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{{#Wiki_filter:Use of Wireless Technologies for Plant Modernization February 20, 2020
©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute
 
Overview
* Opportunities for implementation of wireless technologies
* Current and planned implementations
* Benefits and implementation considerations
* Next steps
                                                    ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 2
 
Opportunities For Wireless in Nuclear Cost savings by        Diverse &
Wireless sensor avoiding need to  redundant solution technology pull cables and    for some existing advancements conduit          plant systems Ideal in locations Improved data & where sensitive I&C  Allow for remote information      devices are      analysis of test availability protected from RF          results emissions
                                            ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 3
 
Exelon - Wireless Plant Applications Current and Near Term Applications:
* Camera monitoring of in-plant equipment in hard to access areas
* Fire Watch Patrol Cart for in-plant hourly Fire Watch patrol
* Data collection for plant efficiency and equipment status analysis
* Electronic work packages
                                                  ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 4
 
Exelon - Wireless Plant Applications contd Cyber Security Analysis & Regulatory Certainty:
* Critical Digital Asset (CDA) Screening documentation and analysis demonstrate temporary devices are not CDAs and installed CDAs are not affected by the use of wireless.
                                                ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 5
 
Exelon - Wireless Plant Applications Contd Future Applications
* Data Acquisition System (DAS) monitoring devices on/near safety related/important to safety (SR/ITS) for equipment health monitoring
* DAS monitoring devices on/near SR/ITS components for equipment performance data collection w/o local observation
* Use of DAS throughout the plant using Radio Frequencies (RF) through installed plant radio antenna system
* Dose rate monitoring, tracking and automated survey map updates                                  ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 6
 
PSEG - Wireless Power Plant Applications Nuclear Wireless Technology Use Cases
                                      ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 7
 
PSEG - Wireless Power Plant Applications Current  applications
* Dosimetry
* Voice communications
* Equipment monitoring (e.g. reliability analysis)
* Cameras
* Meteorological instruments
* Heavy equipment operation (e.g. crane controls)                              Future applications
* Mobile worker in the field with tablet PC
* Redundant/Diverse systems to improve existing plant equipment reliability
                                                                        ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 8
 
Benefits and Implementation Considerations Benefits
* Cost-effective alternative to wired applications
* Easy to install
* Can be designed with built-in redundancy Considerations
* Potential Electro Magnetic Induction/Radio Frequency Interference (EMI/RFI) impacts on I&C equipment
* Cyber security
* Network availability & data integrity
* Regulatory impacts
                                                              ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 9
 
National Lab Engagement and Focus The NEI Cyber Security Task Force and members of the industry have engaged the National Laboratories.
Laboratory Experience:
* Wireless technologies for nuclear applications
* Codes, standards, and regulatory guides
* Vulnerability assessments
* Security defense-in-depth analysis
* Practical experience and lessons learned
                                                  ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 10
 
Next Steps Industry
* NEI, industry, National Labs, and EPRI identify acceptable cyber security protections for current and future use cases
* Consider industry guidance to provide acceptable alternatives and limitations for use of wireless technologies on SR/ITS & Security CDAs
* Identify impacts to Cyber Security Plans (e.g., D.1.17 and Defensive Architecture)
Industry and NRC
* Address identified impacts to Cyber Security Plans
* Develop the criteria for demonstrating the use of wireless does not adversely impact the safety and security of the plant
* Conduct workshops to ensure consistent implementation strategies
                                                                  ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 11}}

Latest revision as of 23:08, 1 March 2020

2-20-20_Public_Meeting_NEI_Wireless_Presentation
ML20050H009
Person / Time
Site: Nuclear Energy Institute
Issue date: 02/20/2020
From:
Nuclear Energy Institute
To:
Office of Nuclear Security and Incident Response
Pantalo C
References
Download: ML20050H009 (11)


Text

Use of Wireless Technologies for Plant Modernization February 20, 2020

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute

Overview

  • Opportunities for implementation of wireless technologies
  • Current and planned implementations
  • Benefits and implementation considerations
  • Next steps

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 2

Opportunities For Wireless in Nuclear Cost savings by Diverse &

Wireless sensor avoiding need to redundant solution technology pull cables and for some existing advancements conduit plant systems Ideal in locations Improved data & where sensitive I&C Allow for remote information devices are analysis of test availability protected from RF results emissions

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 3

Exelon - Wireless Plant Applications Current and Near Term Applications:

  • Camera monitoring of in-plant equipment in hard to access areas
  • Data collection for plant efficiency and equipment status analysis
  • Electronic work packages

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 4

Exelon - Wireless Plant Applications contd Cyber Security Analysis & Regulatory Certainty:

  • Critical Digital Asset (CDA) Screening documentation and analysis demonstrate temporary devices are not CDAs and installed CDAs are not affected by the use of wireless.

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 5

Exelon - Wireless Plant Applications Contd Future Applications

  • Data Acquisition System (DAS) monitoring devices on/near safety related/important to safety (SR/ITS) for equipment health monitoring
  • DAS monitoring devices on/near SR/ITS components for equipment performance data collection w/o local observation
  • Use of DAS throughout the plant using Radio Frequencies (RF) through installed plant radio antenna system
  • Dose rate monitoring, tracking and automated survey map updates ©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 6

PSEG - Wireless Power Plant Applications Nuclear Wireless Technology Use Cases

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 7

PSEG - Wireless Power Plant Applications Current applications

  • Dosimetry
  • Voice communications
  • Equipment monitoring (e.g. reliability analysis)
  • Cameras
  • Meteorological instruments
  • Heavy equipment operation (e.g. crane controls) Future applications
  • Mobile worker in the field with tablet PC
  • Redundant/Diverse systems to improve existing plant equipment reliability

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 8

Benefits and Implementation Considerations Benefits

  • Cost-effective alternative to wired applications
  • Easy to install
  • Can be designed with built-in redundancy Considerations
  • Potential Electro Magnetic Induction/Radio Frequency Interference (EMI/RFI) impacts on I&C equipment
  • Network availability & data integrity
  • Regulatory impacts

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 9

National Lab Engagement and Focus The NEI Cyber Security Task Force and members of the industry have engaged the National Laboratories.

Laboratory Experience:

  • Wireless technologies for nuclear applications
  • Codes, standards, and regulatory guides
  • Vulnerability assessments
  • Security defense-in-depth analysis
  • Practical experience and lessons learned

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 10

Next Steps Industry

  • NEI, industry, National Labs, and EPRI identify acceptable cyber security protections for current and future use cases
  • Consider industry guidance to provide acceptable alternatives and limitations for use of wireless technologies on SR/ITS & Security CDAs
  • Identify impacts to Cyber Security Plans (e.g., D.1.17 and Defensive Architecture)

Industry and NRC

  • Develop the criteria for demonstrating the use of wireless does not adversely impact the safety and security of the plant
  • Conduct workshops to ensure consistent implementation strategies

©2020 Nuclear Energy Institute 11