Waste Michigan (DWM), Michigan Safe Energy Future - Shoreline Chapter (MSEF), and the Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS) (hereafter collectively called Petitioners), and reply in support of their Amended Petition to Intervene and for a Public Adjudication Hearing of Entergy License Request for Authorization to Implement 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, Alternate Fracture Toughness Requirements for Protection Against Pressurized Thermal Shock Events. Specifically, Petitioners respond in opposition to Entergys Answer Opposing Petition to Intervene and Request for Hearing (Entergy Answer) and the NRC Staff Answer to Petition to Intervene and Request for a Hearing Filed by Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter, and the Nuclear Energy Information Service (NRC Answer).
, and the Nuc lear Energy Information Servic e" ("NRC Answer
I. INTRODUCTION The NRC Staff and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Entergy) have set forth by way of answer to the Petition, a threadbare tapestry of misrepresentations, unsupported attorney opinions passed off as expert contradictions, and bare assertions of what the 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a alternate fracture toughness requirements for protection against pressurized thermal shock events supposedly mean, all as part of a strategy aimed at keeping Palisades Nuclear Plant (PNP) in operation as the most embrittled reactor pressure vessel in the American nuclear industry. It is not a positive attribute to be identified as an outlier among the most thermal shock-endangered reactor pressure vessels. Yet as this memorandum will show, Palisades is truly in a category of its own, where it has become the butt of gallows humor at the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards. Petitioners see nothing funny about Palisades as a laughingstock, and believe that they should be granted an opportunity to explore the dangers of Palisades embrittlement problem through sworn witnesses in an effort to avoid serious future drama.
").I. INTRODUCTION The NRC Staff a nd Enterg y Nuclear Operations, I nc. ("Entergy") have set for th by way of answer to the Petition, a threadba re tapestry of misrepre sentations, unsupported attorne y opinions passed of f as expert contradictions, and ba re assertions of wha t the 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a alter natefracture toughness require ments for prote ction against pressurized therma l shock eve ntssupposedly mean, all as part of a strategy aimed at ke eping Palisades Nucle ar Plant ("
II. RESPONSES TO THE STAFF ANSWER A. Standing The NRC Staff agrees that Petitioners have established standing, although they advance the quaint but bizarre argument that the one-page declarations submitted by individuals living within the 50-mile danger radius around Palisades must articulate claims in the one-page standing declarations themselves which raise admissible contentions. Staff Answer p. 5 fn. 15.
PNP") inoperation as the most embrittled reac tor pressur e vessel in the America n nuclear industry
Given that Petitioners are represented by counsel who submitted on their behalves a 21-page enumeration of grounds for a hearing, along with evidentiary attachments, including a serious, expert-supported contention, the ASLB can disregard the Staffs fussiness, resolve its dissonant positions and find that Petitioners have demonstrated sufficient grounds for standing to allow them to proceed to the admissibility question.
. It isnot a positive attribute to be identified a s an outlier among the most thermal shock-e ndangeredreactor pressure vessels. Yet as this memorandum will show, Palisades is truly in a category of itsown, wher e it has bec ome the butt of g allows humor at the Advisory Committee on Rea ctorSafeguards. Petitioners see nothing f unny about Palisades as a laughingstock, and believe thatthey should be g ranted an opportunity to explore the dangers of Palisades' e mbrittlement problem throug h sworn witnesses in a n effort to avoid serious future drama.II. RESPONSES T O THE STAFF ANSWERA. Standing The NRC Staff a grees that Petiti oners have established standing, a lthough they advancethe quaint but bizarre a rgument that the one-page declarations submi tted by individuals li vingwithin the 50-mile dang er radius around Palisade s must articulate c laims in the one-page standing declarations themselves which raise admissible contentions. Staff Answe r p. 5 fn. 15.
B. Claimed Impermissible Challenges to NRC Regulations The NRC Staff launches (Staff Answer p. 14) into the objection that Petitioners fail[] to specify any particular deficiency in the LAR, . . . raise[] numerous matters that are not the subject of the instant LAR and are beyond the permissible scope of this proceeding, and . . .
Given that Petitioners ar e represented by counsel who submitted on their be halves a 21-pageenumeration of g rounds for a hearing, along with evidentiary attachme nts, including a serious, expert-supported c ontention, the ASL B can disreg ard the Staff's f ussiness, resolve its dissonant positions and find that Petit ioners have demonstrated suf ficient g rounds for sta nding to a llowthem to proce ed to the admissibility question.
constitute[] an impermissible challenge to the Commissions regulations. To back up this assertion, the Staff cites a host of statements made by Petitioners expert, Arnold Gundersen, which it claims impermissibly challenge NRC regulations.1 So the Staff attempts to shut down this license amendment intervention by arguing that mere disagreement with the calculations, methods and assemblage of data being submitted for a presumably discretionary 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a ruling from the Director of Nuclear Reactor Regulation is heresy against the regulatory regime. The Staffs interpretation is a spoof of the rule; 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a clearly contemplates a discretionary determination by the Director of 1
B. Claimed Impe rmissible Chall enges to NRC Regulations The NRC Staff launc hes (Staff Answer p. 14) into the objection that Petitioners "fa il[] tospecify any particula r deficiency in the L AR, . . . raise[] num erous matter s that are not thesubject of the instant L AR and ar e beyond the per missible scope of this proce eding, and . . .
For example, see Staff Answer at p. 17: For example, a recurring theme in the Petitioners arguments is that Palisades should not be allowed to use § 50.61a because § 50.61a, unlike § 50.61, relies on estimates and lacks scientific rigor. This argument, however, challenges § 50.61a, not Entergys LAR.
constitute[]
And Staff Answer at 18: The Petitioners expert, Dr. Gundersen, makes this argument succinctly, Until a new capsule sample is removed and analyzed, the analytical assumptions created for the proposed license amendment are unable to be validated and verified. Nowhere, however, do the Petitioners point to any provision in the NRCs rules that impose such a requirement. To the contrary, by arguing that some additional requirement must be imposed to enable Palisades to use the alternate requirements in § 50.61a, the Petitioners are, in fact, challenging the adequacy of the rule itself, rather than the adequacy of Entergys license amendment request.
an impermissible cha llenge to the Commissi on's regulations.To bac k up this assertion, the Staff cites a host of statements made by Petitioners' expert, Arnold Gunde rsen,which it claims impermissibly challeng e NRC reg ulations.
And Staff Answer at pp. 18-19: The Petitioners argument that Entergy must remove surveillance capsules from the reactor before using § 50.61a thus challenges the rule, which does not require the removal of additional surveillance capsules beyond those withdrawn under the Part 50, Appendix H withdrawal schedule.
1So the Staff attempts to shut down this l icense amendment inter vention by arguing thatmere disagreement with the calc ulations, methods and assemblag e of data being submitted for apresumably discretionar y 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a ruling from the Dir ector of Nuclear ReactorRegulation is heresy against the reg ulatory regime. The Staff
And Staff Answer at p. 20: The Petitioners apparent challenge to the approved capsule withdrawal schedule is inadmissible, as it relates to a prior approval pursuant to 10 C.F.R. Part 50, Appendix H, not the amendment at issue in this proceeding.The Petitioners may not use this amendment proceeding as a backdoor to file a challenge to the approved modified withdrawal schedule.
's interpre tation is a spoof of the rule; 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a c learly contemplates a discretionar y determination by the Dire ctor ofFor example, see Staff Answer at p. 17: "For example, a recurring theme in the Petitioners'1arguments is that Palisades should not be allowed to use § 50.61a because § 50.61a, unlike § 50.61, relieson 'estimates' and lacks 'scientific rigor.' This argument, however, challenges § 50.61a, not Entergy'sLAR.And Staff Answer at 18: "The Petitioners' expert, Dr. Gundersen, makes this argumentsuccinctly, 'Until a new capsule sample is removed and analyzed, the analytical assumptions created forthe proposed license amendment are unable to be validated and verified.' Nowhere, however, do thePetitioners point to any provision in the NRC's rules that impose such a requirement. To the contrary, byarguing tha t some additional requirement must b e imposed to enable Palisades to use the alternaterequirements in § 50.61a, the Petitioners are, in fact, challenging the adequacy of the rule itself, ratherthan the adequacy of Entergy's license amendment request."And Staff Answer at pp. 18-19: "The Petitioners' argument that Entergy must removesurveillance capsules from the reactor before using § 50.6 1a thus challenges the rule, which does notrequire the removal of additional surveillance capsules beyond those withdrawn under the Part 50,Appendix H withdrawal schedule."And Staff Answer at p. 20: "The Petitioners' apparent challenge to the approved capsulewithdrawal schedule is inadmissible, as it relates to a prior approval pursuant to 10 C.F.R. Part 50,Appendix H, not the amendment at issue in this proceeding.The Petitioners may not use this amendmentproceeding as a backdoor to file a challenge to the approved modif ied withdrawal schedule."
NRR. Where there is discretion vested in the regulator, differences of opinion, interpretation, and expert analysis are legitimate bases for challenging the decision because the decision is potentially arrived at in an adversarial manner. See, for example, § 50.61a( c)(1) (RTMAX-X values assessment must specify the bases for the projected value of RTMAX-X for each reactor vessel beltline material, including the assumptions regarding future plant operation); § 50.61a
NRR. Where there is discretion vested in the r egulator, diffe rences of opinion, interpre tation,and expert ana lysis are le gitimate bases for challeng ing the decision bec ause the decision is potentially arrived at in an a dversarial manne
( c)(2) (Each licensee shall perform an examination and an assessment of flaws in the reactor vessel beltline as required by paragraph (e) of this section - and (e) requires disclosure of tests performed but, again, detailed explanation of the methodology underlying NDE uncertainties assumptions,2 and adjustments must be disclosed. This is merely a recognition that even objective data, once interpreted, may be examined to ascertain the objectivity or inappropriate bias which may have occurred in the means of analysis which have been applied to it.
: r. See, for example, § 50.61a(
Indeed, the final section of § 50.61a, subsection (f)(7), requires that The licensee shall report any information that significantly influences the RTMAX-X value to the Director in accordance with the requirements of paragraphs (c)(1) and (d)(1) of this section. The requirement clearly introduces subjective judgment and choice into the decision of what data is to be provided to the Director of NRR. Hence for Petitioners to provide their experts critique of the means by which the § 50.61a investigation was conducted, and the weaknesses or biases in the underlying data, assumptions and manipulations of information cannot be construed as a 2
c)(1) (RTMAX-Xvalues assessment "must specify the base s for the pr ojected va lue of RT MAX-X for each reactorvessel beltline mater ial, including the assumptions reg arding future pla nt operation"); § 50.61a
          § 50.61a says in part: The methodology to account for NDE-related uncertainties must be based on statistical data from the qualification tests and any other tests that measure the difference between the actual flaw size and the NDE detected flaw size. Licensees who adjust their test data to account for NDE-related uncertainties to verify conformance with the values in Tables 2 and 3 shall prepare and submit the methodology used to estimate the NDE uncertainty, the statistical data used to adjust the test data and an explanation of how the data was analyzed for review and approval by the Director in accordance with paragraphs (c)(2) and (d)(2) of this section.
( c)(2) ("Each license e shall per form an e xamination and an a ssessment of flaw s in the rea ctorvessel beltline as r equired by paragraph (e) of this section" - a nd (e) requires disclosure of te stsperformed but, ag ain, detailed e xplanation of the me thodology underlying NDE uncertainties assumptions, and adjustments must be disclosed. This is merely a recognition that even 2objective da ta, once interpre ted, may be examined to asce rtain the objec tivity or inappropr iatebias which may have occurred in the mea ns of ana lysis which have be en applied to it.
frontal assault on the regulatory citadel, but must instead be seen, for purposes of the admissibility determination, as an expose of the flaws caused by straying away from knowable science.
Indeed, the final sec tion of § 50.61a, subsec tion (f)(7)
C. Surveillance Data Disputes The Staff persists in the argument that sister plant surveillance data, viz., scientific evidence of embrittlement from completely different types of nuclear reactors, can be compared, apples-to-apples, with destructive testing data gleaned from metal coupons retrieved from the Palisades RPV. The Staff urges that the § 50.61a(10) definition of surveillance data includes other plants information within its sweep, and that every reference to surveillance data automatically means not just Palisades, but other plants.3 Only through such a misleading insistence can the Staff proclaim (Staff Answer pp. 21-22) that If these [§ 50.61a(f)(6)] criteria are met, the rule requires the applicant to use the surveillance data to verify that its predicted reference temperatures are appropriate.
, require s that "The lice nseeshall repor t any information that sig nificantly influence s the RTMAX-X value to the Dir ectorin accordance with the re quirements of pa ragraphs (c)(1) and (d)(1) of this section.The requirement clea rly introduces subjec tive judgme nt and choice into the decision of wha t data is to be provided to the D irector of NRR. Henc e for Petitioners to provide their expert's c ritique of the means by which the § 50.61a investiga tion was conduc ted, and the w eaknesses or biase s inthe under lying data, assumptions and manipulations of information ca nnot be construe d as a§ 50.61a says in part: "The methodology to account for NDE-related uncertainties must be based2on statistical data from the qualification tests and any other tests that measure the difference between theactual flaw size and the NDE detected flaw size. Licensees who adjust their test data to account for NDE-related uncertainties to verify conformance with the values in Tables 2 and 3 shall prepare and submit themethodology used to estimate the NDE uncertainty, the statistical data used to adjust the test data and anexplanation of how the data was analyzed for review and approval by the Director in accordance withparagraphs (c)(2) and (d)(2) of this section."
But no matter how obfuscatory its arguments, the Staff cannot get around the fact that 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a(f)(6)(i) requires that (A) The surveillance material must be a heat-specific match for one or more of the materials for which RTMAX-X is being calculated. Gundersen has attested to the lack of proof that the metals from the various RPVs match.
frontal a ssault on the reg ulatory citadel, but must instead be se en, for purposes of the admissibili ty determination, as an expose' of the f laws caused by straying away from knowa blescience.C. Surveillance Data Disputes The Staff persists in the arg ument that "sister plant surve illance da ta," viz., scientific evidence of embrittlement from completely different types of nuc lear reactors, ca n be compa red,apples-to-apples, with destruc tive testing da ta gleaned from metal c oupons retrie ved from thePalisades RPV. The Staff ur ges that the § 50.61a (10) definition of "surveillanc e data" includes other plants' infor mation within it s sweep, a nd that ever y reference to surve illance da taautomatically means not just Palisades, but other plants.
The Staff manipulates engineer Gundersens testimony by selectively citing (Staff Answer p. 21) his observation that an exhaustive review of NRC regulations has not unveiled any regulations that allow for such comparisons, and no record of scientific validation of such 3
Only through such a misleading 3insistence ca n the Staff pr oclaim (Staff Answer pp. 21-22) that "
Staff Answer p. 21: Thus, whenever the term surveillance data is used in § 50.61a, it includes surveillance data from other plants.
If these [§ 50.61a(f
methodology. The Staff then terms this an inappropriate challenge to NRC regulations and, adding injury to that insult, accuses Gundersen and Petitioners (Staff Answer p. 22) of saying that Entergy should not be allowed to analyze sister-plant data at all.
)(6)] criteria are met, the rule r equires the applica nt to use the surveillanc e data to verify that its predicted reference temperatures are appropriate."
But the Staff omits to respond - deliberately, one must conclude - to Gundersens further opinion, cited at Petitioners Amended Petition p. 15, where in a section entitled The Comparable Plants Are Not Apples-to-Apples Comparisons, Gundersen offers these conclusions:
But no matter how obfusca tory its arguments, the Staff c annot get around the fa ct that 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a(f
These plants, which he says thus far have not exhibited significant signs of reactor metal embrittlement, are poor comparables because
)(6)(i) requires that "(
                . . . the dramatically different nuclear core design and operational power characteristics make an accurate comparison impossible. The difference between the Westinghouse nuclear cores and the Combustion Engineering nuclear core impacts the neutron flux on each reactor vessel, thus making an accurate comparison of neutron bombardment and embrittlement impossible.
A) The surveillance material must be a hea t-specificMAX-X match for one or more of the mate rials for w hich RT is being calculated."  G undersen hasattested to the lac k of proof that the metals fr om the various RPVs match.
Id. at p. 10, ¶ 27.
The Staff manipulates eng ineer Gundersen's testimony by selectively citing (
It is thus misrepresentative for the Staff to maintain that Gundersen did not critique the surveillance samples from other plants according to § 50.61a(f)(6) criteria.
StaffAnswer p. 21) his observa tion that "an exhaustive revie w of NRC reg ulations has not unveiled any regulations that allow for such c omparisons, and no re cord of scientific va lidation of such Staff Answer p. 21: "Thus, whenever the term 'surveillance data' is used in § 50.61a, it includes3surveillance data from other plants."
Even if the ASLB were to conclude that Arnold Gundersen was incorrect in asserting that no rule governs the comparison of Palisades embrittlement data with that from other nuclear reactors, a contention about a matter not covered by a specific rule need only allege that the matter poses a significant safety problem. That is sufficient to raise an issue under the general requirement for operating licenses, 10 C.F.R. § 50.57(a)(3), for a finding of reasonable assurance of operation without endangering the health and safety of the public. Duke Power Co. (Catawba Nuclear Station, Units 1 & 2), LBP-82-116, 16 NRC 1937, 1946 (1982).
methodology
Related to this dispute, the Staff points out (Staff Answer p. 19 fn. 80) that Arnold Gundersen incorrectly attributed to the ACRS these statements - the use of all possible physical samples is important to an accurate outcome . . . the vehicle for doing that is doing a statistical comparison of a particular reactors plant specific surveillance data with the general trends.
.The Staff then ter ms this an inappropriate c hallenge to NRC reg ulations and, adding injury to that insult
Petitioners acknowledge that they mistakenly believed these were statements made by a member of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, and they admit their error. The speaker is the principal NRC staff expert on embrittlement, Mark Kirk of the NRC Office of Regulatory Research and longtime point person on this issue. Kirk is the primary author of § 50.61a, so coming from him, the acknowledgment that the use of all possible physical samples is important to an accurate outcome bolsters Petitioners case even more than if it were a statement by an ACRS member being briefed by an NRC staff expert.
, accuses Gunder sen and Petitioners (Staf f Answer p. 22) of saying"that Enter gy should not be allowed to ana lyze sister-plant data a t all."But the Staff omits to respond -
D. Staff Pretensions At Expertise After dispensing with the Staffs disingenuous contention that every expert conclusion proffered by Petitioners is an impermissible challenge to NRC regulations, an underlying weakness to the agencys arguments is exposed: the NRC Staff has not met Petitioners experts conclusions with its own expert evidence. Presumably, qualified NRC engineers are vetting Entergys License Amendment Request, but theyre nowhere in sight in the Staffs Answer.
delibera tely, one must conclude
Instead, the Staffs tactic is to float unsupported conclusions, faux expert representations, tendered via lawyers.
- to Gunder sen's fur theropinion, cited at Petitioners' Amende d Petition p. 15, where in a se ction entitled "The Comparable Plants Are Not Apples-to-A pples Comparisons," Gunde rsen offers theseconclusions:
For example, the Staff criticizes Arnold Gundersens testimony on the subject of error band overlap at its Answer, p. 25 in this way:
These pla nts, which he say s "thus far have not e xhibited significa nt signs of reactor meta l embrittlement," ar e poor comparables because. . . the dra matically different nuclea r core design and oper ational power characteristics make a n accurate comparison imposs ible. The diff erence betweenthe Westinghouse nuc lear cores and the Combustion Enginee ring nuclear coreimpacts the neutron f lux on each reactor vessel, thus making a n accuratecomparison of neutron bombar dment and embr ittlement impos sible.Id. at p. 10, ¶ 27.
The Petitioners assert that it is difficult to compare the data from Palisades with data from four other plants, because of the need to assure that the 20% error band[s]
It is thus m isrepresentative for the Staff to maintain that Gunde rsen did not cr itique the surveillance samples from other plants acc ording to § 50.61a(f)
overlap. According to the Petitioners, To compare this different data without assurance that the 1ó variance [sic] from each plant overlaps the other plants lacks scientific validity. In addition, in discussing the differences in flux and fluence from cycle-to-cycle at Palisades, the Petitioners argue that it is mathematically implausible that the needed deviation was obtained. The Petitioners therefore argue that additional testing and analysis is needed to support relicensure.
(6) criteria.Even if the A SLB were to conclude tha t Arnold Gunder sen was incorre ct in asser ting that no rule g overns the c omparison of Palisades' embrittlement data w ith that from other nuc learreactors, a c ontention about a matter not cover ed by a specific rule ne ed only allege that the matter poses a signific ant safety problem. That is suffic ient to raise a n issue under the generalrequirement for ope rating licenses, 10 C.F
But in fact, Gundersen stated a scientific criticism with regulatory-violation overtones, i.e., that there is a need for consistency in comparing the 20% error band among the sister plants and that under 10 C.F.R. §50.61a, Entergy has not made that showing. By its very construction, Gundersens opinion is predicated on adequate facts taken from the License Amendment Request (LAR):
.R. § 50.57(a)(
While [a] 1ó analysis appears to be binding within the Palisades data, . . . the NRC lowers the bar when comparing data from similar sister plants that are included in Entergys analysis of the Palisades reactor vessel without requiring the same 1ó variance with Palisades. Id. at p. 12, ¶ 32. Gundersen adds: There can be no assurance that the 20% error band at Palisades encompasses the 20% error band at the Robinson or Indian Point plants. To compare this different data without assurance that the 1ó variance from each plant overlaps the other plants lacks scientific validity. Id. at p. 12, ¶ 33.
3), for a finding of reasonable assuranceof operation without endang ering the health and safe ty of the public.
Duke Power Co.  
(CatawbaNuclear Station, Units 1 & 2), L BP-82-116, 16 NRC 1937, 1946 (1982).
Related to this dispute, the Staff points out (Staff Answe r p. 19 fn. 80) that Arnold Gundersen incorr ectly attributed to the ACRS these statements - "
the use of a ll possibl e physical samples is important to an acc urate outcome" . . . "
the vehicle for doing that is doing a statistical comparison of a par ticular re actor's plant specific surveillance data with the g eneral trends."
Petitioners acknowle dge that they mistakenly believed the se were statements made by a member of the Advisory Committee on Rea ctor Safe guards, and they admit their err or. The spe aker is theprincipal NRC staff e xpert on e mbrittlement, Mark Kirk of the NRC Office of RegulatoryResearch and long time point person on this iss ue. Kirk is the pr imary author of § 50.61a
, socoming from him, the ac knowledgment that the use of "
all possible phy sical samples is important to an ac curate outcome" bolsters Petitioners' ca se even more than if it we re a statement by an ACRS member being briefed by an NRC staff e xpert.D. Staff Pretensions At Expertise After dispensing w ith the Staff's dising enuous conte ntion that every expert conclusion proffered by Petitioners is an impermissible challeng e to NRC reg ulations, an underly ingweakness to the ag ency's arguments is ex posed: the NRC Staff has not met Petitioners' e xpert'sconclusions with its own ex pert evidence. Presumably
, qualified NRC eng ineers are vettingEntergy's License Amendment Reque st, but they
're nowhere in sight in the Staff's Answe r.Instead, the Staff
's tactic is to float unsupporte d conclusions, faux expert repr esentations,tendered via law yers. For example, the Staff cr iticizes Arnold Gunde rsen's testimony on the subject of e rrorband over lap at its Answer
, p. 25 in this way
: The Petitioners asse rt that it is difficult to compare the data from Palisades with data from four othe r plants, bec ause of the need to assure tha t the "20% e rror band[s]"overlap. According to the Petitioners, 'To compar e this differ ent data w ithout assurance that the 1
ó variance [sic] from eac h plant overla ps the other plants lac ks scientific validity.' In addition, in discussing the diff erences in flux and fluenc e from cycle-to-cycleat Palisades, the Petitioners ar gue that it is 'mathematica lly implausible' that the nee ded deviation was obta ined. The Petitioners ther efore argue that additional testing andanalysis is needed to 'support r elicensur e.'But in fa ct, Gunder sen stated a scientific c riticism with reg ulatory-violation overtones, i.e., thatthere is a nee d for consistency in comparing the 20% e rror band among the sister plants and that under 10 C.F
.R. §50.61a, Enterg y has not made tha t showing. B y its very construction, Gundersen's opinion is predica ted on ade quate facts take n from the L icense Amendment Reque st("LAR"):While '[a] 1ó analysis appear s to be binding w ithin the Palis ades data, . . . the NRC lowers the bar when comparing data from similar sister plants that are included in Entergy's analysis of the Palisades re actor vessel without requiring the same 1
ó variancewith Palisades.'
Id. at p. 12, ¶ 32. Gunde rsen adds: 'There can be no assura nce that the20% error band at Palisades enc ompasses the 20% e rror band at the Robinson or I ndianPoint plants. To compar e this differ ent data w ithout assurance that the 1
ó variance fromeach plant overla ps the other plants lac ks scientific va lidity.' Id. at p. 12, ¶ 33.
Amended Petition p. 18.
Amended Petition p. 18.
In support of the c ontinuity and consistenc y of Petitioners' conte ntion, their expert Gundersen found that ther e is "extraordina ry variability between the neutron f lux acrossthe nuclea r core in this Combus tion Engine ering reactor" because of a "flux variation of as much as 300% be tween the 45-degree segment and the 75-degree segment," ca lling it "mathema ticallyimplausible that a 20% devia tion is poss ible when the ne utron flux i tself var ies by 300%." Id. atp. 12, ¶ 34. Gunde rsen's final opinion on this poi nt is:The Westinghouse Analysis delineates that a 20% variation is mandatory
In support of the continuity and consistency of Petitioners contention, their expert Gundersen found that there is extraordinary variability between the neutron flux across the nuclear core in this Combustion Engineering reactor because of a flux variation of as much as 300% between the 45-degree segment and the 75-degree segment, calling it mathematically implausible that a 20% deviation is possible when the neutron flux itself varies by 300%. Id. at
, yet theeffective fluence variability can be as high as 300%, ther efore, the analytical data does not support relicensure without destructive testing and complete embrittlement analysis of additional capsule samples
: p. 12, ¶ 34. Gundersens final opinion on this point is:
.Gundersen Report a t p. 16, ¶ 39.
The Westinghouse Analysis delineates that a 20% variation is mandatory, yet the effective fluence variability can be as high as 300%, therefore, the analytical data does not support relicensure without destructive testing and complete embrittlement analysis of additional capsule samples.
At another place in the Staff Answe r, at pp. 26-27, the Staff proje cts a scie ntificconclusion without g oing to the tr ouble of sponsoring it through a n expert:  
Gundersen Report at p. 16, ¶ 39.
. . . [I]n their argument conce rning flux variability at Palisades and the difficulty in assuring the necessary standard de viation, the Petitioners and Dr. G undersen do notprovide a ny basis for their assertion that fluence cannot be predicted because the fluenceper cycle changes. Signific antly, the Petitioners do not point to any thing in the a pplication which would indicate that Enterg y failed to c onsider the va riability between cycles whencomparing measured data with ca lculational data in the L AR.Which unidentified eng ineering expert lawyer for the NRC Staff is testify ing here that "thefluence per cycle changes"? Technical ana lyses offered in evidence must be sponsored by an expert who c an beexamined on the reliability of the fa ctual asse rtions and soundness of the sc ientific opinions found in the docume nts. Southern Cal. Edison C
At another place in the Staff Answer, at pp. 26-27, the Staff projects a scientific conclusion without going to the trouble of sponsoring it through an expert:
: o. (San Onofr e Nuclear Generating Station, Units 2 & 3), A LAB-717, 17 NRC 346, 367 (1983), c iting Duke Power Co.  
                . . . [I]n their argument concerning flux variability at Palisades and the difficulty in assuring the necessary standard deviation, the Petitioners and Dr. Gundersen do not provide any basis for their assertion that fluence cannot be predicted because the fluence per cycle changes. Significantly, the Petitioners do not point to anything in the application which would indicate that Entergy failed to consider the variability between cycles when comparing measured data with calculational data in the LAR.
(William B.McGuire Nuclear Station, Units 1 & 2), AL AB-669, 15 NRC 453, 477 (1982).
Which unidentified engineering expert lawyer for the NRC Staff is testifying here that the fluence per cycle changes?
See ClevelandElec. Illuminating C
Technical analyses offered in evidence must be sponsored by an expert who can be examined on the reliability of the factual assertions and soundness of the scientific opinions found in the documents. Southern Cal. Edison Co. (San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, Units 2 & 3), ALAB-717, 17 NRC 346, 367 (1983), citing Duke Power Co. (William B.
: o. (Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 &
McGuire Nuclear Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-669, 15 NRC 453, 477 (1982). See Cleveland Elec. Illuminating Co. (Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-443, 6 NRC 741, 754-56 (1977); Philadelphia Elec. Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-836, 23 NRC 479, 494 n.22 (1986); Pub. Serv. Co. of N.H. (Seabrook Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-891, 27 NRC 341, 350-51 (1988). The Staff has omitted to sponsor its expert opinions through a bona fide expert witness, which undermines - not just at this point in their Answer, but at other places - the validity of their arguments against admissibility.
2), ALAB-443, 6 NRC 741, 754-56 (1977);
Testimony based upon subjective belief or unsupported speculation rather than the methods and procedures of science, and not grounded upon sufficient facts or data to be the product of applying reliable principles and methods to the facts cannot suffice as evidence of the merits in a licensing dispute. Duke Cogema Stone & Webster (Savannah River Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabrication Facility), LBP-05-4, 61 NRC 71, 98-99 (2005). Neither mere speculation nor bare or conclusory assertions, even by an expert, which allege that a matter should be considered, can suffice to cause admission of a proffered contention. USEC, Inc. (Am. Centrifuge Plant), CLI 10, 63 NRC 451, 472 (2006); Fansteel, Inc. (Muskogee, Oklahoma Site), CLI-03-13, 58 NRC 195, 203 (2003). Presumably the NRC Staff is likewise bound, in opposing proffered content-ions, to avoid mere speculation and bare/conclusory assertions, and worse for them, they identify no expert making such assertions. Consequently, the penalty for the Staffs repeated uses of lawyers as proxy embrittlement experts in its Answer should be forfeiture of their arguments.
Philadelphia Elec. Co.  
E. Claimed Irrelevance/Unchallenged Earlier Licensing Decisions The Staff repeatedly engages in a ploy, treating Petitioners evidentiary references which tend to prove that 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a has been improvidently or incorrectly invoked, instead, as out-of-bounds facts which Petitioners may not use. For instance:
(Limerick Ge nerating Station, Units 1 & 2), A LAB-836, 23NRC 479, 494 n.22 (1986);
Finally, in Section IV.C.3 of the Amended Petition, the Petitioners argue that fluence data from Surveillance Capsule A-60, which was excluded from the licensees surveillance program in the early 1980s, exceeded the 1ó variation [sic] described above. The Petitioners maintain that this data would have shown that Palisades must be shut down, and that disregarding Capsule A-60 distorts the analytical basis for continued operation. However, as is the case with many of Petitioners arguments, their concerns with Capsule A-60 have no relevance to the present proceeding. Entergy is not relying on Capsule A-60 at any point in its LAR. Capsule A-60 was deleted from the Reactor Vessel Surveillance Capsule Program over 30 years ago, and the Reactor Vessel Surveillance Coupon Removal Schedule was modified to provide the option of removing an equivalent capsule instead of the primary capsule in a separate licensing action.
Pub. Serv. Co. of N.H.  
Staff Answer p. 27. This is the Staffs attempt to transform a purely evidentiary observation into a regulatory brick wall. By arguing that Capsule A-60 is irrelevant as having been deleted from the surveillance program 30 years ago, the Staff obviously hopes to conceal evidence. That evidence arguably showed that the degree of RPV embrittlement in the 1980's was greatly advanced, given the then-short operational age of the reactor. In a similar vein, Entergy proposes to proceed through the 16 years from 2003 to 2019 without testing a coupon, which is rather akin to throwing out an inconveniently revelatory test result that might prove the too-fragile-to-operate state of Palisades RPV. By referring to Capsule A-60, Petitioners are both pointing to evidence that might be pertinent, as well as alerting the Licensing Board to an ongoing course by Entergy to evade scientific validation of the true circumstances of embrittlement of the Palisades RPV. By concealing, or not pursuing, scientific evidence now, Entergy can move with less controversy to the probabilistic assessment, mostly-theoretical path afforded by 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a.
(Seabrook Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-891,27 NRC 341, 350-51 (1988). The Staff has omitted to sponsor its ex pert opinions throug h abona fide expert witness, which under mines - not just at this poi nt in their Answer
E. Misconstrued Evidentiary Value Of The LAR-EMA The NRC Staff often defends by taking a discursive view of Petitioners evidence, piecemealing it down to disjoint facts, followed by the assertion that such anomie is beyond the regulatory pale. That remains true respecting the ruckus raised by the Staff from Petitioners reference to a License Amendment Request pertaining to revisions of the Equivalent Margins Analysis for Palisades.
, but at other places - the validity of their a rguments ag ainst admissibil ity.Testimony based upon "
Arnold Gundersen notes (Gundersen Declaration ¶ 46) that
subjective be lief or unsupporte d specula tion" rathe r than the "methods and pr ocedures of science," and not g rounded upon suf ficient fa cts or data to be the product of a pplying reliable pr inciples and methods to the fa cts cannot suffice as evide nce of themerits in a licensing dispute.
                  . . . prior evaluations suggest that three portions of the nuclear reactor vessel will not meet the NRC required 50 ft-lb ductility stress limit. It also appears, from the five documents attached to the LAR, that Westinghouse has re-analyzed and manipulated the Palisades data so that the final calculations keep the reactor vessel within the regulatory acceptable range above the minimum 50 ft-lb ductility stress limit.
Duke Cogema Stone &
Gundersen considers the LAR EMA request to be red flag evidence that Entergy is proposing to operate its Palisades NPP well outside the norm by proposing to re-analyze the deteriorating metallurgical conditions without using the readily available physical samples that are designed specifically for this purpose. Id. at ¶ 48. And therein lies the distinction between Petitioners and the Staff: it is of evidentiary value to point out that Entergy is engaged in a wider campaign to, once again, move the goal posts back by raising the permissible limits for embrittlement so that the astonishingly serious shatter capabilities of the Palisades RPV remain camouflaged in alleged regulatory protections. Irrespective of the separate pendency of the EMA license amendment request, the request involves the very same RPV. Petitioners expert may rightfully expose the facts on which the request is based, and their pertinence to this hearing petition.
Webster (Savanna h River Mix ed Oxide Fuel Fabrication Facility), LBP-05-4, 61 NRC 71, 98-99 (2005). Ne ither mere speculation nor bare orconclusory assertions, even by an expert, which a llege that a ma tter should be conside red, can suffice to cause admission of a prof fered contention. USEC, Inc.
F. The Lack Of Thermal Shield Is Relevant Evidence Petitioners have the same response concerning the Staffs bickering that mentioning the lack of a thermal shield is not relevant to whether superficial paperwork requirements have been met concerning 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a. Petitioners are urging none of what the Staff alleges - that is, Petitioners are not trying to predicate a contention on what Palisades prior owner should have done. The lack of a thermal shield emphasizes the unfettered neutron fluence to which the RPV has been continuously exposed for over 43 years. It tends to prove that a science-based regulatory determination of Palisades embrittlement may be preferable to the use of probabilistic risk assessment in the circumstances of this reactor.
(Am. Centrifug e Plant), CL I-06-10, 63 NRC 451, 472 (2006);
G. Prior License Amendments Enabling More Embrittlement Are Relevant Evidence For the Staff to seriously posit that the multiple past increases of the trigger temperature (the Staffs term) are not admissible evidence is laughable. Their objection pertains to the forthcoming adjudication of this matter which should be held. It is incumbent upon an expert to disclose the bases for his/her opinion. Quite rationally, Arnold Gundersens analysis was that the date at which the trigger temperature was exceeded kept getting longer. The rollbacks were of the date and also the temperature. The pattern of those rollbacks is of importance to scrutinizing and understanding the pending § 50.61a application. Too, a 230 degrees F. increase in the trigger temperature over 43+ years is relevant information. The regulation - 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a(d)(1) -
Fansteel, Inc
makes it relevant:
. (Muskogee, Oklahoma Site), CL I-03-13, 58 NRC 195, 203 (2003). Pre sumably the NRC Staff is likewise bound, in opposing pr offered content-ions, to avoid mere spe culation and ba re/conclusory assertions, and worse f or them, they identify no expert making such asse rtions. Consequently
Whenever there is a significant change in projected values of RTMAX-X, so that the previous value, the current value, or both values, exceed the screening criteria before the expiration of the plant operating license; or upon the licensees request for a change in the expiration date for operation of the facility; a re-assessment of RTMAX-X values documented consistent with the requirements of paragraph (c)(1) and (c)(3) of this section must be submitted in the form of a license amendment for review and approval by the Director. (Emphasis added).
, the pena lty for the Staf f's repeated uses of lawyers as proxy embrittlement experts in its Answer should be for feiture of their a rguments.
III. Responses To Entergys Answer A. Standing Entergy hints that there is no meaningful relief that would follow a decision adverse to its interests on the License Amendment Request. Entergy Answer at p. 14/37 of .pdf. Given the stage of Palisades operating life and the severe, undeniable embrittlement of the reactor pressure vessel, it is possible that the ASLB could overturn or deny recourse to Entergy under 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, which would force a decision on the utility to undertake the annealing of the RPV, or perhaps, if the economics of that remedy were prohibitive, for the reactor to be permanently shutdown, and decommissioned. If the former relief were ordered or followed from a denial of § 50.61a amendment, Petitioners would benefit from safety enhancements to Palisades operations.
E. Claimed Irrelev ance/Unchallenged Earlier Licensing Dec isionsThe Staff repeatedly engages in a ploy
If the latter relief occurred, they would benefit even more since the risks from decommissioning would principally attend management of spent fuel at the reactor site as well as the cleanup of radioactive contamination.
, treating Petitioners' e videntiary references whichtend to prove tha t 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a has be en improvidently or incorr ectly invoked, instead, a sout-of-bounds f acts whic h Petitioners may not use. For instance:
Entergy urges that the Petitioners are not entitled to rely on the proximity presumption to establish standing. Even if the ASLB were to accept the proposition that a through-wall crack or shattering of the Palisades RPV cannot conceivably form the heart of a dangerous nuclear reactor accident, residence or activities within 10 miles of a facility (and in one case 17 miles from a facility) have been found sufficient to establish standing in a case involving the proposed expansion in capacity of a spent fuel pool. See Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. (Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station), LBP-87-7, 25 NRC 116, 118 (1987); see also Florida Power &
Finally, in Section I V.C.3 of the Amende d Petition, t he Petitioners ar gue thatfluence data from Surveillanc e Capsule A-60, which wa s excluded from the lice nsee'ssurveillance program in the e arly 1980s, exceede d the "1ó variation" [si c] describe dabove. The Petitioners maintain that this data would have shown that Palisades must be shut down, and that disreg arding Capsule A-60 distorts the ana lytical basis for c ontinuedoperation. However
Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), LBP-88-10A, 27 NRC 452-454-55 (1988),
, as is the ca se with many of Petitioners' ar guments, their conc ernswith Capsule A-60 ha ve no relevance to the pre sent proce eding. Entergy is not rely ing onCapsule A-60 a t any point in it s LAR. Capsule A-60 wa s deleted f rom the Reac tor Vesse lSurveillance Capsule Prog ram over 30 years ago, and the Rea ctor Vessel Surveillance Coupon Removal Schedule wa s modified to provide the option of re moving an equivalent capsule instead of the pr imary capsule in a sepa rate licensing action.Staff Answe r p. 27. This is the Staff's a ttempt to transform a pur ely evidentiar y observation into a regulatory brick wa ll. By arguing that Capsule A-60 is "irr elevant" as ha ving been "deleted"from the surve illance pr ogram 30 years ago, the Staff obviously hopes to conc eal evidence. Thatevidence arguably showed that the de gree of RPV embrittlement in the 1980' s was greatlyadvanced, given the then-short opera tional ag e of the reactor. In a similar vein, Enter gy proposes to proceed throug h the 16 y ears from 2003 to 2019 without testing a c oupon, which is rathe r akin to throwing out an inconvenie ntly revelatory test result that might prove the too-fr agile-to-operate state of Palisade s' RPV. By referring to Capsule A
affd, ALAB-893, 27 NRC 627 (1988); Carolina Power & Light Co. (Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant), LBP-99-25, 50 NRC 25, 29-31 (1999); Northeast Nuclear Energy Co. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Unit 3), LBP-00-2, 51 NRC 25 (2000). Maynard Kaufman, one of the individuals who has provided a declaration and is represented by Michigan Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter, lives within 10 miles of Palisades. Bette Pierman, represented by Beyond Nuclear, lives within 15 miles. Gail Snyder, represented by Nuclear Energy Information Service, camps and picnics on property she owns about 15 miles from Palisades. At least these three intervening organizations thus overcome a reduced radius (Alice Hirt, represented by Dont Waste Michigan, lives 35 miles from the reactor). In a proceeding reviewing an extended power uprate application, an organization had representational standing where its representative members each lived within 15 miles of the plant. Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee, L.L.C. and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station), LBP-04-28, 60 NRC 548, 553-54 (2004).
-60, Petitioners are both pointing to evidence that mig ht be per tinent, as well as a lerting the Licensing Board to an ong oing course byEntergy to evade scientific va lidation of the true c ircumstance s of embrittlement of the Palisade sRPV. By concealing, or not pursuing
Moreover, residence within 30-40 miles of a reactor site has been held to be sufficient to show the requisite interest in raising safety questions. Virginia Electric & Power Co. (North Anna Power Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-146, 6 AEC 631, 633-634 (1973); Louisiana Power &
, scientific e vidence now, Enterg y can move with less controversy to the probabilistic assessment, mostly
Light Co. (Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3), ALAB-125, 6 AEC 371, 372 n.6 (1973);
-theoretical path af forded by 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a.E. Misconstrued Ev identiary Value Of The LAR-EM AThe NRC Staff ofte n defends by taking a discursive view of Petitioners' e vidence,piecemealing it down to disj oint facts, followe d by the asser tion that such anomie is bey ond theregulatory pale. Tha t remains true respecting the ruckus raised by the Staff f rom Petitioners' reference to a License Amendment Reque st pertaining to revisions of the Equivale nt MarginsAnalysis for Palisades.
Northern States Power Co. (Prairie Island Nuclear Generating Plant, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-107, 6 AEC 188, 190, 193, reconsid. den., ALAB-110, 6 AEC 247, affd, CLI-73-12, 6 AEC 241 (1973); Florida Power and Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), LBP-88-10A, 27 NRC 452, 454-55 (1988), affd on other grounds, ALAB-893, 27 NRC 627 (1988).
Arnold Gunde rsen notes (
Turning to Entergys other standing objections, the utility suggests (Entergy Answer p.
Gundersen Declaration ¶ 46) that  
13/37) that Petitioners are making a general objection to the plants operations. That is incorrect.
. . . prior eva luations sugg est that three portions of the nucle ar reactor vessel will not meet the NRC require d 50 ft-lb ductility stress limit. I t also appea rs, from the f ivedocuments attac hed to the L AR, that Westinghouse ha s re-analyzed and manipulated the Palisades data so tha t the final ca lculations keep the reactor vessel within the reg ulatoryacceptable r ange above the minimum 50 ft-lb ductili ty stress limit.
The contention raised by Petitioners is quite particular, in that it is an objection to any further weakening of pressurized thermal shock (PTS) safety standards. The chain of causation which Entergy maintains has not been made is that if there were a PTS event, it could cause RPV failure and core meltdown, accompanied by containment failure, followed by catastrophic radioactivity release. Safety concerns which carry the potential for offsite consequences enable standing.
Gundersen consider s the LAR EMA reque st to be "re d flag" evidence that "Enterg y is proposing to operate its Palisades NPP well outsi de the nor m by proposing to re-analyze the deter ioratingmetallurg ical conditions without using the r eadily available physical samples that a re designedspecifically for this purpose."
Cleveland Elec. Illuminating Co. (Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), CLI-93-21, 38 NRC 87, 95-96 (1993). In ruling on claims of proximity standing, the Commission determines the radius beyond which it believes there is no longer an obvious potential for offsite consequences by taking into account the nature of the proposed action and the significance of the radioactive source. Entergy Nuclear Operations and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant), CLI-08-19, 68 NRC 251, 254 (2008).
Id. at ¶ 48. And the rein lies the distinction betwee n Petitioners and the Staff: it is of evidentiar y value to point out that Enterg y is engaged in a wide r campaign to, once again, move the g oal posts back by raising the permissible limits for embrittlement so that the astonishingly serious shatter capabilities of the Palisade s RPV remain ca mouflaged in alleg edregulatory protections. Irrespective of the "separate" pendency of the EMA lice nse amendmentrequest, the reque st involves the very same RPV. Petitioners' expert may rightfully expose the facts on which the re quest is based, a nd their per tinence to this hea ring petition.
Petitioners submit here that a pressurized thermal shock-caused failure of a reactor pressure vessel raises an obvious potential for offsite consequences. Even in license amendment cases involving allegations of management's lack of the required character and competence, there is deemed to be an obvious potential for offsite cónsequences, so standing is analogous to that in an operating license case. Florida Power and Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2), CLI-89-21, 30 NRC 325 (1989).
F. The Lack Of Thermal Shield Is Re levant Ev idencePetitioners have the sa me response conc erning the Staff' s bickering that mentioning the lack of a thermal shield is not relevant to whe ther super ficial pa perwork requirements have beenmet conce rning 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a. Petitioners ar e urging none of what the Staff alleg es - that is, Petitioners are not trying to pr edicate a contention on what Palisades' pr ior owner should have done. The lack of a thermal shield emphasizes the unfetter ed neutron fluenc e to which the RPV has been continuously exposed for over 43 years. It tends to prove that a sc ience-based regulatorydetermination of Palisades' embr ittlement may be preferable to the use of proba bilistic riskassessment in the cir cumstance s of this reac tor.G. Prior License Ame ndments Enabling More Em brittlement Are Rele vant Evide nceFor the Staff to ser iously posit that the mult iple past incre ases of the "trig ger temperature"(the Staff
IV. CONCLUSION There is no genuine issue but that Petitioners have successfully established standing based on the prospects of a through-wall accident from the extraordinary state of embrittlement of the Palisades RPV. The NRC Staff has not sincerely proven that any of the opinions and conclusions proffered by Petitioners expert witness comprise an impermissible attack on NRC regulations. The historical evidence of the increasingly severe and advance pressurized thermal shock concern at Palisades which is cited by Petitioners and through their expert constitutes facially relevant evidence and may not be discarded merely because of earlier regulatory decisions which touch upon it.
's term) a re not admissible evidence is laug hable. The ir objection per tains to the forthcoming adjudication of this matter w hich should be held. I t is incumbent upon an expert to disclose the base s for his/her opinion. Quite ra tionally, Arnold Gunde rsen's analysis was that the date at which the trig ger temperature was exceede d kept getting long er. The rollbacks we re of thedate and also the temper ature. The pattern of those r ollbacks is of importance to scrutinizi ng andunderstanding the pending
Finally, two additional facts warrant the ASLB to note the severity of the PTS problem at Palisades and the companion matter of the still rather unsettled, inchoate nature of NRC regulations governing embrittlement, notwithstanding the existence of 10 C.F.R. §§ 50.61 and 50.61a.
§ 50.61a applica tion. Too, a 230 deg rees F. incr ease in the trig ger temperature over 43+ years is releva nt information. The re gulation - 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a(d)
A. ACRS Subcommittee Minutes One is the dark view maintained by certain members of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, Metallurgy and Reactor Fuels subcommittee, manifested in recent official transcribed minutes of Subcommittee proceedings. On October 16, 2014, this colloquy took place:
(1) -makes it rele vant: Whenever there is a signif icant cha nge in projec ted values of RTMAX-X, so thatthe previous value, the c urrent value, or both value s, exceed the screening criteria before the expiration of the plant operating license
MEMBER BANERJEE: Yes, but I mean what is special about Palisades? That's what I was going to ask.
; or upon the license e's request for a changein the expiration date for ope ration of the f acility; a re-assessment of RT MAX-X valuesdocumented c onsistent with the requireme nts of para graph (c)(1) and (c)(3) of this section must be submitt ed in the for m of a lice nse amendment for r eview and approva l by theDirector. (Emphasis adde d).III. Responses To E ntergy's AnswerA. Standing Entergy hints that there is no meaning ful relief that would follow a de cision adver se to its interests on the L icense Amendment Reque st. Enterg y Answer at p. 14/37 of .pdf. Give n thestage of Palisade s' operating life and the severe, undenia ble embrittlement of the r eactor pressur evessel, it is possibl e that the ASL B could overturn or deny recourse to Enter gy under 10 C.F
MR. KIRK: Well, there are so many things that are special about Palisades.
.R. §50.61a, which w ould force a decision on the util ity to undertake the anne aling of the RPV, or perhaps, if the ec onomics of that re medy were prohibitive, for the reactor to be per manentlyshutdown, and dec ommissioned. If the for mer relief were ordered or followed f rom a denial of § 50.61a ame ndment, Petitioners would benef it from safe ty enhancements to Palisades' ope rations.
MEMBER BANERJEE: There's nothing special about Palisades, though, than you exposed it to a lot of risk?
If the latter relief occurred, they would benef it even more since the r isks from decommissioning would principally attend mana gement of spe nt fuel at the r eactor site as we ll as the clea nup ofradioactive conta mination.
MR. KIRK: A higher level of embrittlement, yes.
Entergy urges that the Petitioners ar e not entitled to rely on the "pr oximity presumption" to establish standing. Eve n if the ASL B were to accept the proposition that a throug h-wall crackor shatter ing of the Palisades RPV cannot c onceivably form the he art of a dangerous nuc lear reactor accident, residenc e or activities within 10 m iles of a f acility (and in one case 17 miles from a facility) have been found sufficie nt to establish standing in a c ase involving the proposed expansion in capac ity of a spe nt fuel pool.
Official Transcript of Proceedings, ADAMS No. ML14296A342, pp. 30-31 (pp. 31-32 of 168 on
See Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp
.pdf counter).
. (VermontYankee Nuclear Power Station), L BP-87-7, 25 NRC 116, 118 (1987);
Also:
see also Florida Power &
CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: Where is Palisades in 80 years if you can convert that to fluence?
Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), L BP-88-10A, 27 NRC 452-454-55 (1988)
MR. KIRK: Well, it's probably over hereish.
,aff'd, ALAB-893, 27 NRC 627 (1988);
CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: Okay.
Carolina Pow er & Light Co. (Shearon Harris Nuclea rPower Plant), L BP-99-25, 50 NRC 25, 29-31 (1999);
MR. KIRK: Right. I know that doesn't go well into the transcript but that's probably about the accuracy.
Northeast Nuclear Energy Co.  
CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: But it's less than one times ten to the minus six, let us hope.
(Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Unit 3), L BP-00-2, 51 NRC 25 (2000). May nard Kaufman, one of the individuals who has provided a declaration and is re presented by Michigan Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter
MR. KIRK: Yeah.
, lives within 10 mi les of Palisades. B ette Pierman, r epresented by BeyondNuclear, lives within 15 miles. Gail Sny der, represented by Nuclear Energy Information Servic e,camps and picnics on prope rty she owns about 15 miles fr om Palisades. At least these thr eeintervening organizations thus overcome a reduced radius (Alice Hir t, represented by Don'tWaste Michiga n, lives 35 miles from the re actor). In a proceeding reviewing an extended powe ruprate application, an or ganization had repr esentational standing w here its repre sentative members e ach lived w ithin 15 mi les of the plant.
Id., p. 32 (33 of 168 on .pdf counter).
Entergy Nucle ar Vermont Y ankee, L.L.C. andEntergy Nucle ar Operations, Inc
And additionally:
. (Vermont Yanke e Nuclear Power Station), L BP-04-28, 60NRC 548, 553-54 (2004).
MR. KIRK: We don't - we didn't incorporate a generic way to deal with flaws that don't meet the flaw tables.
Moreover, residence within 30-40 mil es of a reactor site has be en held to be suf ficient to show the re quisite interest in raising safety questions.
CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: That's why I was kind of pinging on you about the Palisades and Beaver Valley and how - where they were likely to get hung up.
Virginia Electric &
MR. STEVENS: Our experience, and we did look at better than a dozen flaw evaluations or - I'm sorry, inspection results for plants that we were able to look at through submittals or part of the review of the NRR activity associated with extending RPV inspection from 10 to 20 years, and our experiences we have yet to see any plants that challenge the flaw tables in this rule.
Power Co.  
So another reason I think we chose a realistic not to address that comment is first off is a lot of different possibilities on flaws that could exist that might challenge those limits, and then second, we just didn't see - it seemed to us that to have a fair probability that that would occur so we didn't see the need to spend the resource to chase that because our experience was we don't see people having trouble satisfying the flaw regs.
(NorthAnna Power Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-146, 6 AEC 631, 633-634 (
Id., pp. 54-55 (pp. 55-56 of .pdf counter).
1973); Louisiana Power &
Finally:
Light Co. (Waterford Steam Elec tric Station, Unit 3), AL AB-125, 6 AEC 371, 372 n.6 (1973)
MR. KIRK: So, you know, that's the other thing and that's why we tend to defer to the generic trends is there's really just not that much plant-specific data to go on, in most cases.
;
If in some other universe, which we don't exist in, there was a hundred plant-specific data points I think, you know, quite clearly we'd just use that trend. But that's not what we have.
Northern States Power Co.  
So, really, we're looking here for the limited data - we're looking at the limited data that we have to flag big inconsistencies between the embrittlement trends in a particular vessel weld plate forging with what we use.
(Prairie Island Nucle ar Generating Plant, Units 1 & 2), AL AB-107, 6AEC 188, 190, 193, reconsid. den
Id., p. 60 (61/168 of .pdf).
., ALAB-110, 6 AEC 247, af f'd, CLI-73-12, 6 AE C 241(1973); Florida Power and Li ght Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), L BP-88-10A, 27NRC 452, 454-55 (1988)
B. The NRC Staffs Unannounced Succor For Embrittled Nuclear Power Plant Owners When Compliance Even With § 50.61a Is A Bridge Too Far In the end, for extremely-embrittled RPVs, 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a contains an obscure, little-noticed bypass provision whereby the NRC Director of NRR may allow selected embrittled reactors to operate beyond the PTS screening criteria. At the 619th Meeting of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, Mark Kirk of the Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research and the principal author of 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, presented a slide show, Technical Brief on Regulatory Guidance on the Alternative PTS Rule (10 C.F.R. § 50.61a). Official Transcript of Proceedings, ADAMS No. ML14321A542, commencing at p. 202/268 of .pdf. The slide at p.
, aff'd on other grounds
242 of the transcript contains the following information:
, ALAB-893, 27 NRC 627 (1988).
Use of 10 CFR 50.61a PTS screening criteria requires submittal for review and approval by Director, NRR.
Turning to Enterg y's other standing objections, the utility suggests (Enter gy Answer p. 13/37) that Petitioners are making a general objection to the plant's ope rations. That is incorr ect. The contention raised by Petitioners is quit e particular, in that it is an objection to any furtherweakening of pressurized thermal shock ("
For plants that do not satisfy PTS Screening Criteria, plant-specific PTS assessment is required.
PTS") safe ty standards. The chain of causation which Entergy maintains has not been ma de is that if there were a PTS eve nt, it could cause RPV fa ilureand core meltdown, ac companied by containment fa ilure, followed by catastrophic ra dioactivity release. Safety concerns which c arry the potential for of fsite conse quences enable standing
Must be submitted for review and approval by Director, NRR.
.Cleveland Elec
Guidance is not provided for this case Subsequent requirements (i.e., after submittal) are defined in paragraph (d) of 10 CFR 50.61a. (Emphasis supplied).
. Illuminating Co.  
Thus even as the NRC Staff and Entergy castigate Petitioners for not strictly following pleading requirements and flay public representatives for impermissibly trampling on regulations which are strict by design, the agency quietly maintains pressurized thermal shock regulatory relief valve therapy for deserving nuclear power plant corporations which appears to be outside the Atomic Energy Act and unchallengeable by the public..
(Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), CL I-93-21, 38 NRC 87, 95-96 (1993)
                                                /s/ Terry J. Lodge Terry J. Lodge (OH #0029271) 316 N. Michigan St., Ste. 520 Toledo, OH 43604-5627 (419) 255-7552 Fax (419) 255-7552 Tjlodge50@yahoo.com Counsel for Petitioners UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board In the Matter of:                                       )      Docket No. 50-255 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.                       )
. In ruling on claims of "pr oximity standing
(Palisades Nuclear Plant)
," the Commission determines the ra diusbeyond which it believes the re is no long er an "obvious potential for of fsite conse quences" by"taking into account the na ture of the proposed a ction and the sig nificance of the radioactivesource." Entergy Nucle ar Operations and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC (Palisades Nuc learPlant), CL I-08-19, 68 NRC 251, 254 (2008).
                                                        )       January 20, 2015 Operating License Amendment Request
Petitioners submit here that a pre ssurized thermal shock-c aused failure of a reactorpressure vessel ra ises an "obvious potential for offsite c onsequenc es." Even in license amendment c ases involving allegations of manag ement's lack of the required character andcompetenc e, there is deemed to be an obvious potential for offsite c
                                                        )
ónsequenc es, so standing isanalogous to that in an opera ting lice nse case. Florida Power and Li ght Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2), CL I-89-21, 30 NRC 325 (1989).
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing PETITIONERS COMBINED REPLY IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PETITION TO INTERVENE AND FOR A PUBLIC ADJUDICATION HEARING OF ENTERGY LICENSE AMENDMENT REQUEST FOR AUTHORIZATION TO IMPLEMENT 10 CFR §50.61a, ALTERNATE FRACTURE TOUGHNESS REQUIREMENTS FOR PROTECTION AGAINST PRESSURIZED THERMAL SHOCK EVENTS was served by me upon the parties to this proceeding via the NRCs Electronic Information Exchange system this 20th day of January, 2015.
IV. CONCLUSION There is no ge nuine issue but that Petitioners have suc cessfully established standing based on the prospects of a throug h-wall accide nt from the extraordinar y state of e mbrittlement of the Palisades RPV. The N RC Staff has not sincere ly proven tha t any of the opinions and conclusions proff ered by Petitioners' expert witness comprise a n impermissible attack on NRC regulations. The historical evide nce of the incre asingly severe and advance pressurized ther malshock conc ern at Palisades which is cited by Petitioners and throug h their expert constitutes facially relevant evidenc e and may not be discar ded merely because of earlier regulatorydecisions which touch upon it.
                                                  /s/ Terry J. Lodge Terry J. Lodge (OH #0029271) 316 N. Michigan St., Ste. 520 Toledo, OH 43604-5627 (419) 255-7552 Fax (419) 255-7552 Tjlodge50@yahoo.com Counsel for Petitioners
Finally, two additional fac ts warrant the ASL B to note the severity of the PTS problem at Palisades and the c ompanion matter of the still rather unsettled, inchoa te nature of NRCregulations gove rning embrittlement, notwithstanding the e xistence of 10 C.F.R. §§ 50.61 and 50.61a. A. ACRS Subcommittee MinutesOne is the da rk view ma intained by certain members of the Advisory Committee onReactor Safeg uards, Me tallurgy and Reactor Fuels subcommittee, manife sted in rec ent offic ialtranscribed minutes of Subcommittee proce edings. On Octobe r 16, 2014, this colloquy tookplace:MEMBER BANERJEE: Yes, but I mean wha t is special about Palisades?
                                                  }}
That'swhat I was going to a sk.MR. KIRK: Well, there are so many things that a re special about Palisade s.MEMBER BANERJEE: There
's nothing spec ial about Palisades, thoug h, than y ou exposed it t o a lot of risk?
MR. KIRK: A highe r level of embrittlement, y es.Official Transc ript of Proce edings, ADAMS No. ML 14296A342, pp. 30-31 (pp. 31-32 of 168 on
.pdf counte r). Also:CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: Where is Palisades in 80 y ears if you can convertthat to fluence
?MR. KIRK: Well, it's proba bly over hereish.CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: Okay
.MR. KIRK: Right. I know that doesn' t go well into the transcr ipt but that's probably about the ac curacy.CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: But it' s less than one times ten to the minus six
, letus hope.MR. KIRK: Yeah.
Id., p. 32 (33 of 168 on .pdf counter).And additionally
:MR. KIRK: We don't - we didn' t incorpora te a generic way to deal with flaw s thatdon't meet the fla w tables.
CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: That' s why I was kind of ping ing on you about the Palisades and B eaver Valley and how -
where they were likely to get hung up.
MR. STEVENS: Our experience
, and we did look at better than a dozen flaw evaluations or - I
'm sorry, inspection results for pla nts that we we re able to look at through submitt als or par t of the re view of the NRR activity associate d with ext endingRPV inspection from 10 to 20 y ears, and our e xperiences we have yet to see a ny plantsthat challeng e the flaw tables in this rule.
So another re ason I think we chose a realistic not to address that comment is first off is alot of differ ent possibilit ies on flaws tha t could exis t that might cha llenge those limits, and then se cond, we just didn't see -
it seemed to us that to have a fair probability that that would occur so we didn' t see the ne ed to spend the r esource to chase that bec ause ourexperience was we don't see people having trouble satisfy ing the flaw regs.Id., pp. 54-55 (pp. 55-56 of .pdf c ounter).Finally:MR. KIRK: So, y ou know, that' s the other thing and that' s why we tend to de fer tothe generic trends is there
's really just not t hat much plant-spe cific data to go on, in most cases.If in some other unive rse, whic h we don' t exist in, there wa s a hundre dplant-spec ific data points I think, y ou know, quite clea rly we'd just use that trend. B utthat's not what we ha ve.So, really
, we're looking here for the limited data -
we're looking at the limited data that we have to f lag big inconsistencies betwe en the embrittlement trends in a particula r vessel weld plate f orging with what we use
. Id., p. 60 (61/168 of .pdf)
.B. The NRC Staff
's Unannounce d Succor For Em brittled Nuclear Power Plant Owners W hen Compliance Ev en With § 50.61a Is A Bridge Too Far In the end, f or extremely
-embrittled RPVs, 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a contains a n obscure
, little-noticed by pass provision wher eby the NRC Direc tor of NRR may allow selec ted embrittled reactors to oper ate beyond the PTS scree ning criteria. A t the 619th Meeting of the Advisory Committee on Rea ctor Safe guards, Ma rk Kirk of the Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research andthe principa l author of 10 C.F
.R. § 50.61a, prese nted a slide show, "
Technical Brief onRegulatory Guidance on the Alterna tive PTS R ule (10 C.F.R. § 50.61a
)." Official Transcript ofProceedings, ADAMS No. ML 14321A542, commenc ing at p. 202/268 of .pdf. The slide a t p.242 of the tra nscript contains the f ollowing infor mation:Use of 10 CF R 50.61a PTS screening criteria requires submittal for re view andapproval by Director, NRR.
For plants that do not satisfy PTS Screening Criteria, plant-spe cific PTS assessment is requir ed.Must be submitt ed for review and approval by Director, NRR.
Guidance is not provided for this case Subsequent requir ements (i.e., after submittal) are defined in para graph (d) of 10CFR 50.61a. (Empha sis suppli ed).Thus even a s the NRC St aff and Enter gy castigate Petitioners for not strictly following pleading requirements and flay public repr esentatives for "
impermissibly
" trampling on regulations which are "strict by design," the a gency quietly maintains "pre ssurized thermal shock regulatory relief valve" therapy for deserving nuclear power plant cor porations which a ppears tobe outside the Atomic Ene rgy Act and unc hallengeable by the public..
 
  /s/ Terry J. Lodge Terry J. Lodge (OH #0029271) 316 N. Michig an St., Ste. 520 Toledo, OH 43604-5627(419) 255-7552Fax (419) 255-7552Tjlodge50@yahoo.comCounsel for Petitioners UNITED STAT ES OF AMERICANUCLEAR REG ULATORY COMMISSION Before the At omic Safety and Licensin g BoardIn the Matter of
:Entergy Nuclear Operations, I nc.(Palisades Nuc lear Plant)Operating License Amendment Reque st)  Docket No. 50-255
))          January 20, 2015
)     *****CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing "PETITIONERS' COMBI NED REPLY INSUPPORT OF AMENDED PETI TION TO INTERVENE A ND FOR A PUBL ICADJUDICATION HEARING OF ENTERGY L ICENSE AMENDMENT REQUE ST FORAUTHORIZATION TO IMPLEMENT 10 CFR §50.61a, '
ALTERNATE F RACTURETOUGHNESS REQUI REMENTS FOR PROTECTI ON AGAINST PRESSURIZEDTHERMAL SHOCK EVENTS" wa s served by me upon the par ties to this proceeding via theNRC's Electronic I nformation Exchang e system this 20th day of January
, 2015.   /s/ Terry J. Lodge Terry J. Lodge (OH #0029271) 316 N. Michig an St., Ste. 520 Toledo, OH 43604-5627(419) 255-7552Fax (419) 255-7552Tjlodge50@yahoo.comCounsel for Petitioners }}

Latest revision as of 15:15, 5 February 2020

Petitioners' Combined Reply in Support of Amended Petition to Intervene and for a Public Adjudication Hearing of Entergy License Amendment Request for Authorization to Implement 10 CFR Section 50.61a, 'Alternate Fracture Toughness Requireme
ML15020A740
Person / Time
Site: Palisades Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 01/20/2015
From: Lodge T
Beyond Nuclear, Don't Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future - Shoreline Chapter (MSEF), Nuclear Energy Information Service
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
SECY RAS
References
50-255-LA, Pending, RAS 27097
Download: ML15020A740 (20)


Text

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board In the Matter of: ) Docket No. 50-255 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. )

(Palisades Nuclear Plant)

) January 20, 2015 Operating License Amendment Request

)

PETITIONERS COMBINED REPLY IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PETITION TO INTERVENE AND FOR A PUBLIC ADJUDICATION HEARING OF ENTERGY LICENSE AMENDMENT REQUEST FOR AUTHORIZATION TO IMPLEMENT 10 CFR

§50.61a, ALTERNATE FRACTURE TOUGHNESS REQUIREMENTS FOR PROTECTION AGAINST PRESSURIZED THERMAL SHOCK EVENTS Now come Beyond Nuclear (BN), Dont Waste Michigan (DWM), Michigan Safe Energy Future - Shoreline Chapter (MSEF), and the Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS) (hereafter collectively called Petitioners), and reply in support of their Amended Petition to Intervene and for a Public Adjudication Hearing of Entergy License Request for Authorization to Implement 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, Alternate Fracture Toughness Requirements for Protection Against Pressurized Thermal Shock Events. Specifically, Petitioners respond in opposition to Entergys Answer Opposing Petition to Intervene and Request for Hearing (Entergy Answer) and the NRC Staff Answer to Petition to Intervene and Request for a Hearing Filed by Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter, and the Nuclear Energy Information Service (NRC Answer).

I. INTRODUCTION The NRC Staff and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Entergy) have set forth by way of answer to the Petition, a threadbare tapestry of misrepresentations, unsupported attorney opinions passed off as expert contradictions, and bare assertions of what the 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a alternate fracture toughness requirements for protection against pressurized thermal shock events supposedly mean, all as part of a strategy aimed at keeping Palisades Nuclear Plant (PNP) in operation as the most embrittled reactor pressure vessel in the American nuclear industry. It is not a positive attribute to be identified as an outlier among the most thermal shock-endangered reactor pressure vessels. Yet as this memorandum will show, Palisades is truly in a category of its own, where it has become the butt of gallows humor at the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards. Petitioners see nothing funny about Palisades as a laughingstock, and believe that they should be granted an opportunity to explore the dangers of Palisades embrittlement problem through sworn witnesses in an effort to avoid serious future drama.

II. RESPONSES TO THE STAFF ANSWER A. Standing The NRC Staff agrees that Petitioners have established standing, although they advance the quaint but bizarre argument that the one-page declarations submitted by individuals living within the 50-mile danger radius around Palisades must articulate claims in the one-page standing declarations themselves which raise admissible contentions. Staff Answer p. 5 fn. 15.

Given that Petitioners are represented by counsel who submitted on their behalves a 21-page enumeration of grounds for a hearing, along with evidentiary attachments, including a serious, expert-supported contention, the ASLB can disregard the Staffs fussiness, resolve its dissonant positions and find that Petitioners have demonstrated sufficient grounds for standing to allow them to proceed to the admissibility question.

B. Claimed Impermissible Challenges to NRC Regulations The NRC Staff launches (Staff Answer p. 14) into the objection that Petitioners fail[] to specify any particular deficiency in the LAR, . . . raise[] numerous matters that are not the subject of the instant LAR and are beyond the permissible scope of this proceeding, and . . .

constitute[] an impermissible challenge to the Commissions regulations. To back up this assertion, the Staff cites a host of statements made by Petitioners expert, Arnold Gundersen, which it claims impermissibly challenge NRC regulations.1 So the Staff attempts to shut down this license amendment intervention by arguing that mere disagreement with the calculations, methods and assemblage of data being submitted for a presumably discretionary 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a ruling from the Director of Nuclear Reactor Regulation is heresy against the regulatory regime. The Staffs interpretation is a spoof of the rule; 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a clearly contemplates a discretionary determination by the Director of 1

For example, see Staff Answer at p. 17: For example, a recurring theme in the Petitioners arguments is that Palisades should not be allowed to use § 50.61a because § 50.61a, unlike § 50.61, relies on estimates and lacks scientific rigor. This argument, however, challenges § 50.61a, not Entergys LAR.

And Staff Answer at 18: The Petitioners expert, Dr. Gundersen, makes this argument succinctly, Until a new capsule sample is removed and analyzed, the analytical assumptions created for the proposed license amendment are unable to be validated and verified. Nowhere, however, do the Petitioners point to any provision in the NRCs rules that impose such a requirement. To the contrary, by arguing that some additional requirement must be imposed to enable Palisades to use the alternate requirements in § 50.61a, the Petitioners are, in fact, challenging the adequacy of the rule itself, rather than the adequacy of Entergys license amendment request.

And Staff Answer at pp. 18-19: The Petitioners argument that Entergy must remove surveillance capsules from the reactor before using § 50.61a thus challenges the rule, which does not require the removal of additional surveillance capsules beyond those withdrawn under the Part 50, Appendix H withdrawal schedule.

And Staff Answer at p. 20: The Petitioners apparent challenge to the approved capsule withdrawal schedule is inadmissible, as it relates to a prior approval pursuant to 10 C.F.R. Part 50, Appendix H, not the amendment at issue in this proceeding.The Petitioners may not use this amendment proceeding as a backdoor to file a challenge to the approved modified withdrawal schedule.

NRR. Where there is discretion vested in the regulator, differences of opinion, interpretation, and expert analysis are legitimate bases for challenging the decision because the decision is potentially arrived at in an adversarial manner. See, for example, § 50.61a( c)(1) (RTMAX-X values assessment must specify the bases for the projected value of RTMAX-X for each reactor vessel beltline material, including the assumptions regarding future plant operation); § 50.61a

( c)(2) (Each licensee shall perform an examination and an assessment of flaws in the reactor vessel beltline as required by paragraph (e) of this section - and (e) requires disclosure of tests performed but, again, detailed explanation of the methodology underlying NDE uncertainties assumptions,2 and adjustments must be disclosed. This is merely a recognition that even objective data, once interpreted, may be examined to ascertain the objectivity or inappropriate bias which may have occurred in the means of analysis which have been applied to it.

Indeed, the final section of § 50.61a, subsection (f)(7), requires that The licensee shall report any information that significantly influences the RTMAX-X value to the Director in accordance with the requirements of paragraphs (c)(1) and (d)(1) of this section. The requirement clearly introduces subjective judgment and choice into the decision of what data is to be provided to the Director of NRR. Hence for Petitioners to provide their experts critique of the means by which the § 50.61a investigation was conducted, and the weaknesses or biases in the underlying data, assumptions and manipulations of information cannot be construed as a 2

§ 50.61a says in part: The methodology to account for NDE-related uncertainties must be based on statistical data from the qualification tests and any other tests that measure the difference between the actual flaw size and the NDE detected flaw size. Licensees who adjust their test data to account for NDE-related uncertainties to verify conformance with the values in Tables 2 and 3 shall prepare and submit the methodology used to estimate the NDE uncertainty, the statistical data used to adjust the test data and an explanation of how the data was analyzed for review and approval by the Director in accordance with paragraphs (c)(2) and (d)(2) of this section.

frontal assault on the regulatory citadel, but must instead be seen, for purposes of the admissibility determination, as an expose of the flaws caused by straying away from knowable science.

C. Surveillance Data Disputes The Staff persists in the argument that sister plant surveillance data, viz., scientific evidence of embrittlement from completely different types of nuclear reactors, can be compared, apples-to-apples, with destructive testing data gleaned from metal coupons retrieved from the Palisades RPV. The Staff urges that the § 50.61a(10) definition of surveillance data includes other plants information within its sweep, and that every reference to surveillance data automatically means not just Palisades, but other plants.3 Only through such a misleading insistence can the Staff proclaim (Staff Answer pp. 21-22) that If these [§ 50.61a(f)(6)] criteria are met, the rule requires the applicant to use the surveillance data to verify that its predicted reference temperatures are appropriate.

But no matter how obfuscatory its arguments, the Staff cannot get around the fact that 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a(f)(6)(i) requires that (A) The surveillance material must be a heat-specific match for one or more of the materials for which RTMAX-X is being calculated. Gundersen has attested to the lack of proof that the metals from the various RPVs match.

The Staff manipulates engineer Gundersens testimony by selectively citing (Staff Answer p. 21) his observation that an exhaustive review of NRC regulations has not unveiled any regulations that allow for such comparisons, and no record of scientific validation of such 3

Staff Answer p. 21: Thus, whenever the term surveillance data is used in § 50.61a, it includes surveillance data from other plants.

methodology. The Staff then terms this an inappropriate challenge to NRC regulations and, adding injury to that insult, accuses Gundersen and Petitioners (Staff Answer p. 22) of saying that Entergy should not be allowed to analyze sister-plant data at all.

But the Staff omits to respond - deliberately, one must conclude - to Gundersens further opinion, cited at Petitioners Amended Petition p. 15, where in a section entitled The Comparable Plants Are Not Apples-to-Apples Comparisons, Gundersen offers these conclusions:

These plants, which he says thus far have not exhibited significant signs of reactor metal embrittlement, are poor comparables because

. . . the dramatically different nuclear core design and operational power characteristics make an accurate comparison impossible. The difference between the Westinghouse nuclear cores and the Combustion Engineering nuclear core impacts the neutron flux on each reactor vessel, thus making an accurate comparison of neutron bombardment and embrittlement impossible.

Id. at p. 10, ¶ 27.

It is thus misrepresentative for the Staff to maintain that Gundersen did not critique the surveillance samples from other plants according to § 50.61a(f)(6) criteria.

Even if the ASLB were to conclude that Arnold Gundersen was incorrect in asserting that no rule governs the comparison of Palisades embrittlement data with that from other nuclear reactors, a contention about a matter not covered by a specific rule need only allege that the matter poses a significant safety problem. That is sufficient to raise an issue under the general requirement for operating licenses, 10 C.F.R. § 50.57(a)(3), for a finding of reasonable assurance of operation without endangering the health and safety of the public. Duke Power Co. (Catawba Nuclear Station, Units 1 & 2), LBP-82-116, 16 NRC 1937, 1946 (1982).

Related to this dispute, the Staff points out (Staff Answer p. 19 fn. 80) that Arnold Gundersen incorrectly attributed to the ACRS these statements - the use of all possible physical samples is important to an accurate outcome . . . the vehicle for doing that is doing a statistical comparison of a particular reactors plant specific surveillance data with the general trends.

Petitioners acknowledge that they mistakenly believed these were statements made by a member of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, and they admit their error. The speaker is the principal NRC staff expert on embrittlement, Mark Kirk of the NRC Office of Regulatory Research and longtime point person on this issue. Kirk is the primary author of § 50.61a, so coming from him, the acknowledgment that the use of all possible physical samples is important to an accurate outcome bolsters Petitioners case even more than if it were a statement by an ACRS member being briefed by an NRC staff expert.

D. Staff Pretensions At Expertise After dispensing with the Staffs disingenuous contention that every expert conclusion proffered by Petitioners is an impermissible challenge to NRC regulations, an underlying weakness to the agencys arguments is exposed: the NRC Staff has not met Petitioners experts conclusions with its own expert evidence. Presumably, qualified NRC engineers are vetting Entergys License Amendment Request, but theyre nowhere in sight in the Staffs Answer.

Instead, the Staffs tactic is to float unsupported conclusions, faux expert representations, tendered via lawyers.

For example, the Staff criticizes Arnold Gundersens testimony on the subject of error band overlap at its Answer, p. 25 in this way:

The Petitioners assert that it is difficult to compare the data from Palisades with data from four other plants, because of the need to assure that the 20% error band[s]

overlap. According to the Petitioners, To compare this different data without assurance that the 1ó variance [sic] from each plant overlaps the other plants lacks scientific validity. In addition, in discussing the differences in flux and fluence from cycle-to-cycle at Palisades, the Petitioners argue that it is mathematically implausible that the needed deviation was obtained. The Petitioners therefore argue that additional testing and analysis is needed to support relicensure.

But in fact, Gundersen stated a scientific criticism with regulatory-violation overtones, i.e., that there is a need for consistency in comparing the 20% error band among the sister plants and that under 10 C.F.R. §50.61a, Entergy has not made that showing. By its very construction, Gundersens opinion is predicated on adequate facts taken from the License Amendment Request (LAR):

While [a] 1ó analysis appears to be binding within the Palisades data, . . . the NRC lowers the bar when comparing data from similar sister plants that are included in Entergys analysis of the Palisades reactor vessel without requiring the same 1ó variance with Palisades. Id. at p. 12, ¶ 32. Gundersen adds: There can be no assurance that the 20% error band at Palisades encompasses the 20% error band at the Robinson or Indian Point plants. To compare this different data without assurance that the 1ó variance from each plant overlaps the other plants lacks scientific validity. Id. at p. 12, ¶ 33.

Amended Petition p. 18.

In support of the continuity and consistency of Petitioners contention, their expert Gundersen found that there is extraordinary variability between the neutron flux across the nuclear core in this Combustion Engineering reactor because of a flux variation of as much as 300% between the 45-degree segment and the 75-degree segment, calling it mathematically implausible that a 20% deviation is possible when the neutron flux itself varies by 300%. Id. at

p. 12, ¶ 34. Gundersens final opinion on this point is:

The Westinghouse Analysis delineates that a 20% variation is mandatory, yet the effective fluence variability can be as high as 300%, therefore, the analytical data does not support relicensure without destructive testing and complete embrittlement analysis of additional capsule samples.

Gundersen Report at p. 16, ¶ 39.

At another place in the Staff Answer, at pp. 26-27, the Staff projects a scientific conclusion without going to the trouble of sponsoring it through an expert:

. . . [I]n their argument concerning flux variability at Palisades and the difficulty in assuring the necessary standard deviation, the Petitioners and Dr. Gundersen do not provide any basis for their assertion that fluence cannot be predicted because the fluence per cycle changes. Significantly, the Petitioners do not point to anything in the application which would indicate that Entergy failed to consider the variability between cycles when comparing measured data with calculational data in the LAR.

Which unidentified engineering expert lawyer for the NRC Staff is testifying here that the fluence per cycle changes?

Technical analyses offered in evidence must be sponsored by an expert who can be examined on the reliability of the factual assertions and soundness of the scientific opinions found in the documents. Southern Cal. Edison Co. (San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, Units 2 & 3), ALAB-717, 17 NRC 346, 367 (1983), citing Duke Power Co. (William B.

McGuire Nuclear Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-669, 15 NRC 453, 477 (1982). See Cleveland Elec. Illuminating Co. (Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-443, 6 NRC 741, 754-56 (1977); Philadelphia Elec. Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-836, 23 NRC 479, 494 n.22 (1986); Pub. Serv. Co. of N.H. (Seabrook Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-891, 27 NRC 341, 350-51 (1988). The Staff has omitted to sponsor its expert opinions through a bona fide expert witness, which undermines - not just at this point in their Answer, but at other places - the validity of their arguments against admissibility.

Testimony based upon subjective belief or unsupported speculation rather than the methods and procedures of science, and not grounded upon sufficient facts or data to be the product of applying reliable principles and methods to the facts cannot suffice as evidence of the merits in a licensing dispute. Duke Cogema Stone & Webster (Savannah River Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabrication Facility), LBP-05-4, 61 NRC 71, 98-99 (2005). Neither mere speculation nor bare or conclusory assertions, even by an expert, which allege that a matter should be considered, can suffice to cause admission of a proffered contention. USEC, Inc. (Am. Centrifuge Plant), CLI 10, 63 NRC 451, 472 (2006); Fansteel, Inc. (Muskogee, Oklahoma Site), CLI-03-13, 58 NRC 195, 203 (2003). Presumably the NRC Staff is likewise bound, in opposing proffered content-ions, to avoid mere speculation and bare/conclusory assertions, and worse for them, they identify no expert making such assertions. Consequently, the penalty for the Staffs repeated uses of lawyers as proxy embrittlement experts in its Answer should be forfeiture of their arguments.

E. Claimed Irrelevance/Unchallenged Earlier Licensing Decisions The Staff repeatedly engages in a ploy, treating Petitioners evidentiary references which tend to prove that 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a has been improvidently or incorrectly invoked, instead, as out-of-bounds facts which Petitioners may not use. For instance:

Finally, in Section IV.C.3 of the Amended Petition, the Petitioners argue that fluence data from Surveillance Capsule A-60, which was excluded from the licensees surveillance program in the early 1980s, exceeded the 1ó variation [sic] described above. The Petitioners maintain that this data would have shown that Palisades must be shut down, and that disregarding Capsule A-60 distorts the analytical basis for continued operation. However, as is the case with many of Petitioners arguments, their concerns with Capsule A-60 have no relevance to the present proceeding. Entergy is not relying on Capsule A-60 at any point in its LAR. Capsule A-60 was deleted from the Reactor Vessel Surveillance Capsule Program over 30 years ago, and the Reactor Vessel Surveillance Coupon Removal Schedule was modified to provide the option of removing an equivalent capsule instead of the primary capsule in a separate licensing action.

Staff Answer p. 27. This is the Staffs attempt to transform a purely evidentiary observation into a regulatory brick wall. By arguing that Capsule A-60 is irrelevant as having been deleted from the surveillance program 30 years ago, the Staff obviously hopes to conceal evidence. That evidence arguably showed that the degree of RPV embrittlement in the 1980's was greatly advanced, given the then-short operational age of the reactor. In a similar vein, Entergy proposes to proceed through the 16 years from 2003 to 2019 without testing a coupon, which is rather akin to throwing out an inconveniently revelatory test result that might prove the too-fragile-to-operate state of Palisades RPV. By referring to Capsule A-60, Petitioners are both pointing to evidence that might be pertinent, as well as alerting the Licensing Board to an ongoing course by Entergy to evade scientific validation of the true circumstances of embrittlement of the Palisades RPV. By concealing, or not pursuing, scientific evidence now, Entergy can move with less controversy to the probabilistic assessment, mostly-theoretical path afforded by 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a.

E. Misconstrued Evidentiary Value Of The LAR-EMA The NRC Staff often defends by taking a discursive view of Petitioners evidence, piecemealing it down to disjoint facts, followed by the assertion that such anomie is beyond the regulatory pale. That remains true respecting the ruckus raised by the Staff from Petitioners reference to a License Amendment Request pertaining to revisions of the Equivalent Margins Analysis for Palisades.

Arnold Gundersen notes (Gundersen Declaration ¶ 46) that

. . . prior evaluations suggest that three portions of the nuclear reactor vessel will not meet the NRC required 50 ft-lb ductility stress limit. It also appears, from the five documents attached to the LAR, that Westinghouse has re-analyzed and manipulated the Palisades data so that the final calculations keep the reactor vessel within the regulatory acceptable range above the minimum 50 ft-lb ductility stress limit.

Gundersen considers the LAR EMA request to be red flag evidence that Entergy is proposing to operate its Palisades NPP well outside the norm by proposing to re-analyze the deteriorating metallurgical conditions without using the readily available physical samples that are designed specifically for this purpose. Id. at ¶ 48. And therein lies the distinction between Petitioners and the Staff: it is of evidentiary value to point out that Entergy is engaged in a wider campaign to, once again, move the goal posts back by raising the permissible limits for embrittlement so that the astonishingly serious shatter capabilities of the Palisades RPV remain camouflaged in alleged regulatory protections. Irrespective of the separate pendency of the EMA license amendment request, the request involves the very same RPV. Petitioners expert may rightfully expose the facts on which the request is based, and their pertinence to this hearing petition.

F. The Lack Of Thermal Shield Is Relevant Evidence Petitioners have the same response concerning the Staffs bickering that mentioning the lack of a thermal shield is not relevant to whether superficial paperwork requirements have been met concerning 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a. Petitioners are urging none of what the Staff alleges - that is, Petitioners are not trying to predicate a contention on what Palisades prior owner should have done. The lack of a thermal shield emphasizes the unfettered neutron fluence to which the RPV has been continuously exposed for over 43 years. It tends to prove that a science-based regulatory determination of Palisades embrittlement may be preferable to the use of probabilistic risk assessment in the circumstances of this reactor.

G. Prior License Amendments Enabling More Embrittlement Are Relevant Evidence For the Staff to seriously posit that the multiple past increases of the trigger temperature (the Staffs term) are not admissible evidence is laughable. Their objection pertains to the forthcoming adjudication of this matter which should be held. It is incumbent upon an expert to disclose the bases for his/her opinion. Quite rationally, Arnold Gundersens analysis was that the date at which the trigger temperature was exceeded kept getting longer. The rollbacks were of the date and also the temperature. The pattern of those rollbacks is of importance to scrutinizing and understanding the pending § 50.61a application. Too, a 230 degrees F. increase in the trigger temperature over 43+ years is relevant information. The regulation - 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a(d)(1) -

makes it relevant:

Whenever there is a significant change in projected values of RTMAX-X, so that the previous value, the current value, or both values, exceed the screening criteria before the expiration of the plant operating license; or upon the licensees request for a change in the expiration date for operation of the facility; a re-assessment of RTMAX-X values documented consistent with the requirements of paragraph (c)(1) and (c)(3) of this section must be submitted in the form of a license amendment for review and approval by the Director. (Emphasis added).

III. Responses To Entergys Answer A. Standing Entergy hints that there is no meaningful relief that would follow a decision adverse to its interests on the License Amendment Request. Entergy Answer at p. 14/37 of .pdf. Given the stage of Palisades operating life and the severe, undeniable embrittlement of the reactor pressure vessel, it is possible that the ASLB could overturn or deny recourse to Entergy under 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, which would force a decision on the utility to undertake the annealing of the RPV, or perhaps, if the economics of that remedy were prohibitive, for the reactor to be permanently shutdown, and decommissioned. If the former relief were ordered or followed from a denial of § 50.61a amendment, Petitioners would benefit from safety enhancements to Palisades operations.

If the latter relief occurred, they would benefit even more since the risks from decommissioning would principally attend management of spent fuel at the reactor site as well as the cleanup of radioactive contamination.

Entergy urges that the Petitioners are not entitled to rely on the proximity presumption to establish standing. Even if the ASLB were to accept the proposition that a through-wall crack or shattering of the Palisades RPV cannot conceivably form the heart of a dangerous nuclear reactor accident, residence or activities within 10 miles of a facility (and in one case 17 miles from a facility) have been found sufficient to establish standing in a case involving the proposed expansion in capacity of a spent fuel pool. See Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. (Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station), LBP-87-7, 25 NRC 116, 118 (1987); see also Florida Power &

Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), LBP-88-10A, 27 NRC 452-454-55 (1988),

affd, ALAB-893, 27 NRC 627 (1988); Carolina Power & Light Co. (Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant), LBP-99-25, 50 NRC 25, 29-31 (1999); Northeast Nuclear Energy Co. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Unit 3), LBP-00-2, 51 NRC 25 (2000). Maynard Kaufman, one of the individuals who has provided a declaration and is represented by Michigan Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter, lives within 10 miles of Palisades. Bette Pierman, represented by Beyond Nuclear, lives within 15 miles. Gail Snyder, represented by Nuclear Energy Information Service, camps and picnics on property she owns about 15 miles from Palisades. At least these three intervening organizations thus overcome a reduced radius (Alice Hirt, represented by Dont Waste Michigan, lives 35 miles from the reactor). In a proceeding reviewing an extended power uprate application, an organization had representational standing where its representative members each lived within 15 miles of the plant. Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee, L.L.C. and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station), LBP-04-28, 60 NRC 548, 553-54 (2004).

Moreover, residence within 30-40 miles of a reactor site has been held to be sufficient to show the requisite interest in raising safety questions. Virginia Electric & Power Co. (North Anna Power Station, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-146, 6 AEC 631, 633-634 (1973); Louisiana Power &

Light Co. (Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3), ALAB-125, 6 AEC 371, 372 n.6 (1973);

Northern States Power Co. (Prairie Island Nuclear Generating Plant, Units 1 & 2), ALAB-107, 6 AEC 188, 190, 193, reconsid. den., ALAB-110, 6 AEC 247, affd, CLI-73-12, 6 AEC 241 (1973); Florida Power and Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), LBP-88-10A, 27 NRC 452, 454-55 (1988), affd on other grounds, ALAB-893, 27 NRC 627 (1988).

Turning to Entergys other standing objections, the utility suggests (Entergy Answer p.

13/37) that Petitioners are making a general objection to the plants operations. That is incorrect.

The contention raised by Petitioners is quite particular, in that it is an objection to any further weakening of pressurized thermal shock (PTS) safety standards. The chain of causation which Entergy maintains has not been made is that if there were a PTS event, it could cause RPV failure and core meltdown, accompanied by containment failure, followed by catastrophic radioactivity release. Safety concerns which carry the potential for offsite consequences enable standing.

Cleveland Elec. Illuminating Co. (Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 1), CLI-93-21, 38 NRC 87, 95-96 (1993). In ruling on claims of proximity standing, the Commission determines the radius beyond which it believes there is no longer an obvious potential for offsite consequences by taking into account the nature of the proposed action and the significance of the radioactive source. Entergy Nuclear Operations and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant), CLI-08-19, 68 NRC 251, 254 (2008).

Petitioners submit here that a pressurized thermal shock-caused failure of a reactor pressure vessel raises an obvious potential for offsite consequences. Even in license amendment cases involving allegations of management's lack of the required character and competence, there is deemed to be an obvious potential for offsite cónsequences, so standing is analogous to that in an operating license case. Florida Power and Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2), CLI-89-21, 30 NRC 325 (1989).

IV. CONCLUSION There is no genuine issue but that Petitioners have successfully established standing based on the prospects of a through-wall accident from the extraordinary state of embrittlement of the Palisades RPV. The NRC Staff has not sincerely proven that any of the opinions and conclusions proffered by Petitioners expert witness comprise an impermissible attack on NRC regulations. The historical evidence of the increasingly severe and advance pressurized thermal shock concern at Palisades which is cited by Petitioners and through their expert constitutes facially relevant evidence and may not be discarded merely because of earlier regulatory decisions which touch upon it.

Finally, two additional facts warrant the ASLB to note the severity of the PTS problem at Palisades and the companion matter of the still rather unsettled, inchoate nature of NRC regulations governing embrittlement, notwithstanding the existence of 10 C.F.R. §§ 50.61 and 50.61a.

A. ACRS Subcommittee Minutes One is the dark view maintained by certain members of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, Metallurgy and Reactor Fuels subcommittee, manifested in recent official transcribed minutes of Subcommittee proceedings. On October 16, 2014, this colloquy took place:

MEMBER BANERJEE: Yes, but I mean what is special about Palisades? That's what I was going to ask.

MR. KIRK: Well, there are so many things that are special about Palisades.

MEMBER BANERJEE: There's nothing special about Palisades, though, than you exposed it to a lot of risk?

MR. KIRK: A higher level of embrittlement, yes.

Official Transcript of Proceedings, ADAMS No. ML14296A342, pp. 30-31 (pp. 31-32 of 168 on

.pdf counter).

Also:

CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: Where is Palisades in 80 years if you can convert that to fluence?

MR. KIRK: Well, it's probably over hereish.

CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: Okay.

MR. KIRK: Right. I know that doesn't go well into the transcript but that's probably about the accuracy.

CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: But it's less than one times ten to the minus six, let us hope.

MR. KIRK: Yeah.

Id., p. 32 (33 of 168 on .pdf counter).

And additionally:

MR. KIRK: We don't - we didn't incorporate a generic way to deal with flaws that don't meet the flaw tables.

CHAIRMAN BALLINGER: That's why I was kind of pinging on you about the Palisades and Beaver Valley and how - where they were likely to get hung up.

MR. STEVENS: Our experience, and we did look at better than a dozen flaw evaluations or - I'm sorry, inspection results for plants that we were able to look at through submittals or part of the review of the NRR activity associated with extending RPV inspection from 10 to 20 years, and our experiences we have yet to see any plants that challenge the flaw tables in this rule.

So another reason I think we chose a realistic not to address that comment is first off is a lot of different possibilities on flaws that could exist that might challenge those limits, and then second, we just didn't see - it seemed to us that to have a fair probability that that would occur so we didn't see the need to spend the resource to chase that because our experience was we don't see people having trouble satisfying the flaw regs.

Id., pp. 54-55 (pp. 55-56 of .pdf counter).

Finally:

MR. KIRK: So, you know, that's the other thing and that's why we tend to defer to the generic trends is there's really just not that much plant-specific data to go on, in most cases.

If in some other universe, which we don't exist in, there was a hundred plant-specific data points I think, you know, quite clearly we'd just use that trend. But that's not what we have.

So, really, we're looking here for the limited data - we're looking at the limited data that we have to flag big inconsistencies between the embrittlement trends in a particular vessel weld plate forging with what we use.

Id., p. 60 (61/168 of .pdf).

B. The NRC Staffs Unannounced Succor For Embrittled Nuclear Power Plant Owners When Compliance Even With § 50.61a Is A Bridge Too Far In the end, for extremely-embrittled RPVs, 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a contains an obscure, little-noticed bypass provision whereby the NRC Director of NRR may allow selected embrittled reactors to operate beyond the PTS screening criteria. At the 619th Meeting of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, Mark Kirk of the Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research and the principal author of 10 C.F.R. § 50.61a, presented a slide show, Technical Brief on Regulatory Guidance on the Alternative PTS Rule (10 C.F.R. § 50.61a). Official Transcript of Proceedings, ADAMS No. ML14321A542, commencing at p. 202/268 of .pdf. The slide at p.

242 of the transcript contains the following information:

Use of 10 CFR 50.61a PTS screening criteria requires submittal for review and approval by Director, NRR.

For plants that do not satisfy PTS Screening Criteria, plant-specific PTS assessment is required.

Must be submitted for review and approval by Director, NRR.

Guidance is not provided for this case Subsequent requirements (i.e., after submittal) are defined in paragraph (d) of 10 CFR 50.61a. (Emphasis supplied).

Thus even as the NRC Staff and Entergy castigate Petitioners for not strictly following pleading requirements and flay public representatives for impermissibly trampling on regulations which are strict by design, the agency quietly maintains pressurized thermal shock regulatory relief valve therapy for deserving nuclear power plant corporations which appears to be outside the Atomic Energy Act and unchallengeable by the public..

/s/ Terry J. Lodge Terry J. Lodge (OH #0029271) 316 N. Michigan St., Ste. 520 Toledo, OH 43604-5627 (419) 255-7552 Fax (419) 255-7552 Tjlodge50@yahoo.com Counsel for Petitioners UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board In the Matter of: ) Docket No. 50-255 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. )

(Palisades Nuclear Plant)

) January 20, 2015 Operating License Amendment Request

)

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing PETITIONERS COMBINED REPLY IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PETITION TO INTERVENE AND FOR A PUBLIC ADJUDICATION HEARING OF ENTERGY LICENSE AMENDMENT REQUEST FOR AUTHORIZATION TO IMPLEMENT 10 CFR §50.61a, ALTERNATE FRACTURE TOUGHNESS REQUIREMENTS FOR PROTECTION AGAINST PRESSURIZED THERMAL SHOCK EVENTS was served by me upon the parties to this proceeding via the NRCs Electronic Information Exchange system this 20th day of January, 2015.

/s/ Terry J. Lodge Terry J. Lodge (OH #0029271) 316 N. Michigan St., Ste. 520 Toledo, OH 43604-5627 (419) 255-7552 Fax (419) 255-7552 Tjlodge50@yahoo.com Counsel for Petitioners