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{{#Wiki_filter:UCS Perspectives on Part 53 Dr. Edwin Lyman Director of Nuclear Power Safety Climate and Energy Program Union of Concerned Scientists December 9, 2021
 
The foundation of a new reactor licensing rule
* A new reactor licensing rule should
  - Clearly provide for levels of safety, security, and environmental protection at least equivalent to the operating fleet
* Or preferably, greater levels than the operating fleet
  - Employ risk-informed provisions only to the extent that state-of-the-art risk assessment methods allow
  - Maintain robust defense-in-depth
  - Contain clear requirements for prototype testing
  - Reject provisions that could result in disproportionate outcomes to disadvantaged communities 2
 
The Part 53 process is broken
* Although UCS appreciates the greater degree of public engagement for developing the draft rule language required in SRM-SECY-0020-0032, the intermittent and iterative process has been ineffective and inefficient, and the high degree of industry involvement threatens to compromise the NRCs regulatory independence
  - What was intended to be a flexible, technology-inclusive approach has split into at least three alternatives
* Following the next release of draft language, UCS recommends that a more conventional notice-and-comment rulemaking process be restored, and that the NRC consider developing a regulatory basis document 3
 
Part 53 should be scrapped
* Development of a technology-inclusive rule does not require starting from scratch and rewriting the entire rule book
* The population of new reactor designs that the NRC is likely to receive for review for many years to come is not actually that diverse
    - Coolants: liquid-metal, gas, molten salt
    - Fuels: metal, TRISO, molten salt
    - Size: very small (<20 MWe), small (<300 MWe); medium (<600 MWe)
* The accident spectrum is fairly well-characterized for many of these design categories 4
 
Alternative approach
* Rather than a new part, NEIMAs intent can be addressed through a series of appendices to Parts 50/52
    - Coolant-specific, size-specific, and fuel specific
* Each appendix specifies
    - All regulations in Parts 50/52 that are not applicable
    - Design-specific alternatives for inapplicable requirements that correspond to a safety or security function (e.g. 50.46)
* Anticipated operational occurrences, design-basis accidents, and severe accidents determined through a structured process such as the Licensing Modernization Project, with sufficient error bars on frequency estimates to adequately encompass uncertainties
* Should be complemented with a requirement to conduct systematic searches for hazards, initiating events, and accident scenarios, as recommended by ACRS 5
 
Core safety approach
* To ensure a clear correspondence with requirements for the operating fleet, fundamental defense-in-depth principles for AOOs and DBAs should be maintained on an equivalent level, including safety-related SSCs and the single-failure criterion
* Severe accident risks should not be greater than those for the operating fleet (more on this later) 6
 
Alternative approach
* Part 53 will duplicateor may even be inconsistent withother rulemakings taking place for new reactors
  - Limited-scope security
  - EP requirements
* The risk-informed licensing approach should focus first and foremost on the design and construction of the plant
  - Requirements covered by other parts of the regulations should remain where they are
  - risk-informed voluntary alternatives should be available once designs have been approved (or demonstrated)
* A structured approach is needed for application of analytical safety margins to operating flexibilities to ensure sufficient layers of defense-in-depth are maintained 7
 
Severe accidents and the use of PRA
* There is no credible way to risk-inform licensing without a PRA other than providing defense-in-depth measures with unquantified risk benefitsi.e. a deterministic approach
* There is no plausible way to define a maximum credible accident without a PRA (maximum credible implies a likelihood threshold) 8
 
Role of Quantitative Health Objectives in licensing
* The QHOs are not adequate metrics for incorporation as regulatory requirements
  - Magnitude is too high
* latent fatality QHO corresponds to CDFs from 5x10-4 for an open containment (NUREG-1860) to 4x10-2 for a frequency-weighted average risk (2018 EPRI Margins study), compared to an average of 5x10-5 for the operating fleet
  - Do not include societal risks (land contamination)
  - Are based on population-averaged radiological risks that are insensitive to the disproportionate effects of ionizing radiation on disadvantaged populations such as Black people 9
 
Conclusion
* The 9-month extension in the Part 53 schedule should provide some room for the NRC to reconsider the direction of the rulemaking
* UCS recommends a more modest approach that preserves the foundational principles underlying the current rules, while providing for design-specific 10
 
Acronyms
* AOO: Anticipated Operational Occurrence
* CDF: Core Damage Frequency
* DBA: Design-Basis Accident
* PRA: Probabilistic Risk Assessment
* TRISO: Tristructural Isotropic
* QHOs: Quantitative Health Objectives
* SSCs: Structures, Systems, and Components
* UCS: Union of Concerned Scientists 11}}

Latest revision as of 11:10, 18 January 2022

M211209: Slides - Briefing on 10 CFR Part 53 Licensing and Regulation of Advanced Nuclear Reactors - E Lyman Slides
ML21337A138
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Issue date: 12/03/2021
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Download: ML21337A138 (11)


Text

UCS Perspectives on Part 53 Dr. Edwin Lyman Director of Nuclear Power Safety Climate and Energy Program Union of Concerned Scientists December 9, 2021

The foundation of a new reactor licensing rule

  • A new reactor licensing rule should

- Clearly provide for levels of safety, security, and environmental protection at least equivalent to the operating fleet

  • Or preferably, greater levels than the operating fleet

- Employ risk-informed provisions only to the extent that state-of-the-art risk assessment methods allow

- Maintain robust defense-in-depth

- Contain clear requirements for prototype testing

- Reject provisions that could result in disproportionate outcomes to disadvantaged communities 2

The Part 53 process is broken

  • Although UCS appreciates the greater degree of public engagement for developing the draft rule language required in SRM-SECY-0020-0032, the intermittent and iterative process has been ineffective and inefficient, and the high degree of industry involvement threatens to compromise the NRCs regulatory independence

- What was intended to be a flexible, technology-inclusive approach has split into at least three alternatives

  • Following the next release of draft language, UCS recommends that a more conventional notice-and-comment rulemaking process be restored, and that the NRC consider developing a regulatory basis document 3

Part 53 should be scrapped

  • Development of a technology-inclusive rule does not require starting from scratch and rewriting the entire rule book
  • The population of new reactor designs that the NRC is likely to receive for review for many years to come is not actually that diverse

- Coolants: liquid-metal, gas, molten salt

- Fuels: metal, TRISO, molten salt

- Size: very small (<20 MWe), small (<300 MWe); medium (<600 MWe)

  • The accident spectrum is fairly well-characterized for many of these design categories 4

Alternative approach

  • Rather than a new part, NEIMAs intent can be addressed through a series of appendices to Parts 50/52

- Coolant-specific, size-specific, and fuel specific

  • Each appendix specifies

- All regulations in Parts 50/52 that are not applicable

- Design-specific alternatives for inapplicable requirements that correspond to a safety or security function (e.g. 50.46)

  • Anticipated operational occurrences, design-basis accidents, and severe accidents determined through a structured process such as the Licensing Modernization Project, with sufficient error bars on frequency estimates to adequately encompass uncertainties
  • Should be complemented with a requirement to conduct systematic searches for hazards, initiating events, and accident scenarios, as recommended by ACRS 5

Core safety approach

  • To ensure a clear correspondence with requirements for the operating fleet, fundamental defense-in-depth principles for AOOs and DBAs should be maintained on an equivalent level, including safety-related SSCs and the single-failure criterion
  • Severe accident risks should not be greater than those for the operating fleet (more on this later) 6

Alternative approach

  • Part 53 will duplicateor may even be inconsistent withother rulemakings taking place for new reactors

- Limited-scope security

- EP requirements

  • The risk-informed licensing approach should focus first and foremost on the design and construction of the plant

- Requirements covered by other parts of the regulations should remain where they are

- risk-informed voluntary alternatives should be available once designs have been approved (or demonstrated)

  • A structured approach is needed for application of analytical safety margins to operating flexibilities to ensure sufficient layers of defense-in-depth are maintained 7

Severe accidents and the use of PRA

  • There is no credible way to risk-inform licensing without a PRA other than providing defense-in-depth measures with unquantified risk benefitsi.e. a deterministic approach
  • There is no plausible way to define a maximum credible accident without a PRA (maximum credible implies a likelihood threshold) 8

Role of Quantitative Health Objectives in licensing

  • The QHOs are not adequate metrics for incorporation as regulatory requirements

- Magnitude is too high

- Do not include societal risks (land contamination)

- Are based on population-averaged radiological risks that are insensitive to the disproportionate effects of ionizing radiation on disadvantaged populations such as Black people 9

Conclusion

  • The 9-month extension in the Part 53 schedule should provide some room for the NRC to reconsider the direction of the rulemaking
  • UCS recommends a more modest approach that preserves the foundational principles underlying the current rules, while providing for design-specific 10

Acronyms

  • CDF: Core Damage Frequency
  • DBA: Design-Basis Accident
  • QHOs: Quantitative Health Objectives
  • SSCs: Structures, Systems, and Components