ASLBP 24-986-01-LA-BD01, NRC Staff Answer to Intervention Petition from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service in Palisades Restart Amendments Proceeding: Difference between revisions

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{{#Wiki_filter:November 4, 2024
{{#Wiki_filter:November 4, 2024 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of HOLTEC DECOMMISSIONING INTERNATIONAL, LLC, AND HOLTEC PALISADES, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant)
Docket No. --LA-NRC STAFF ANSWER TO INTERVENTION PETITION FROM BEYOND NUCLEAR, DONT WASTE MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN SAFE ENERGY FUTURE, THREE MILE ISLAND ALERT, AND NUCLEAR ENERGY INFORMATION SERVICE IN PALISADES RESTART AMENDMENTS PROCEEDING INTRODUCTION Pursuant to C.F.R. §.(i)() and the licensing boards (Boards) order dated October,, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff (Staff) herein answers an intervention petition (Petition) from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service (collectively, Petitioners) filed on October,, challenging license amendment requests associated with the potential restart of Palisades Nuclear Plant (Palisades).1 As explained below, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear 1 The Petition was originally filed on October,, on the hearing docket for the license transfer request associated with the potential restart of Palisades. On October,, the Office of the Secretary informed the participants that it had determined that the filing related to a proceeding separate from the license transfer request and that the submitter had been requested to refile the Petition in that separate proceeding. The Petition was filed on the hearing docket for this proceeding on October,.


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention meet the requirements for contention admissibility as a contention of omission.
 
However, as also explained below, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing, and the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible. In particular, the remainder of the proposed contentions do not provide material, adequately supported challenges that raise a genuine dispute with the license amendment requests. Also, many of the Petitioners arguments are outside the scope of the proceeding and challenge NRC regulations and processes. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.
BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD
BACKGROUND I.
 
Palisades Licensing History Just Prior to Restart Efforts Palisades was licensed for reactor operation until March,, under its renewed facility operating license,2 but by letter dated June,, the licensee at the time, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Entergy), submitted certifications under C.F.R. §.(a)() that operation had permanently ceased and that fuel had been permanently removed from the reactor.3 In accordance with C.F.R. §.(a)(), the docketing of these certifications means that the CFR part license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel into the reactor vessel. Also, the NRC issued amendments changing the operating license, which includes technical specifications (TS), to reflect the authorities and 2 Letter from Juan Ayala, NRC, to Paul A. Harden, Nuclear Management Company, LLC, Issuance of Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-for Palisades Nuclear Plant (Jan., ) (ADAMS Accession No. ML).
In the Matter of
3 Letter from Darrell W. Corbin, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Certifications of Permanent Cessation of Power Operations and Permanent Removal of Fuel from the Reactor Vessel (June,  
 
) (MLA) (Palisades.(a)() Certifications).  
HOLTEC DECOMMISSIONING Docket No. - -LA-INTERNATIONAL, LLC, AND HOLTEC PALISADES, LLC
 
(Palisades Nuclear Plant)
 
NRC STAFF ANSWER TO INTERVENTION PETITION FROM BEYOND NUCLEAR, DONT WASTE MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN SAFE ENERGY FUTURE, THREE MILE ISLAND ALERT, AND NUCLEAR ENERGY INFORMATION SERVICE IN PALISADES RESTART AMENDMENTS PROCEEDING
 
INTRODUCTION
 
Pursuant to C.F.R. §. (i)() and the licensing boards (Boards) order dated
 
October,, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff (Staff) herein answers
 
an intervention petition (Petition) from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe
 
Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service (collectively,
 
Petitioners) filed on October,, challenging license amendment requests associated with
 
the potential restart of Palisades Nuclear Plant (Palisades). 1 As explained below, the Petition
 
should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear
 
1 The Petition was originally filed on October,, on the hearing docket for the license transfer request associated with the potential restart of Palisades. On October,, the Office of the Secretary informed the participants that it had determined that the filing related to a proceeding separate from the license transfer request and that the submitter had been requested to refile the Petition in that separate proceeding. The Petition was filed on the hearing docket for this proceeding on October,.
 
Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention meet the
 
requirements for contention admissibility as a contention of omission.
 
However, as also explained below, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and
 
Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing, and the remainder of the proposed
 
contentions are inadmissible. In particular, the remainder of the proposed contentions do not
 
provide material, adequately supported challenges that raise a genuine dispute with the license
 
amendment requests. Also, many of the Petiti oners arguments are outside the scope of the
 
proceeding and challenge NRC regulations and proc esses. Therefore, the Petition should only
 
be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without
 
merit.
 
BACKGROUND
 
I. Palisades Licensing History Just Prior to Restart Efforts
 
Palisades was licensed for reactor operation until March,, under its renewed
 
facility operating license, 2 but by letter dated June,, the licensee at the time, Entergy
 
Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Entergy), submitted certifications under C.F.R. §. (a)() that
 
operation had permanently ceased and that fuel had been permanently removed from the
 
reactor.3 In accordance with C.F.R. §. (a)( ), the docketing of these certifications means
 
that the CFR part license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement
 
or retention of fuel into the reactor vessel. Also, the NRC issued amendments changing the
 
operating license, which includes technical specifications (TS), to reflect the authorities and
 
2 Letter from Juan Ayala, NRC, to Paul A. Harden, Nuclear Management Company, LLC, Issuance of Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-for Palisades Nuclear Plant (Jan., ) (ADAMS Accession No. ML ).
 
3 Letter from Darrell W. Corbin, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Certifications of Permanent Cessation of Power Operations and Permanent Removal of Fuel from the Reactor Vessel (June,
) (ML A ) (Palisades. (a)() Certifications).
 
requirements for a reactor in decommissioning. 4 Among other things, the amendments removed
 
language from the license regarding the authority to operate the reactor and removed the TS for
 
an operating reactor that are not relevant to decommissioning. 5 However, even after these
 
amendments became effective during the decommissioning period, the license is still referred to
 
as a renewed facility operating license in the license itself, and it continues to be a Part
 
operating license.6
 
About months before submitting the Palisades. (a)() Certifications, Entergy
 
submitted a license transfer request on behalf of itself, Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC, Holtec
 
International, and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC (HDI), to (among other things)
 
make Holtec Palisades, LLC (Holtec Palisades) the licensed owner of Palisades and to transfer
 
licensed operational authority for Palisades from Entergy to HDI. 7 Four hearing requests were
 
filed challenging this transfer request. 8 While these hearing requests were pending, the Staff
 
issued an order ( Transfer Order) approving the requested transfer (Entergy-Holtec
 
4 See, e.g., Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President for Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant -Issuance of Amendment Regarding Administrative Controls for Permanently Defueled Condition (June, ) (MLA) (Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment); Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President for Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Issuance of Amendment No.
Re: Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications (May, ) (ML A) (Defueled TS Amendment).


requirements for a reactor in decommissioning.4 Among other things, the amendments removed language from the license regarding the authority to operate the reactor and removed the TS for an operating reactor that are not relevant to decommissioning.5 However, even after these amendments became effective during the decommissioning period, the license is still referred to as a renewed facility operating license in the license itself, and it continues to be a Part operating license.6 About months before submitting the Palisades.(a)() Certifications, Entergy submitted a license transfer request on behalf of itself, Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC, Holtec International, and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC (HDI), to (among other things) make Holtec Palisades, LLC (Holtec Palisades) the licensed owner of Palisades and to transfer licensed operational authority for Palisades from Entergy to HDI.7 Four hearing requests were filed challenging this transfer request.8 While these hearing requests were pending, the Staff issued an order ( Transfer Order) approving the requested transfer (Entergy-Holtec 4 See, e.g., Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President for Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant -Issuance of Amendment Regarding Administrative Controls for Permanently Defueled Condition (June, ) (MLA) (Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment); Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President for Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Issuance of Amendment No.
Re: Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications (May, ) (MLA) (Defueled TS Amendment).
5 See, e.g., Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure at,,,,, - (discussion of changes to License Conditions.B.() and.C.() in Sections.. and.. of the Staff safety evaluation and discussion of changes to the TS in Section. of the Staff safety evaluation); Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment, Enclosure (discussion of TS changes in Section of the Staff safety evaluation).
5 See, e.g., Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure at,,,,, - (discussion of changes to License Conditions.B.() and.C.() in Sections.. and.. of the Staff safety evaluation and discussion of changes to the TS in Section. of the Staff safety evaluation); Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment, Enclosure (discussion of TS changes in Section of the Staff safety evaluation).
6 See, e.g., Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure (license change pages repeatedly use the term Renewed Facility Operating License or similar terms such as renewed operating license, Facility Operating License, or Operating License).
6 See, e.g., Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure (license change pages repeatedly use the term Renewed Facility Operating License or similar terms such as renewed operating license, Facility Operating License, or Operating License).
7 Letter from A. Christopher Bakken III, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Application for Order Consenting to Transfers of Control of Licenses and Approving Conforming License Amendments, at (Dec., ) (MLA).
8 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant & Big Rock Point Site), CLI--, NRC
().


7 Letter from A. Christopher Bakken III, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Application for Order Consenting to Transfers of Control of Licenses and Approving Conforming License Amendments, at (Dec., ) (ML A ).
Transfer).9 But the proposed transaction was subject to Palisades entering decommissioning.10 Therefore, the transfer transaction did not close until June, after Entergy submitted both §.(a)() certificationson which date the Staff issued a conforming administrative amendment to the license (Entergy-Holtec Transfer Conforming Amendment).11 As a result of the Entergy-Holtec Transfer, the license holders for Palisades are HDI and Holtec Palisades. As stated in the Transfer Order, the Entergy-Holtec Transfer made Holtec Palisades the licensed owner and HDI the licensed operator of Palisades and Big Rock Point.12 HDI became the licensed operator because the NRC approve[d] the transfer of operating authority from the currently licensed operator, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.
 
(ENOI), to [HDI].13 This operating authority was the authority to conduct licensed activities at Big Rock Point and Palisades.14 After the transfer, HDI assume[d] responsibility for compliance with NRC regulations and the current licensing bases, including regulatory commitments that 9 In the Matter of Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC, Holtec International and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, Big Rock Point Plant and Palisades Nuclear Plant; Transfer of Licenses; Order, Fed. Reg., (Dec., ) ( Transfer Order). See also Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to A. Christopher Bakken, III, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant and Big Rock Point Plant - Order Approving Transfer of Licenses and Draft Conforming Administrative License Amendments (EPID L--LLM-) (Dec., ) (MLA (package)).
8 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant & Big Rock Point Site), CLI- -, NRC
10 Safety Evaluation by the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation Related to the Request for Transfer of Control of Facility Operating License No. DPR-, Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-, and the General Licenses for the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installations from Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC to Holtec International and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC Big Rock Point Plant and Palisades Nuclear Plant, at (MLA) (stating, [T]he proposed transfer transaction is subject to Palisades also having permanently ceased operations.
( ).
Accordingly, HDI (the proposed licensed operator for decommissioning) would not be authorized under the Palisades license to operate or load fuel in the Palisade[s] reactor pursuant to CFR.(a)().)
 
11 Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Pierre Paul Oneid, Holtec International, and Kelly D. Trice, HDI, Palisades Nuclear Plant and Big Rock Point Plant - Issuance of Amendment Nos. and Re: Order Approving Transfer of Licenses and Conforming Administrative License Amendments (EPIDS L--
Transfer).9 But the proposed transaction was subject to Palisades entering decommissioning. 10
LLM-AND L--LLM-) (June, ) (MLA (package)) (Entergy-Holtec Transfer Conforming Amendment).
 
Therefore, the transfer transaction did not close until June, after Entergy submitted
 
both §. (a)() certificationson which date the Staff issued a conforming administrative
 
amendment to the license (Entergy-Holtec Transfer Conforming Amendment). 11
 
As a result of the Entergy-Holtec Transfer, the license holders for Palisades are HDI and
 
Holtec Palisades. As stated in the Transfer Order, the Entergy-Holtec Transfer made
 
Holtec Palisades the licensed owner and HDI the licensed operator of Palisades and Big Rock
 
Point.12 HDI became the licensed operator because the NRC approve[d] the transfer of
 
operating authority from the currently licensed operator, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.
 
(ENOI), to [HDI].13 This operating authority was the authority to conduct licensed activities at
 
Big Rock Point and Palisades. 14 After the transfer, HDI assume[d] responsibility for compliance
 
with NRC regulations and the current licensing bases, including regulatory commitments that
 
9 In the Matter of Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC, Holtec International and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, Big Rock Point Plant and Palisades Nuclear Plant; Transfer of Licenses; Order, Fed. Reg., (Dec., ) ( Transfer Order). See also Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to A. Christopher Bakken, III, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant and Big Rock Point Plant - Order Approving Transfer of Licenses and Draft Conforming Administrative License Amendments (EPID L- -LLM- ) (Dec., ) (ML A (package)).
 
10 Safety Evaluation by the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation Related to the Request for Transfer of Control of Facility Operating License No. DPR-, Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-, and the General Licenses for the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installations from Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC to Holtec International and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC Big Rock Point Plant and Palisades Nuclear Plant, at (ML A) (stating, [T]he proposed transfer transaction is subject to Palisades also having permanently ceased operations.
Accordingly, HDI (the proposed licensed operator for decommissioning) would not be authorized under the Palisades license to operate or load fuel in the Palisade[s] reactor pursuant to CFR. (a)( ).)
 
11 Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Pierre Paul Oneid, Holtec International, and Kelly D. Trice, HDI, Palisades Nuclear Plant and Big Rock Point Plant - Issuance of Amendment Nos. and Re: Order Approving Transfer of Licenses and Conforming Administrative License Amendments (EPIDS L- -
LLM-AND L- -LLM- ) (June, ) (ML A (package)) (Entergy-Holtec Transfer Conforming Amendment).
 
12 Transfer Order, Fed. Reg. at,. Control of the Big Rock Point licenses is not affected by the transfer request related to potential restart of Palisades.
12 Transfer Order, Fed. Reg. at,. Control of the Big Rock Point licenses is not affected by the transfer request related to potential restart of Palisades.
13 Id. at,.
13 Id. at,.
14 Id. at,.


14 Id. at,.
exist at the consummation of the proposed transfer transaction, and would implement any changes under applicable regulatory requirements and practices.15 Because the Entergy-Holtec Transfer was subject to hearing requests, the Transfer Order included a condition stating that approval of the transfer is subject to the Commissions authority to rescind, modify, or condition the approved transfer based on the outcome of any post-effectiveness hearing on the license transfer application.16 On July,, the Commission denied three hearing requests on the transfer application but granted a hearing request from the Michigan Attorney General and admit[ted] limited issues pertaining to the Attorney General's challenge to the proposed transferees' financial qualifications.17 The Commission directed the appointment of a Presiding Officer to take all necessary actions to compile, complete, and certify the hearing record, including presiding over any oral hearing.18 The Presiding Officer held an oral hearing on February and,, closed the evidentiary hearing record on February,, and certified the hearing record to the Commission on March,.19 The Commission has not yet issued a decision on those hearing issues.
 
II.
exist at the consummation of the proposed transfer transaction, and would implement any
Licensing and Regulatory Requests Related to Potential Restart of Palisades In, HDI engaged with the Staff regarding the potential restart of reactor operation at Palisades. From September to May, the NRC received the following licensing and regulatory requests related to potential restart of Palisades:
 
A September,, request for an exemption (Exemption Request) from the CFR.(a)() restriction that prohibits reactor power operations and retention 15 Id.
changes under applicable regulatory requirements and practices. 15
 
Because the Entergy-Holtec Transfer was subject to hearing requests, the Transfer
 
Order included a condition stating that approval of the transfer is subject to the Commissions
 
authority to rescind, modify, or condition the approved transfer based on the outcome of any
 
post-effectiveness hearing on the license transfer application. 16 On July,, the
 
Commission denied three hearing requests on the transfer application but granted a hearing
 
request from the Michigan Attorney General and admit[ted] limited issues pertaining to the
 
Attorney General's challenge to the pr oposed transferees' financial qualifications. 17 The
 
Commission directed the appointment of a Presiding Officer to take all necessary actions to
 
compile, complete, and certify the hearing record, including presiding over any oral hearing. 18
 
The Presiding Officer held an oral hearing on February and,, closed the evidentiary
 
hearing record on February,, and certified the hearing record to the Commission on
 
March,.19 The Commission has not yet issued a decision on those hearing issues.
 
II. Licensing and Regulatory Requests Related to Potential Restart of Palisades
 
In, HDI engaged with the Staff regarding the potential restart of reactor operation at
 
Palisades. From September to May, the NRC received the following licensing and
 
regulatory requests related to potential restart of Palisades:
 
A September,, request for an exemption (Exemption Request) from the CFR. (a)( ) restriction that prohibits reactor power operations and retention
 
15 Id.
 
16 Transfer Order, Fed. Reg. at,.
16 Transfer Order, Fed. Reg. at,.
 
17 Palisades, CLI--, NRC at.
17 Palisades, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
18 Id. at.
18 Id. at.
19 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant & Big Rock Point Site), LBP--,
NRC ().


19 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant & Big Rock Point Site), LBP- -,
of fuel in the reactor vessel by allowing for a one-time rescission of the docketed CFR.(a)() certifications.20 The December,, Restart Transfer Request, which seeks NRC consent to, and a conforming amendment for, a transfer of operating authority from HDI to Palisades Energy, LLC (OPCO) under Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-for Palisades and the general license for the Palisades Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI).21 A December,, license amendment request (Primary Amendment Request) in support of resuming power operations that largely seeks to undo the changes made by the previously issued Defueled TS Amendment with some proposed differences from the previous operating reactor TS.22 A February,, license amendment request (Administrative Controls Amendment Request) in support of resuming power operations that largely seeks to undo the changes made by the previously issued Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment with some proposed differences from the previous operating reactor TS.23 A May,, license amendment request (Emergency Plan Amendment Request) to revise the Palisades site emergency plan to support resuming power operations.24 A May,, license amendment request (MSLB Amendment Request) to revise the Palisades main steam line break analysis to support the Palisades restart project.25 20 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Request for Exemption from Certain Termination of License Requirements of CFR., at (Sept., )
NRC ( ).
(MLA) (Exemption Request).
 
21 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International and HDI, to NRC Document Control Desk, Application for Order Consenting to Transfer of Control of License and Approving Conforming License Amendments, at (Dec., ) (MLA) (Restart Transfer Request).
of fuel in the reactor vessel by allowing for a one-time rescission of the docketed CFR. (a)() certifications.20
22 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise Renewed Facility Operating License and Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications to Support Resumption of Power Operations (Dec., ) (MLA) (Primary Amendment Request).
 
23 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise Selected Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications Administrative Controls to Support Resumption of Power Operations (Feb., ) (MLA) (Administrative Controls Amendment Request).
The December,, Restart Transfer Request, which seeks NRC consent to, and a conforming amendment for, a transfer of operating authority from HDI to Palisades Energy, LLC (OPCO) under Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-for Palisades and the general license for the Palisades Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI).21
24 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise the Palisades Nuclear Plant Site Emergency Plan to Support Resumption of Power Operations (May, ) (MLC) (Emergency Plan Amendment Request).
 
25 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Approve the Biasi Critical Heat Flux (CHF) Correlation for Use with the Palisades  
A December,, license amendment request (Pri mary Amendment Request) in support of resuming power operations that largely seeks to undo the changes made by the previously issued Defueled TS Amendment with some proposed differences from the previous operating reactor TS. 22
 
A February,, license amendment request (Administrative Controls Amendment Request) in support of resuming power operations that largely seeks to undo the changes made by the previously issued Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment with some proposed differences from the previous operating reactor TS.23
 
A May,, license amendment request (Emergency Plan Amendment Request) to revise the Palisades site emergency plan to support resuming power operations. 24
 
A May,, license amendment request (MSLB Amendment Request) to revise the Palisades main steam line break analysis to support the Palisades restart project.25
 
20 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Request for Exemption from Certain Termination of License Requirements of CFR., at (Sept., )
(ML A) (Exemption Request).
 
21 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International and HDI, to NRC Document Control Desk, Application for Order Consenting to Transfer of Control of License and Approving Conforming License Amendments, at (Dec., ) (ML A) (Restart Transfer Request).
 
22 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise Renewed Facility Operating License and Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications to Support Resumption of Power Operations (Dec., ) (ML A) (Primary Amendment Request).
 
23 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise Selected Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications Administrative Controls to Support Resumption of Power Operations (Feb., ) (ML A ) (Administrative Controls Amendment Request).
 
24 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise the Palisades Nuclear Plant Site Emergency Plan to Support Resumption of Power Operations (May, ) (ML C ) (Emergency Plan Amendment Request).
 
25 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Approve the Biasi Critical Heat Flux (CHF) Correlation for Use with the Palisades
 
The Staff has accepted all of these requests for review. The review is underway, and no
 
decisions have been made on any of the requests.
 
The four restart-related amendment requests are parts of the licensing and regulatory
 
requests that would be necessary to restart reactor operation at Palisades. All of the requests
 
listed in the previous paragraph would need to be approved for restart to be authorized. Also,
 
the Emergency Plan Amendment Request includes the following proposal:
 
As discussed in Reference, HDI is proposing to submit to the NRC, approximately four weeks in advance of the date that [Palisades] plans to transition to a power operations plant (transition date), a readiness letter that will state the planned transition date and HDIs satisfaction that the implementation conditions for license transfer, CFR. (a)( ) exemption, and license amendments are met. Additionally, on the designated transition date, HDI will submit a notification letter to docket that [Palisades] has transitioned from a facility in decommissioning to a power operations plant. 26
 
Like the restart-related requests as a whole, this proposal is subject to a detailed Staff technical
 
review.
 
III. Petitioners Hearing Request on Amendments Related to Restart of Palisades
 
On August,, the NRC published a Federal Register notice of opportunity to
 
request a hearing regarding the Transfer Request (Transfer Notice) 27 and a Federal Register
 
notice of opportunity to request a hearing regarding the four license amendment requests
 
(Amendments Notice).28 The Transfer Notice established an August,, deadline for
 
Main Steam Line Break (MSLB) Analysis, at (May, ) (ML A) (MSLB Amendment Request).


The Staff has accepted all of these requests for review. The review is underway, and no decisions have been made on any of the requests.
The four restart-related amendment requests are parts of the licensing and regulatory requests that would be necessary to restart reactor operation at Palisades. All of the requests listed in the previous paragraph would need to be approved for restart to be authorized. Also, the Emergency Plan Amendment Request includes the following proposal:
As discussed in Reference, HDI is proposing to submit to the NRC, approximately four weeks in advance of the date that [Palisades] plans to transition to a power operations plant (transition date), a readiness letter that will state the planned transition date and HDIs satisfaction that the implementation conditions for license transfer, CFR.(a)() exemption, and license amendments are met. Additionally, on the designated transition date, HDI will submit a notification letter to docket that [Palisades] has transitioned from a facility in decommissioning to a power operations plant.26 Like the restart-related requests as a whole, this proposal is subject to a detailed Staff technical review.
III.
Petitioners Hearing Request on Amendments Related to Restart of Palisades On August,, the NRC published a Federal Register notice of opportunity to request a hearing regarding the Transfer Request (Transfer Notice)27 and a Federal Register notice of opportunity to request a hearing regarding the four license amendment requests (Amendments Notice).28 The Transfer Notice established an August,, deadline for Main Steam Line Break (MSLB) Analysis, at (May, ) (MLA) (MSLB Amendment Request).
26 Emergency Plan Amendment Request at.
26 Emergency Plan Amendment Request at.
27 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, Holtec Palisades, LLC, and Palisades Energy, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant and the Palisades Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation; Consideration of Approval of Transfer of Licenses and Conforming Amendment, Fed. Reg., (Aug., )
27 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, Holtec Palisades, LLC, and Palisades Energy, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant and the Palisades Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation; Consideration of Approval of Transfer of Licenses and Conforming Amendment, Fed. Reg., (Aug., )
(Transfer Notice).
(Transfer Notice).
28 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, and Holtec Palisades, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant; Applications for Amendments to Renewed Facility Operating License Involving Proposed No Significant Hazards Considerations and Order Imposing Procedures for Access to Sensitive Unclassified Non-Safeguards Information and Safeguards Information, Fed. Reg., (Aug., ) (Amendments Notice).


28 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, and Holtec Palisades, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant; Applications for Amendments to Renewed Facility Operating License Involving Proposed No Significant Hazards Considerations and Order Imposing Procedures for Access to Sensitive Unclassified Non-Safeguards Information and Safeguards Information, Fed. Reg., (Aug., ) (Amendments Notice).
hearing requests, while the Amendments Notice established an October,, deadline for hearing requests.29 Three of the Petitioners (Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future) filed a hearing request in response to the Transfer Notice on August,
. The Petitioners filed the instant Petition in response to the Amendments Notice on October,.30 By order dated October,, the Board established a November,
, deadline for answers to the Petition.31 DISCUSSION As discussed below, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention meet the requirements for contention admissibility as a contention of omission. However, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing because their standing arguments focus on the Exemption Request, not the restart-related amendment requests that are the subject of this proceeding. Also, the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible because they offer immaterial, out of scope, and inadequately supported challenges that do not raise a genuine dispute with the licensee. Moreover, many of the proposed contentions arguments challenge NRC regulations and processes, which is prohibited in this adjudicatory proceeding absent a sufficient petition for waiver or exception under C.F.R. §. that the Petitioners have not submitted. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.
29 Transfer Notice, Fed. Reg. at,; Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at,.
30 Petition to Intervene and Request for Adjudicatory Hearing by Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service (Oct.,
) (Petition). As explained above, the Petition was originally filed by the October,, deadline but on the wrong hearing docket. Also, the Staff notes that co-counsel for the Petitioners have not yet filed notices of appearance required by C.F.R. §.(b).
31 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant), LBP Memorandum and Order (Amending Initial Prehearing Order) (Oct. 17, 2024) (unpublished) (ML24291A105).  


hearing requests, while the Amendments Notice established an October,, deadline for
I.
 
Three of the Petitioners Have Not Demonstrated Standing While Two of the Petitioners Have Demonstrated Standing A.
hearing requests.29 Three of the Petitioners (Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan
Standing Requirements Section a. of the Atomic Energy Act, as amended (AEA), requires the Commission to grant a hearing upon the request of any person whose interest may be affected by the proceeding, and shall admit any such person as a party to such proceeding.32 A request for a hearing or petition for leave to intervene in a proceeding must demonstrate standing in accordance with the NRCs requirements at C.F.R. §.(d). Pursuant to  
 
§.(d)(), the request for a hearing or petition for leave to intervene must state:
Safe Energy Future) filed a hearing request in response to the Transfer Notice on August,
(i) The name, address and telephone number of the petitioner; (ii) The nature of the petitioners right under the AEA to be made a party to the proceeding; (iii) The nature and extent of the petitioners property, financial or other interest in the proceeding; and (iv) The possible effect of any decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding on the petitioners interest.33 The burden of demonstrating standing is on the petitioner.34 In addition, for the purposes of determining standing the petition will be construed in the petitioners favor35 and its material allegations will be accepted as true.36 32 U.S.C. § (a)()(A).
 
33 C.F.R. §.(d)().
. The Petitioners filed the instant Petition in response to the Amendments Notice on
34 Commonwealth Edison Co. (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units and ), CLI--, NRC,
 
().
October,.30 By order dated October,, the Board established a November,
35 Florida Power & Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC  
 
, ().
, deadline for answers to the Petition. 31
36 Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech Research Reactor, Atlanta, Georgia), LBP--, NRC  
 
, () (citing Warth v. Seldin, U.S., (), and Kelley v. Selin, F.d, -
DISCUSSION
(th Cir. )), vacated in part and remanded on other grounds, CLI--, NRC, and aff'd in part, CLI--, NRC (); see also U.S. Army Installation Command (Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii, and Pohakuloa Training Area, Island of Hawaii, Hawaii), CLI--, NRC, n. ()
 
(citing Kelley, F.d at -).  
As discussed below, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the
 
Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, establish standing,
 
and portions of proposed Contention meet the requirements for contention admissibility as a
 
contention of omission. However, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe
 
Energy Future do not establish standing because their standing arguments focus on the
 
Exemption Request, not the restart-related amendment requests that are the subject of this
 
proceeding. Also, the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible because they
 
offer immaterial, out of scope, and inadequately supported challenges that do not raise a
 
genuine dispute with the licensee. Moreover, many of the proposed contentions arguments
 
challenge NRC regulations and processes, which is prohibited in this adjudicatory proceeding
 
absent a sufficient petition for waiver or exception under C.F.R. §. that the Petitioners
 
have not submitted. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the
 
Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.
 
29 Transfer Notice, Fed. Reg. at, ; Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at,.
 
30 Petition to Intervene and Request for Adjudicatory Hearing by Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service (Oct.,
) (Petition). As explained above, the Petition was originally filed by the October,, deadline but on the wrong hearing docket. Also, the Staff notes that co-counsel for the Petitioners have not yet filed notices of appearance required by C.F.R. §.(b).
 
31 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant), LBP Memorandum and Order (Amending Initial Prehearing Order) (Oct. 17, 2024) (unpublished) (ML24291A105).
 
I. Three of the Petitioners Have Not Demonstrated Standing While Two of the Petitioners Have Demonstrated Standing
 
A. Standing Requirements
 
Section a. of the Atomic Energy Act, as amended (AEA), requires the Commission to
 
grant a hearing upon the request of any person whose interest may be affected by the
 
proceeding, and shall admit any such person as a party to such proceeding. 32 A request for a
 
hearing or petition for leave to intervene in a proceeding must demonstrate standing in
 
accordance with the NRCs requirements at C.F.R. §. (d). Pursuant to
 
§. (d)(), the request for a hearing or petition for leave to intervene must state:
 
(i) The name, address and telephone number of the petitioner;
 
(ii) The nature of the petitioner s right under the AEA to be made a party to the proceeding;
 
(iii) The nature and extent of the petitioner s property, financial or other interest in the proceeding; and
 
(iv) The possible effect of any decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding on the petitioner s interest.33
 
The burden of demonstrating standing is on the petitioner. 34 In addition, for the purposes of
 
determining standing the petition will be construed in the petitioner s favor 35 and its material
 
allegations will be accepted as true. 36
 
32 U.S.C. § (a)()(A).
 
33 C.F.R. §. (d)().
 
34 Commonwealth Edison Co. (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units and ), CLI- -, NRC,
( ).
 
35 Florida Power & Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC
, ( ).
 
36 Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech Research Reactor, Atlanta, Georgia), LBP- -, NRC
, ( ) (citing Warth v. Seldin, U.S., ( ), and Kelley v. Selin, F. d, -
( th Cir. )), vacated in part and remanded on other grounds, CLI- -, NRC, and aff'd in part, CLI- -, NRC ( ); see also U.S. Army Installation Command (Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii, and Pohakuloa Training Area, Island of Hawaii, Hawaii), CLI--, NRC, n. ( )
(citing Kelley, F. d at - ).
 
The Commission uses contemporaneous judici al concepts of standing when evaluating
 
whether a petitioner has established standing. 37 Accordingly, a petitioner must allege an injury in
 
fact that is fairly traceable to the challenged NRC action and that is likely to be redressed by a
 
decision favorable to the petitioner. 38 In addition, the alleged injury must arguably fall within the
 
zone of interests protected by the AEA. 39
 
While the Commission generally requires the elements of standing be pled with
 
specificity, it has also found standing in certain cases under a proximity presumption. In
 
proceedings for construction permits, operating licenses, or significant amendments thereto
 
such as the expansion of the capacity of a spent fuel pool, 40 the Commission permits a
 
petitioner who lives within, or otherwise has frequent contacts with, the zone of possible harm
 
from the nuclear reactor to establish standing without needing to make an individualized
 
showing of injury, causation, and redressability. 41 The determination of how proximate a
 
petitioner must be to a source of radioactivity depends on the danger posed by the source at
 
issue.42 In practice, the Commission has applied the proximity presumption in construction
 
permit, operating license, and license renewal proceedings for power reactors to find standing
 
where a petitioner resides within approximately miles of the facility.43 The Commission has
 
also found standing under the proximity presumption where the petitioner has a property interest
 
37 See Turkey Point, CLI--, NRC at ; see also Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Project, LLC (Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit ), CLI- -, NRC, ( ).
 
38 Tu r k e y P o i n t, CLI--, NRC at.


The Commission uses contemporaneous judicial concepts of standing when evaluating whether a petitioner has established standing.37 Accordingly, a petitioner must allege an injury in fact that is fairly traceable to the challenged NRC action and that is likely to be redressed by a decision favorable to the petitioner.38 In addition, the alleged injury must arguably fall within the zone of interests protected by the AEA.39 While the Commission generally requires the elements of standing be pled with specificity, it has also found standing in certain cases under a proximity presumption. In proceedings for construction permits, operating licenses, or significant amendments thereto such as the expansion of the capacity of a spent fuel pool,40 the Commission permits a petitioner who lives within, or otherwise has frequent contacts with, the zone of possible harm from the nuclear reactor to establish standing without needing to make an individualized showing of injury, causation, and redressability.41 The determination of how proximate a petitioner must be to a source of radioactivity depends on the danger posed by the source at issue.42 In practice, the Commission has applied the proximity presumption in construction permit, operating license, and license renewal proceedings for power reactors to find standing where a petitioner resides within approximately miles of the facility.43 The Commission has also found standing under the proximity presumption where the petitioner has a property interest 37 See Turkey Point, CLI--, NRC at ; see also Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Project, LLC (Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit ), CLI--, NRC, ().
38 Turkey Point, CLI--, NRC at.
39 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant),
39 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant),
CLI- -, NRC, ( ).
CLI--, NRC, ().
 
40 Florida Power & Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC,
40 Florida Power & Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Units and ), CLI- -, NRC,
().
( ).
41 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at.
 
42 Florida Power and Light Co. (Turkey Point, Units and ), LBP--, NRC, ().
41 Calvert Cliffs, CLI- -, NRC at.
43 See Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at n..  
 
42 Florida Power and Light Co. (Turkey Point, Units and ), LBP--, NRC, ( ).
 
43 See Calvert Cliffs, CLI- -, NRC at n..
 
near the facility.44 In license amendment proceedings, how ever, the proximity presumption
 
applies where the license amendment presents an obvious potential of offsite radiological
 
consequences.45 A determination of an obvious potential for offsite radiological consequences
 
takes into account the nature of the proposed action and the significance of the radioactive
 
source.46
 
An organization may establish representational standing by demonstrating, typically via
 
affidavit, that at least one of its members may be affected by the proceeding and that these
 
members have authorized the organization to represent them and to request a hearing on their
 
behalf.47 Further, the member seeking representation must qualify for standing in [their] own
 
right; the interests that the representative organization seeks to protect must be germane to its
 
purpose; and neither the asserted claim nor the requested relief must require an individual
 
member to participate in the organizations legal action. 48
 
B. The Petitions Standing Arguments Do Not Demonstrate Standing with Respect to Three of the Petitioners and Do Demonstrate Standing with Respect to Two of the Petitioners
 
The Petition states that three organizations - Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan,
 
and Michigan Safe Energy Future - are each petitioning on behalf of two of their members, all of
 
whom herewith have submitted declarations. 49 Two other Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert
 
and Nuclear Energy Information Service, also assert representational standing elsewhere in the
 
44 See USEC, Inc. (American Centrifuge Plant), CLI- -, NRC, - ( ) (granting standing based on petitioner holding title to home near uranium enrichment facility notwithstanding that petitioner did not reside at the home).
 
45 Zion, CLI- -, NRC at ( ) (quoting St. Lucie, CLI- -, NRC at ); see also Turkey Point, LBP--, NRC at.


near the facility.44 In license amendment proceedings, however, the proximity presumption applies where the license amendment presents an obvious potential of offsite radiological consequences.45 A determination of an obvious potential for offsite radiological consequences takes into account the nature of the proposed action and the significance of the radioactive source.46 An organization may establish representational standing by demonstrating, typically via affidavit, that at least one of its members may be affected by the proceeding and that these members have authorized the organization to represent them and to request a hearing on their behalf.47 Further, the member seeking representation must qualify for standing in [their] own right; the interests that the representative organization seeks to protect must be germane to its purpose; and neither the asserted claim nor the requested relief must require an individual member to participate in the organizations legal action.48 B.
The Petitions Standing Arguments Do Not Demonstrate Standing with Respect to Three of the Petitioners and Do Demonstrate Standing with Respect to Two of the Petitioners The Petition states that three organizations - Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future - are each petitioning on behalf of two of their members, all of whom herewith have submitted declarations.49 Two other Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, also assert representational standing elsewhere in the 44 See USEC, Inc. (American Centrifuge Plant), CLI--, NRC, - () (granting standing based on petitioner holding title to home near uranium enrichment facility notwithstanding that petitioner did not reside at the home).
45 Zion, CLI--, NRC at () (quoting St. Lucie, CLI--, NRC at ); see also Turkey Point, LBP--, NRC at.
46 Exelon Generation Co, LLC & PSEG Nuclear, LLC (Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station, Units & ),
46 Exelon Generation Co, LLC & PSEG Nuclear, LLC (Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station, Units & ),
CLI- -, NRC, - ( ).
CLI--, NRC, - ().
 
47 FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Co. and FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation, LLC (Beaver Valley Power Station, Units and ), CLI--, NRC, - ().
47 FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Co. and FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation, LLC (Beaver Valley Power Station, Units and ), CLI- -, NRC, - ( ).
48 Beaver Valley, CLI--, NRC at.
 
49 Petition at -.  
48 Beaver Valley, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
49 Petition at -.
 
Petition.50 As discussed below, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe
 
Energy Future have not demonstrated standing because their members standing arguments
 
relate to the Exemption Request and not to HDIs four license amendment requests, which are
 
the subject of this proceeding. Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service,
 
whose members standing arguments are tied to HDIs license amendment requests in addition
 
to the Exemption Request, have demonstrated standing.
 
. Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future Have Not Satisfied Their Burden of Demonstrating Representational Standing
 
Beyond Nuclear (BN), Dont Waste Michigan (DWM), and Michigan Safe Energy Future
 
(MSEF) each seek to establish representational standing to intervene in this proceeding based
 
on the individual standing of two of their respective members. 51 The Petition includes signed
 
and dated declarations from William D. Reed 52 and Carolyn Ferry,53 members of BN; Alice Hirt
 
and Joseph C. Kirk, members of DWM; and James Scott and Ann Scott, members of MSEF. 54 In
 
their declarations, these individuals each designate the respective organization of which they
 
are a member to represent their interests in this proceeding. 55
 
The NRCs hearing regulations require hearing requests to state the
 
requestors/petitioners interest in the proceeding and [t]he possible effect of any decision
 
50 See id. at -.


Petition.50 As discussed below, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future have not demonstrated standing because their members standing arguments relate to the Exemption Request and not to HDIs four license amendment requests, which are the subject of this proceeding. Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, whose members standing arguments are tied to HDIs license amendment requests in addition to the Exemption Request, have demonstrated standing.
Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future Have Not Satisfied Their Burden of Demonstrating Representational Standing Beyond Nuclear (BN), Dont Waste Michigan (DWM), and Michigan Safe Energy Future (MSEF) each seek to establish representational standing to intervene in this proceeding based on the individual standing of two of their respective members.51 The Petition includes signed and dated declarations from William D. Reed52 and Carolyn Ferry,53 members of BN; Alice Hirt and Joseph C. Kirk, members of DWM; and James Scott and Ann Scott, members of MSEF.54 In their declarations, these individuals each designate the respective organization of which they are a member to represent their interests in this proceeding.55 The NRCs hearing regulations require hearing requests to state the requestors/petitioners interest in the proceeding and [t]he possible effect of any decision 50 See id. at -.
51 See id. at,, -.
51 See id. at,, -.
52 The Petition itself refers to W. Dillon Reed, Petition at -, but the signed, individual member declaration refers to William D. Reed. The Staff is using William D. Reed for consistency and in deference to the individuals apparent preference.
52 The Petition itself refers to W. Dillon Reed, Petition at -, but the signed, individual member declaration refers to William D. Reed. The Staff is using William D. Reed for consistency and in deference to the individuals apparent preference.
53 The Petition itself refers to Caroline Ferry, Petition at,, but the signed, individual member declaration refers to Carolyn Ferry. As with references to William D. Reed, the Staff is using Carolyn Ferry for consistency and in deference to the individuals apparent preference.
53 The Petition itself refers to Caroline Ferry, Petition at,, but the signed, individual member declaration refers to Carolyn Ferry. As with references to William D. Reed, the Staff is using Carolyn Ferry for consistency and in deference to the individuals apparent preference.
54 See William D. Reed Declaration; Carolyn Ferry Declaration; Alice Hirt Declaration; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration; James Scott Declaration; Ann Scott Declaration.
54 See William D. Reed Declaration; Carolyn Ferry Declaration; Alice Hirt Declaration; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration; James Scott Declaration; Ann Scott Declaration.
55 William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at ; Alice Hirt Declaration at -; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration at -; James Scott Declaration at -; Ann Scott Declaration at -.


55 William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at ; Alice Hirt Declaration at - ; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration at - ; James Scott Declaration at - ; Ann Scott Declaration at -.
or order that may be issued in the proceeding on the requestor's/petitioner's interest.56 As stated in the notice of hearing opportunity, this proceeding is limited to four license amendment requests submitted by HDI.57 The Petitions standing arguments, however, state that the six individuals BN, DWM, and MSEF seek to represent oppose HDIs Exemption Request but does not state any opposition to or otherwise challenge the license amendment requests.58 In fact, the Petition does not reference the license amendment requests at all in discussing these six individuals basis for standing or the standing of the organizations of which they are members.59 Because the Petitions standing arguments for the individuals that BN, DWM, and MSEF seek to represent never articulate their interest in the proceeding on the amendment requests or how approval of them would affect their interests, the Petitions standing arguments do not satisfy C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii)-(iv). Similarly, the standing arguments do not demonstrate a concrete and particularized injury that is fairly traceable to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision60 because any decision in this proceeding would be on the license amendment requests, which these individuals do not challenge.61 Therefore, the Petition does not demonstrate that BN, DWM, and MSEF have representational standing.
 
The Board need not further consider the standing declarations for BN, DWM, MSEF, and the six individuals they seek to represent because the Petition itself must explain how the 56 C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii)-(iv) (emphasis added).
or order that may be issued in the proceeding on the requestor's/petitioner's interest. 56 As
 
stated in the notice of hearing opportunity, this proceeding is limited to four license amendment
 
requests submitted by HDI. 57 The Petitions standing arguments, however, state that the six
 
individuals BN, DWM, and MSEF seek to represent oppose HDIs Exemption Request but does
 
not state any opposition to or otherwise challenge the license amendment requests. 58 In fact,
 
the Petition does not reference the license amendment requests at all in discussing these six
 
individuals basis for standing or the standing of the organizations of which they are members. 59
 
Because the Petitions standing arguments for the individuals that BN, DWM, and MSEF seek to
 
represent never articulate their interest in the proceeding on the amendment requests or how
 
approval of them would affect their interests, the Petitions standing arguments do not satisfy
 
C.F.R. §. (d)()(iii)-(iv). Similarly, the standi ng arguments do not demonstrate a
 
concrete and particularized injury that is fairly traceable to the challenged action and is likely to
 
be redressed by a favorable decision 60 because any decision in this proceeding would be on
 
the license amendment requests, which these individuals do not challenge. 61 Therefore, the
 
Petition does not demonstrate that BN, DWM, and MSEF have representational standing.
 
The Board need not further consider the standing declarations for BN, DWM, MSEF, and
 
the six individuals they seek to represent becaus e the Petition itself must explain how the
 
56 C.F.R. §. (d)()(iii)-(iv) (emphasis added).
 
57 Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at, (The scope of this notice is limited to comments, requests for a hearing, and petitions for leave to intervene related to the four proposed license amendment requests listed in tabular form in Section III of this document.).
57 Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at, (The scope of this notice is limited to comments, requests for a hearing, and petitions for leave to intervene related to the four proposed license amendment requests listed in tabular form in Section III of this document.).
58 See, e.g., Petition at,,,,, (stating that William D. Reed, Carolyn Ferry, James Scott, Ann Scott, Alice Hirt, and Joseph C. Kirk, respectively, oppose[] the granting of an exemption by the NRC with no reference to the license amendment requests).
58 See, e.g., Petition at,,,,, (stating that William D. Reed, Carolyn Ferry, James Scott, Ann Scott, Alice Hirt, and Joseph C. Kirk, respectively, oppose[] the granting of an exemption by the NRC with no reference to the license amendment requests).
59 See id. at -, -.
59 See id. at -, -.
60 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
61 See Petition at (As each of the member declarants explains, they will suffer (or will be under the threat of suffering) concrete and particularized injuries from the restored operations of Palisades if the exemption sought by Holtec is granted.) (emphasis added).


60 Calvert Cliffs, CLI- -, NRC at (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
supporting documents included with it provide a basis for standing. For example, the Commission concluded in one proceeding that the petitioner did not establish standing because it does not address standing in its Petition; in its assessment of standing, the Commission did not consider a member declaration submitted with the Petition.62 Here, because the six individuals standing arguments in the Petition do not provide a basis for standing, the Board need not consider their declarations. Consistent with Commission precedent, the Staff will not attempt to infer an argument for standing on behalf of the Petitioner; the Petition should be considered as it was pled.63 As with the Petition, the standing declarations for BN, DWM, MSEF, and the six individuals they seek to represent do not provide a basis for standing. In their declarations, the individuals demonstrate an awareness of the license amendment requests but again challenge only the Exemption Request.64 These six individuals, therefore, have not articulated an interest 62 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 3), CLI-20-6, 91 NRC 225, 228 n.15, 238 (2020) (emphasis added). The members declaration in Vogtle provided the members name and address, affirmed she was a member of the petitioning organization, stated her safety concerns, and authorized the petitioner to represent her and protect her interests in the proceeding. Declaration of Susan Bloomfield (ML20111C451) (Apr. 10, 2020).
 
61 See Petition at (As each of the member declarants explains, they will suffer (or will be under the threat of suffering) concrete and particularized injuries from the restored operations of Palisades if the exemption sought by Holtec is granted.) (emphasis added).
 
supporting documents included with it provide a basis for standing. For example, the
 
Commission concluded in one proceeding that the petitioner did not establish standing because
 
it does not address standing in its Petition; in its assessment of standing, the Commission did
 
not consider a member declaration submitted with the Petition. 62 Here, because the six
 
individuals standing arguments in the Petition do not provide a basis for standing, the Board
 
need not consider their declarations. Consistent with Commission precedent, the Staff will not
 
attempt to infer an argument for standing on behalf of the Petitioner; the Petition should be
 
considered as it was pled. 63
 
As with the Petition, the standing declarations for BN, DWM, MSEF, and the six
 
individuals they seek to represent do not provide a basis for standing. In their declarations, the
 
individuals demonstrate an awareness of the license amendment requests but again challenge
 
only the Exemption Request. 64 These six individuals, therefore, have not articulated an interest
 
62 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 3), CLI-20-6, 91 NRC 225, 228 n.15, 238 (2020) (emphasis added). The members declaration in Vogtle provided the members name and address, affirmed she was a member of the petitioning organization, stated her safety concerns, and authorized the petitioner to represent her and protect her interests in the proceeding. Declaration of Susan Bloomfield (ML20111C451) (Apr. 10, 2020).
 
63 See Commonwealth Edison Co. (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units 1 and 2), CLI-99-4, 49 NRC 185, 194 (1999) (internal quotation marks omitted) (We do not expect our adjudicatory Boards, unaided by the parties, to sift through the parties pleadings to uncover and resolve arguments not advanced by litigants themselves. The burden of setting forth a clear and coherent argument for standing and intervention is on the petitioner. It should not be necessary to speculate about what a pleading is supposed to mean.)
63 See Commonwealth Edison Co. (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units 1 and 2), CLI-99-4, 49 NRC 185, 194 (1999) (internal quotation marks omitted) (We do not expect our adjudicatory Boards, unaided by the parties, to sift through the parties pleadings to uncover and resolve arguments not advanced by litigants themselves. The burden of setting forth a clear and coherent argument for standing and intervention is on the petitioner. It should not be necessary to speculate about what a pleading is supposed to mean.)
64 William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at ; Alice Hirt Declaration at ; Joseph C.
64 William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at ; Alice Hirt Declaration at ; Joseph C.
Kirk Declaration at ; James Scott Declaration at ; Ann Scott Declaration at (I oppose the granting of the exemption by the NRC.). These declarations reference the license amendment requests only as part of a general description of the requested licensing actions. See, e.g., William D. Reed Declaration at (HDI has submitted several requests for NRC approval to support allowing the resumption of power operations through March,. These requests include four license amendment requests and an exemption request.). While the standing declarations of Alice Hirt, Joseph C. Kirk, James Scott, and Ann Scott describe this proceeding as either a license transfer and/or amendment proceeding[,] Alice Hirt Declaration at ; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration at ; James Scott Declaration at ; or a license transfer and amendment proceeding[,] Ann Scott Declaration at, this reference to the license amendment requests does not constitute a challenge to those requests nor does it articulate their interest in this proceeding on HDIs license amendment requests. See C.F.R. §. (d)()(iii). The declarations of William D. Reed and Carolyn Ferry describe this proceeding as a regulatory exemption proceeding. William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at.
Kirk Declaration at ; James Scott Declaration at ; Ann Scott Declaration at (I oppose the granting of the exemption by the NRC.). These declarations reference the license amendment requests only as part of a general description of the requested licensing actions. See, e.g., William D. Reed Declaration at (HDI has submitted several requests for NRC approval to support allowing the resumption of power operations through March,. These requests include four license amendment requests and an exemption request.). While the standing declarations of Alice Hirt, Joseph C. Kirk, James Scott, and Ann Scott describe this proceeding as either a license transfer and/or amendment proceeding[,] Alice Hirt Declaration at ; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration at ; James Scott Declaration at ; or a license transfer and amendment proceeding[,] Ann Scott Declaration at, this reference to the license amendment requests does not constitute a challenge to those requests nor does it articulate their interest in this proceeding on HDIs license amendment requests. See C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii). The declarations of William D. Reed and Carolyn Ferry describe this proceeding as a regulatory exemption proceeding. William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at.  
 
in the license amendment requests or explai ned how approval of the amendment requests
 
would affect their interests as required by C.F.R. §. (d)()(iii) and (iv). Similarly, their
 
standing arguments do not demonstrate a concrete and particularized injury that is fairly
 
traceable to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision 65
 
because any decision in this proceeding would be on the license amendment requests, which
 
these individuals do not challenge. Therefore, William D. Reed, Carolyn Ferry, Alice Hirt,
 
Joseph C. Kirk, James Scott, and Ann Scott have not demonstrated standing in this proceeding.
 
Because BN, DWM, and MSEF must demonstrate that the individuals whom they seek to
 
represent have demonstrated standing in their own right, 66 and because these individuals have
 
failed to do so, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not satisfied their burden of demonstrating
 
representational standing. 67
 
BN, DWM, and MSEF state in the Petition and in their declarations that they, as
 
organizations, oppose HDIs license amendment requests, 68 but this is immaterial to
 
determining whether they demonstrate representational standing on behalf of their members,
 
and these organizations have not asserted organizational standing in their own right. Therefore,
 
BN, DWM, and MSEFs own opposition to the license amendment requests does not help to
 
demonstrate that they have representational standing to intervene in this proceeding.
 
Finally, the Staff notes that, as discussed below, the Petitioners may file contentions
 
challenging the Exemption Request under Commission precedent providing that a petitioner
 
65 Calvert Cliffs, CLI- -, NRC at (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
 
66 Beaver Valley, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
67 Consistent with Commission precedent, the Staff will not attempt to infer an argument for standing on behalf of Petitioners; the Petition should be considered as it was pled. See Zion, CLI- -, NRC at
 
68 Petition at (Five petitioning organizations, Beyond Nuclear, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Dont Waste Michigan, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service demonstrate below that they have standing to pursue contentions against Holtecs request for license amendments. Petitioners contend that the requested license amendments must not be granted.).
 
may raise arguments related to an exemption request when such arguments are material to a
 
proposed licensing action and directly bear[] on whether the proposed action should be
 
granted.69 However, Commission precedent on the ability to challenge an exemption request
 
that is intertwined with a proposed licensing action has been applied to contention admissibility,
 
not standing.70 Contention admissibility and standing are different concepts governed by
 
different criteria set forth in NRC regulations. 71 Contentions are addressed at whether the
 
proposed action should be granted and must, among other things, demonstrate their materiality
 
to the findings the NRC must make in order to issue a licensing action; 72 therefore, the
 
materiality of an exemption request to a licensi ng action is directly relevant to the NRCs
 
contention rule. Standing, however, is focused on the asserted injury that would accrue if the
 
proposed action is granted, i.e., the injury that would accrue from the decision or order that may
 
be issued in the proceeding, 73 which in this instance is the decision on the restart-related
 
amendment requests, not the Exemption Request.
 
As explained above, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not asserted any injuries from the
 
proposed amendments, having challenged only the Exemption Request. In any case, granting
 
the exemption would not cause injury because it would merely remove a prohibition on potential
 
operation of Palisades; it would not authorize restart of the reactor. The amendment requests,
 
however, propose changes to the license to authorize restart. 74 Even if HDIs Exemption
 
69 Palisades, CLI- -, NRC at (emphasis added).
 
70 See, e.g., Palisades, CLI- -, NRC at ; Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Station, Units,, and and ISFSI), CLI--, NRC, & n. ( ).
 
71 Compare C.F.R. §. (d) (standing requirements), with C.F.R. §. (f) (contention admissibility requirements).
 
72 C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv).
 
73 C.F.R. §. (d)()(iv).
 
74 See Primary Amendment Request, at. Among the changes to the license that the Primary Amendment Request proposes is authorization to operate the facility at steady state reactor core power levels not in excess of. Megawatts thermal ( percent rated power)[.] Id., Enclosure, Attach., at.
 
Request could in some way be tied to an injury-in-fact from the license amendment requests,
 
Petitioners have not made that connection in the Petition, as it was their burden to do. 75
 
For the reasons stated above, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not satisfied their burden of
 
demonstrating representational standing and should not be admitted as parties to this
 
proceeding. Nevertheless, the Staff addresses the contentions submitted by BN, DWM, and
 
MSEF in Discussion Section III, below, and concludes that one contention is admissible in part.
 
. Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service Have Satisfied Their Burden of Demonstrating Representational Standing


Three Mile Island Alert (TMIA) is a nonprofit organization with approximately
in the license amendment requests or explained how approval of the amendment requests would affect their interests as required by C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii) and (iv). Similarly, their standing arguments do not demonstrate a concrete and particularized injury that is fairly traceable to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision65 because any decision in this proceeding would be on the license amendment requests, which these individuals do not challenge. Therefore, William D. Reed, Carolyn Ferry, Alice Hirt, Joseph C. Kirk, James Scott, and Ann Scott have not demonstrated standing in this proceeding.
Because BN, DWM, and MSEF must demonstrate that the individuals whom they seek to represent have demonstrated standing in their own right,66 and because these individuals have failed to do so, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing.67 BN, DWM, and MSEF state in the Petition and in their declarations that they, as organizations, oppose HDIs license amendment requests,68 but this is immaterial to determining whether they demonstrate representational standing on behalf of their members, and these organizations have not asserted organizational standing in their own right. Therefore, BN, DWM, and MSEFs own opposition to the license amendment requests does not help to demonstrate that they have representational standing to intervene in this proceeding.
Finally, the Staff notes that, as discussed below, the Petitioners may file contentions challenging the Exemption Request under Commission precedent providing that a petitioner 65 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
66 Beaver Valley, CLI--, NRC at.
67 Consistent with Commission precedent, the Staff will not attempt to infer an argument for standing on behalf of Petitioners; the Petition should be considered as it was pled. See Zion, CLI--, NRC at 68 Petition at (Five petitioning organizations, Beyond Nuclear, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Dont Waste Michigan, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service demonstrate below that they have standing to pursue contentions against Holtecs request for license amendments. Petitioners contend that the requested license amendments must not be granted.).


members that is opposed to commercial nuclear power for safety and economic reasons. 76
may raise arguments related to an exemption request when such arguments are material to a proposed licensing action and directly bear[] on whether the proposed action should be granted.69 However, Commission precedent on the ability to challenge an exemption request that is intertwined with a proposed licensing action has been applied to contention admissibility, not standing.70 Contention admissibility and standing are different concepts governed by different criteria set forth in NRC regulations.71 Contentions are addressed at whether the proposed action should be granted and must, among other things, demonstrate their materiality to the findings the NRC must make in order to issue a licensing action;72 therefore, the materiality of an exemption request to a licensing action is directly relevant to the NRCs contention rule. Standing, however, is focused on the asserted injury that would accrue if the proposed action is granted, i.e., the injury that would accrue from the decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding,73 which in this instance is the decision on the restart-related amendment requests, not the Exemption Request.
 
As explained above, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not asserted any injuries from the proposed amendments, having challenged only the Exemption Request. In any case, granting the exemption would not cause injury because it would merely remove a prohibition on potential operation of Palisades; it would not authorize restart of the reactor. The amendment requests, however, propose changes to the license to authorize restart.74 Even if HDIs Exemption 69 Palisades, CLI--, NRC at (emphasis added).
Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS) is a nonprofit organization with over members
70 See, e.g., Palisades, CLI--, NRC at ; Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Station, Units,, and and ISFSI), CLI--, NRC, & n. ().
 
71 Compare C.F.R. §.(d) (standing requirements), with C.F.R. §.(f) (contention admissibility requirements).
that is committed to ending nuclear power and advocating for energy alternatives. 77 TMIA and
72 C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv).
 
73 C.F.R. §.(d)()(iv).
NEIS each seek to establish representational standing to intervene in this proceeding based on
74 See Primary Amendment Request, at. Among the changes to the license that the Primary Amendment Request proposes is authorization to operate the facility at steady state reactor core power levels not in excess of. Megawatts thermal ( percent rated power)[.] Id., Enclosure, Attach., at.  
 
the individual standing of one of their respective members. 78 The Petition includes signed and
 
dated declarations from David Staiger, a member of TMIA, and John Brenneman, a member of
 
NEIS.79 In their declarations, these individuals each designate the respective organization of
 
which they are a member to represent their interests in this proceeding. 80
 
TMIA and NEIS state in the Petition that their members oppose[] the granting of the
 
exemption by the NRC and all of the license ame ndments because of safety, public health, and
 
75 See Zion, CLI- -, NRC at.


Request could in some way be tied to an injury-in-fact from the license amendment requests, Petitioners have not made that connection in the Petition, as it was their burden to do.75 For the reasons stated above, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing and should not be admitted as parties to this proceeding. Nevertheless, the Staff addresses the contentions submitted by BN, DWM, and MSEF in Discussion Section III, below, and concludes that one contention is admissible in part.
Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service Have Satisfied Their Burden of Demonstrating Representational Standing Three Mile Island Alert (TMIA) is a nonprofit organization with approximately members that is opposed to commercial nuclear power for safety and economic reasons.76 Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS) is a nonprofit organization with over members that is committed to ending nuclear power and advocating for energy alternatives.77 TMIA and NEIS each seek to establish representational standing to intervene in this proceeding based on the individual standing of one of their respective members.78 The Petition includes signed and dated declarations from David Staiger, a member of TMIA, and John Brenneman, a member of NEIS.79 In their declarations, these individuals each designate the respective organization of which they are a member to represent their interests in this proceeding.80 TMIA and NEIS state in the Petition that their members oppose[] the granting of the exemption by the NRC and all of the license amendments because of safety, public health, and 75 See Zion, CLI--, NRC at.
76 Petition at.
76 Petition at.
77 Id. at.
77 Id. at.
78 See id. at -,.
78 See id. at -,.
79 See David Staiger Declaration; John Brenneman Declaration.
79 See David Staiger Declaration; John Brenneman Declaration.
80 David Staiger Declaration at -; John Brenneman Declaration at -.


80 David Staiger Declaration at - ; John Brenneman Declaration at -.
environmental concerns.81 Davis Staiger and John Brennemans declarations also state opposition to the license amendment requests and connect the challenged actions that are the subject of this proceedingthe license amendment requeststo the injuries they claim they will suffer if the NRC issues the amendments.82 They therefore address their interest in the proceeding and [t]he possible effect of any decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding on that interest. TMIA and NEIS make similar statements in the Petition and in their respective declarations opposing the license amendment requests and the Exemption Request.83 While TMIA and NEIS are challenging license amendment requests, the requests, if granted, would support restart of the Palisades reactor and resumption of power operations at the facility.84 Although the license amendment and operating license processes are different, granting the amendment requests along with HDIs other related requests would, like granting an initial operating license, permit the applicant to operate a nuclear reactor at full power where reactor operation was not previously permitted. Taking into account the nature of the challenged action (restarting the Palisades reactor from its current defueled state to full-power operations) and the significance of the radioactive source involved (operation of the reactor itself), the license amendment requests presents an obvious potential of offsite radiological consequences.85 As the Commission has stated,
 
[T]he common thread in the [NRC] decisions applying the -mile presumption is a recognition of the potential effects at significant distances from the facility of the accidental release of fissionable materials. The NRC's regulations also recognize that an accidental release has potential effects within a -mile radius of a reactor. The Commission has applied its expertise and concluded that 81 Petition at, -.
environmental concerns.81 Davis Staiger and John Brennemans declarations also state
82 See David Staiger Declaration at -; John Brenneman Declaration at -.
 
opposition to the license amendment requests and connect the challenged actions that are the
 
subject of this proceedingthe license amendment requeststo the injuries they claim they will
 
suffer if the NRC issues the amendments. 82 They therefore address their interest in the
 
proceeding and [t]he possible effect of any decision or order that may be issued in the
 
proceeding on that interest. TMIA and NEIS make similar statements in the Petition and in their
 
respective declarations opposing the license amendment requests and the Exemption
 
Request.83
 
While TMIA and NEIS are challenging lic ense amendment requests, the requests, if
 
granted, would support restart of the Palisades reactor and resumption of power operations at
 
the facility.84 Although the license amendment and operating license processes are different,
 
granting the amendment requests along with HDIs other related requests would, like granting
 
an initial operating license, permit the applicant to operate a nuclear reactor at full power where
 
reactor operation was not previously permitted. Taking into account the nature of the challenged
 
action (restarting the Palisades reactor from its current defueled state to full-power operations)
 
and the significance of the radioactive source involved (operation of the reactor itself), the
 
license amendment requests presents an obvious potential of offsite radiological
 
consequences.85 As the Commission has stated,
 
[T]he common thread in the [NRC] decisions applying the -mile presumption is a recognition of the potential effects at significant distances from the facility of the accidental release of fissionable materials. The NRC's regulations also recognize that an accidental release has potential effects within a -mile radius of a reactor. The Commission has applied its expertise and concluded that
 
81 Petition at, -.
 
82 See David Staiger Declaration at - ; John Brenneman Declaration at -.
 
83 See Petition at, ; Eric Epstein Declaration at ; David Kraft Declaration at.
83 See Petition at, ; Eric Epstein Declaration at ; David Kraft Declaration at.
84 Primary Amendment Request, at.
84 Primary Amendment Request, at.
85 Zion, NRC at (quoting St. Lucie, CLI--, NRC at ).


85 Zion, NRC at (quoting St. Lucie, CLI- -, NRC at ).
persons living within a -mile radius of a proposed new reactor face a realistic threat of harm if a release of radioactive material were to occur from the facility.86 The same logic applies here. The amendment requests TMIA and NEIS contest propose changing the license to enable a currently shutdown and defueled reactor to resume operation at full power, which would involve generating radioactivity in the reactor core. This, on its face, entails an obvious potential for offsite consequences in the unlikely event of an accident. For these reasons, it is appropriate to apply, for purposes of standing, the -mile proximity presumption used in operating license proceedings.
 
In their declarations, David Staiger and John Brenneman state that they live within miles of Palisades.87 These declarations demonstrate that at least one member of TMIA and NEIS would have standing to intervene in their own right based on the proximity presumption.88 In keeping with Commission case law, the interests that TMIA and NEIS seek to protect in this proceeding are germane to their purposes, and neither the asserted claims nor the requested relief require an individual member to participate in this proceeding.89 For these reasons, TMIA and NEIS have satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing.
persons living within a -mile radius of a proposed new reactor face a realistic threat of harm if a release of radioactive material were to occur from the facility. 86
II.
 
Additional Context on the Licensing Process and the Environmental Review Before addressing the proposed contentions individually, the Staff will first address two more general matters that provide important context for the Boards consideration of several of the contentions. These two general matters relate to () the Staffs consideration of licensing 86 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at (alterations in original) (quoting Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Project, LLC (Combined License Application for Calvert Cliffs Unit ), LBP--, NRC, - ()).
The same logic applies here. The amendment requests TMIA and NEIS contest propose
 
changing the license to enable a currently shutdown and defueled reactor to resume operation
 
at full power, which would involve generating radioactivity in the reactor core. This, on its face,
 
entails an obvious potential for offsite consequences in the unlikely event of an accident. For
 
these reasons, it is appropriate to apply, for purposes of standing, the -mile proximity
 
presumption used in operating license proceedings.
 
In their declarations, David Staiger and John Brenneman state that they live within  
 
miles of Palisades.87 These declarations demonstrate that at least one member of TMIA and
 
NEIS would have standing to intervene in thei r own right based on the proximity presumption. 88
 
In keeping with Commission case law, the interests that TMIA and NEIS seek to protect in this
 
proceeding are germane to their purposes, and neither the asserted claims nor the requested
 
relief require an individual member to participate in this proceeding. 89 For these reasons, TMIA
 
and NEIS have satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing.
 
II. Additional Context on the Licensing Process and the Environmental Review
 
Before addressing the proposed contentions individually, the Staff will first address two
 
more general matters that provide important context for the Boards consideration of several of
 
the contentions. These two general matters relate to ( ) the Staffs consideration of licensing
 
86 Calvert Cliffs, CLI- -, NRC at (alterations in original) (quoting Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Project, LLC (Combined License Application for Calvert Cliffs Unit ), LBP- -, NRC, - ( )).
 
87 David Staiger Declaration at ; John Brenneman Declaration at.
87 David Staiger Declaration at ; John Brenneman Declaration at.
 
88 Using the addresses provided on page of their respective declarations, the Staff verified, using the straight-line measurement tool in Google Maps, that Messrs. Staiger and Brenneman live approximately  
88 Using the addresses provided on page of their respective declarations, the Staff verified, using the straight-line measurement tool in Google Maps, that Messrs. Staiger and Brenneman live approximately
. miles and miles, respectively, from the Palisades containment building.
. miles and miles, respectively, from the Palisades containment building.
89 Beaver Valley, CLI--, NRC at (citing Palisades, CLI--, NRC at -; Private Fuel Storage, L.L.C. (Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation), CLI--, NRC, ()).


89 Beaver Valley, CLI- -, NRC at (citing Palisades, CLI- -, NRC at - ; Private Fuel Storage, L.L.C. (Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation), CLI- -, NRC, ( )).
and regulatory requests related to the potential restart of Palisades and () the relationship between the environmental review and the hearing request requirements.
 
A.
and regulatory requests related to the potential restart of Palisades and ( ) the relationship
Staff Consideration of Licensing and Regulatory Requests Related to the Potential Restart of Palisades Here, the Staff explains explain how it is considering the licensing and regulatory requests related to the potential restart of reactor operation at Palisades within the existing regulatory framework. The Staff is doing so because the proposed contentions appear to rely on certain erroneous assumptions about the licensing and regulatory processes applicable to restart of Palisades. Although this proceeding does not concern all of the restart-related requests, the Staff will here address all of them (license amendments, license transfer, and exemption) so that the role the challenged requests have in the Palisades restart efforts can be considered in their proper context.
 
To begin, the Staffs consideration of all restart-related requests is governed by Commission-established policy on the reauthorization of reactor operations for plants in decommissioning. In denying a petition for rulemaking ( PRM Denial), the Commission stated that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework.90 Therefore, the Staff has examined whether the license amendment, license transfer, and exemption processes may be used to seek the resumption of reactor operation at Palisades under the existing regulatory framework given the current status of the Palisades license.
between the environmental review and the hearing request requirements.
Although the Staff has not completed its review of any of the restart-related requests, the Staff has concluded, generally, that a facility licensee in decommissioning may apply to use the license amendment, transfer, and exemption processes, as applicable, to seek approval for the 90 Criteria To Return Retired Nuclear Power Reactors to Operations, Fed. Reg.,,, (May,
 
) (denying a petition for rulemaking) ( PRM Denial).
A. Staff Consideration of Licensing and Regulatory Requests Related to the Potential Restart of Palisades
 
Here, the Staff explains explain how it is considering the licensing and regulatory


requests related to the potential restart of reactor operation at Palisades within the existing
actions necessary to authorize the restart of a reactor in decommissioning. As discussed below, the Staff has reached this conclusion for two principal reasons.
 
First, a facility operating license continues in effect for reactors in decommissioning because entering the decommissioning process involves a change in license authority and not a change to the form of the license itself. Specifically, C.F.R. §.(a)() provides that upon docketing the §.(a)() certifications, the CFR part license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel into the reactor vessel. In other words, the authority to operate is gone but the same Part license remains. The continuation of the Part license is made explicit by C.F.R. §.(b), which states Each license for a facility that has permanently ceased operations, continues in effect beyond the expiration date to authorize ownership and possession of the production or utilization facility, until the Commission notifies the licensee in writing that the license is terminated.91 Thus, the Palisades license remains a renewed Part facility operating license during the decommissioning process.
regulatory framework. The Staff is doing so because the proposed contentions appear to rely on
The following examples from the broader regulatory context and the Palisades license itself also support the Staffs understanding:
 
Both C.F.R. §. and the Decommissioning Rule refer to termination of an operating license, meaning that the license is still an operating license at the point of termination.92 Commission precedent has applied requirements for operating licenses to plants in decommissioning.93 91 C.F.R. §.(b) (emphasis added).
certain erroneous assumptions about the licensing and regulatory processes applicable to
92 See C.F.R. §.(d)() (referring to the termination of an operating license issued under this part); Decommissioning of Nuclear Power Reactors, Fed. Reg.,,, (July, ) (final rule) (referring to the termination of an operating license) ( Decommissioning Rule).
 
93 See EnergySolutions, LLC (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units & ), CLI--, N.R.C., &
restart of Palisades. Although this proceeding does not concern all of the restart-related
: n. () (applying the requirements in C.F.R. §.(b)()(i) for construction permits and operating licenses to license transfers for facilities in decommissioning).  
 
requests, the Staff will here address all of them (license amendments, license transfer, and
 
exemption) so that the role the challenged requests have in the Palisades restart efforts can be
 
considered in their proper context.
 
To begin, the Staffs consideration of all restart-related requests is governed by
 
Commission-established policy on the reauthorization of reactor operations for plants in
 
decommissioning. In denying a petition for rulemaking ( PRM Denial), the Commission
 
stated that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the
 
existing regulatory framework. 90 Therefore, the Staff has examined whether the license
 
amendment, license transfer, and exemption proce sses may be used to seek the resumption of
 
reactor operation at Palisades under the existing regulatory framework given the current status
 
of the Palisades license.
 
Although the Staff has not completed its review of any of the restart-related requests, the
 
Staff has concluded, generally, that a facility licensee in decommissioning may apply to use the
 
license amendment, transfer, and exemption processes, as applicable, to seek approval for the
 
90 Criteria To Return Retired Nuclear Power Reactors to Operations, Fed. Reg.,,, (May,
) (denying a petition for rulemaking) ( PRM Denial).
 
actions necessary to authorize the restart of a reactor in decommissioning. As discussed below,
 
the Staff has reached this conclusion for two principal reasons.
 
First, a facility operating license continues in effect for reactors in decommissioning
 
because entering the decommissioning process involves a change in license authority and not a
 
change to the form of the license itself. Specifically, C.F.R. §. (a)( ) provides that upon
 
docketing the §. (a)() certifications, the CFR part license no longer authorizes
 
operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel into the reactor vessel. In other
 
words, the authority to operate is gone but the same Part license remains. The continuation
 
of the Part license is made explicit by C.F.R. §.(b), which states Each license for a
 
facility that has permanently ceased operations, continues in effect beyond the expiration date
 
to authorize ownership and possession of the production or utilization facility, until the
 
Commission notifies the licensee in writing that the license is terminated. 91 Thus, the Palisades
 
license remains a renewed Part facility operating license during the decommissioning
 
process.
 
The following examples from the broader r egulatory context and the Palisades license
 
itself also support the Staffs understanding:
 
Both C.F.R. §. and the Decommissioning Rule refer to termination of an operating license, meaning that the license is still an operating license at the point of termination.92
 
Commission precedent has applied requirements for operating licenses to plants in decommissioning.93
 
91 C.F.R. §.(b) (emphasis added).
 
92 See C.F.R. §. (d)( ) (referring to the termination of an operating license issued under this part); Decommissioning of Nuclear Power Reactors, Fed. Reg.,,, (July, ) (final rule) (referring to the termination of an operating license) ( Decommissioning Rule).
 
93 See EnergySolutions, LLC (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units & ), CLI- -, N.R.C., &
: n. ( ) (applying the requirements in C.F.R. §. (b)()(i) for construction permits and operating licenses to license transfers for facilities in decommissioning).
 
Section. applies by its terms to operating licenses and combined licenses and yet includes a provision applicable to a nuclear power reactor facility for which the certifications required under §. (a)() have been submitted.94
 
Other important requirements for operating licenses, such as the requirement in
§. (a)() to implement a quality assurance program, do and should continue to apply in decommissioning.
 
The license change pages from the Defueled TS Amendment, which was intended to reflect the modified responsibilities and authorities for Palisades in decommissioning, refer to the Palisades license as a renewed facility operating license. 95
 
As a consequence, the NRCs regulatory requi rements for operating licenses continue to
 
apply to Palisades absent an exemption or an exclusion in the NRCs regulations for plants in
 
decommissioning. Regulatory requirements that still apply include those in C.F.R. §. for
 
final safety analysis reports (FSARs) and in C.F.R. §. (a) for quality assurance (QA)
 
plans.
 
Second, because the license for a reactor in decommissioning remains a facility
 
operating license, licensing and regul atory requests within the existing regulatory framework
 
may be used to restore the licensed authority for reactor operation. The license amendment,
 
license transfer, and exemption processes are all within the existing regulatory framework and
 
may be applied to a reactor in decommissioning as follows:


Section. applies by its terms to operating licenses and combined licenses and yet includes a provision applicable to a nuclear power reactor facility for which the certifications required under §.(a)() have been submitted.94 Other important requirements for operating licenses, such as the requirement in
§.(a)() to implement a quality assurance program, do and should continue to apply in decommissioning.
The license change pages from the Defueled TS Amendment, which was intended to reflect the modified responsibilities and authorities for Palisades in decommissioning, refer to the Palisades license as a renewed facility operating license.95 As a consequence, the NRCs regulatory requirements for operating licenses continue to apply to Palisades absent an exemption or an exclusion in the NRCs regulations for plants in decommissioning. Regulatory requirements that still apply include those in C.F.R. §. for final safety analysis reports (FSARs) and in C.F.R. §.(a) for quality assurance (QA) plans.
Second, because the license for a reactor in decommissioning remains a facility operating license, licensing and regulatory requests within the existing regulatory framework may be used to restore the licensed authority for reactor operation. The license amendment, license transfer, and exemption processes are all within the existing regulatory framework and may be applied to a reactor in decommissioning as follows:
94 C.F.R. §. (introductory paragraph and paragraph (y))
94 C.F.R. §. (introductory paragraph and paragraph (y))
95 Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure, Attach. (attached license change pages -, Appendix A title page, and Appendix B title page that refer to the license as a Renewed Facility Operating License or use similar terms, such as renewed operating license, Facility Operating License, or Operating License).
95 Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure, Attach. (attached license change pages -, Appendix A title page, and Appendix B title page that refer to the license as a Renewed Facility Operating License or use similar terms, such as renewed operating license, Facility Operating License, or Operating License).
Retaining the term operating license was intentional, as the Staff issued a request for additional information (RAI) in which it explained why the Palisades license would still be a renewed facility operating license during the decommissioning phase. Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President, Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Request for Additional Information Regarding License Amendment Request for Permanently Defueled Amendment Request (EPID L- -LLA- ),
Retaining the term operating license was intentional, as the Staff issued a request for additional information (RAI) in which it explained why the Palisades license would still be a renewed facility operating license during the decommissioning phase. Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President, Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Request for Additional Information Regarding License Amendment Request for Permanently Defueled Amendment Request (EPID L--LLA-),
Enclosure at - (Apr., ) (ML A ). Entergy responded by withdrawing its proposal to delete the term operating when it appeared before license. Letter from Phil Couture, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Response to Request for Additional Information Regarding License Amendment Request to Revise Facility Operating License and Technical Specifications for a Permanently Defueled Condition, Enclosure at - (Apr., ) (MLA). Even if this proposal had not been withdrawn, that would not have changed the status of the license under NRC regulations, as discussed above.
Enclosure at - (Apr., ) (MLA). Entergy responded by withdrawing its proposal to delete the term operating when it appeared before license. Letter from Phil Couture, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Response to Request for Additional Information Regarding License Amendment Request to Revise Facility Operating License and Technical Specifications for a Permanently Defueled Condition, Enclosure at - (Apr., ) (MLA). Even if this proposal had not been withdrawn, that would not have changed the status of the license under NRC regulations, as discussed above.  
 
Because license amendments are typi cally used to change the authorities and requirements for a reactor in decommissioning, 96 the amendment process may be used to restore those authorities so long as the amendment standards in C.F.R.
§. (a) are met.
 
The license transfer process may be used to transfer authorities under the existing license to a transferee that is qualified to hold a license for reactor operation under C.F.R. §. (c)().
 
Although §. (a)( ) prohibits reactor operation for a reactor in decommissioning, the exemption process established by C.F.R. §. is available to remove regulatory restrictions, including the one in §. (a)( ), if all exemption requirements are met.
 
For these reasons, the Staff has concluded that a licensee in decommissioning may seek the
 
restart of reactor operation by applying to use relevant processes within the existing regulatory
 
framework, including the license amendment, lic ense transfer, and exemption processes.
 
B. Relationship Between the Environmental Review and Hearing Request Requirements
 
The Staff is here addressing as a general matter how certain information provided by
 
HDI to support the environmental review relates to the hearing request requirements. The Staff
 
is doing so because the amendments proceeding involves an unusual situation where the
 
amendment requests invoke a categorical exclusi on for the environmental review, but the Staff
 
has instead decided to prepare an environmental assessment (EA). Relatedly, none of the
 
proposed contentions address the applications arguments on the categorical exclusion criteria
 
but instead contest other environmental information submitted by HDI. As discussed below, this
 
other environmental information challenged by the Petitioners falls within the NRC definition of
 
environmental report, and the Petitioners may challenge it in accordance with C.F.R.
 
§. (f)( ).
 
96 See, e.g., Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment; Defueled TS Amendment.
 
In each of the restart-related license amendment requests, HDI asserts that the
 
categorical exclusion in C.F.R. §. (c)( ) applies.97 However, the Staff has determined not
 
to invoke any categorical exclusions for the environmental review. Instead, the Staff has
 
decided to prepare an EA that covers the restart-related amendment requests, transfer request,
 
and exemption request, as discussed in a June, Federal Register notice (Notice of
 
Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping). 98 As described therein, if the Staff is able to
 
determine that there are no significant impacts, the Staff intends to publish for comment a draft
 
EA and a draft finding of no significant impact. 99
 
While the Staff is not relying on the categorical exclusion arguments, three of the four
 
amendment requests reference a separate HDI environmental evaluation in Enclosure of the
 
Exemption Request. For example, after stating that a categorical exclusion applies, the Primary


Amendment Request further states:
Because license amendments are typically used to change the authorities and requirements for a reactor in decommissioning,96 the amendment process may be used to restore those authorities so long as the amendment standards in C.F.R.
§.(a) are met.
The license transfer process may be used to transfer authorities under the existing license to a transferee that is qualified to hold a license for reactor operation under C.F.R. §.(c)().
Although §.(a)() prohibits reactor operation for a reactor in decommissioning, the exemption process established by C.F.R. §. is available to remove regulatory restrictions, including the one in §.(a)(), if all exemption requirements are met.
For these reasons, the Staff has concluded that a licensee in decommissioning may seek the restart of reactor operation by applying to use relevant processes within the existing regulatory framework, including the license amendment, license transfer, and exemption processes.
B.
Relationship Between the Environmental Review and Hearing Request Requirements The Staff is here addressing as a general matter how certain information provided by HDI to support the environmental review relates to the hearing request requirements. The Staff is doing so because the amendments proceeding involves an unusual situation where the amendment requests invoke a categorical exclusion for the environmental review, but the Staff has instead decided to prepare an environmental assessment (EA). Relatedly, none of the proposed contentions address the applications arguments on the categorical exclusion criteria but instead contest other environmental information submitted by HDI. As discussed below, this other environmental information challenged by the Petitioners falls within the NRC definition of environmental report, and the Petitioners may challenge it in accordance with C.F.R.
§.(f)().
96 See, e.g., Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment; Defueled TS Amendment.


In each of the restart-related license amendment requests, HDI asserts that the categorical exclusion in C.F.R. §.(c)() applies.97 However, the Staff has determined not to invoke any categorical exclusions for the environmental review. Instead, the Staff has decided to prepare an EA that covers the restart-related amendment requests, transfer request, and exemption request, as discussed in a June, Federal Register notice (Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping).98 As described therein, if the Staff is able to determine that there are no significant impacts, the Staff intends to publish for comment a draft EA and a draft finding of no significant impact.99 While the Staff is not relying on the categorical exclusion arguments, three of the four amendment requests reference a separate HDI environmental evaluation in Enclosure of the Exemption Request. For example, after stating that a categorical exclusion applies, the Primary Amendment Request further states:
In support of this conclusion, as described in Reference, an independent environmental review of potentially new and significant information, and environmental issues not addressed in the October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement,
In support of this conclusion, as described in Reference, an independent environmental review of potentially new and significant information, and environmental issues not addressed in the October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement,
Regarding Palisades Nuclear Plant [License Renewal EIS Supplement] was performed. The review concluded that the proposed licensing actions environmental impacts are consistent with the findings in the [Palisades] RFOL Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (NUREG, Supplement ),
Regarding Palisades Nuclear Plant [License Renewal EIS Supplement] was performed. The review concluded that the proposed licensing actions environmental impacts are consistent with the findings in the [Palisades] RFOL Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (NUREG, Supplement ),
and hence the NRC staff recommendation to the Commission is applicable to this activity.100
and hence the NRC staff recommendation to the Commission is applicable to this activity.100 97 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; MSLB Amendment Request, Enclosure at -.
 
98 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, and Holtec Palisades, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant; Notice of Intent to Conduct Scoping Process and Prepare an Environmental Assessment, Fed. Reg.  
97 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at - ; Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at - ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; MSLB Amendment Request, Enclosure at -.
 
98 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, and Holtec Palisades, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant; Notice of Intent to Conduct Scoping Process and Prepare an Environmental Assessment, Fed. Reg.
,,, (June, ) (Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping).
,,, (June, ) (Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping).
99 Id.
99 Id.
100 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at -. The Reference mentioned in the quoted text is the Exemption Request.


100 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at -. The Reference mentioned in the quoted text is the Exemption Request.
The Administrative Controls Amendment Request and the Emergency Plan Amendment Request have the same text.101 The referenced new and significant review found in Enclosure of the Exemption Request was submitted to aid the NRC in its environmental review, which the Staff is conducting under the National Environmental Policy Act of, as amended (NEPA) § (), among other provisions. Therefore, Enclosure meets the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §., and the Staff will hereafter refer to it as the Environmental Report.102 Further, given the content of the Environmental Report and its ultimate conclusions, the Staff understands that it serves to support a determination that there would be no significant impact from restart of reactor operation at Palisades. The Environmental Report does not address conformance with the categorical exclusion criteria in C.F.R. §.(c)() but rather discusses the continued relevance of the environmental impact determinations in the License Renewal EIS Supplement. Specifically, the Environmental Report states that the License Renewal EIS Supplement reports SMALL impacts in all categories for which an impact determination was made and that HDI did not identify any new and significant information that would change these determinations.103 A SMALL impact determination means that [f]or the issue, environmental effects are not detectable or are so minor that they will neither destabilize nor noticeably alter any important attribute of the resource.104 The Environmental Report further states, Holtec considered that any new information regarding environmental issues with 101 Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at -.
 
102 See C.F.R. §. (stating that Environmental report means a document submitted to the Commission by an applicant for a permit, license, or other form of permission, or an amendment to or renewal of a permit, license or other form of permission, or by a petitioner for rulemaking, in order to aid the Commission in complying with section () of NEPA).
The Administrative Controls Amendment Request and the Emergency Plan Amendment
 
Request have the same text.101 The referenced new and significant review found in Enclosure
 
of the Exemption Request was submitted to ai d the NRC in its environmental review, which
 
the Staff is conducting under the National Environmental Policy Act of, as amended
 
(NEPA) § ( ), among other provisions. Therefore, Enclosure meets the definition of
 
Environmental Report in C.F.R. §., and the Staff will hereafter refer to it as the
 
Environmental Report.102
 
Further, given the content of the Environmental Report and its ultimate conclusions, the
 
Staff understands that it serves to support a determination that there would be no significant
 
impact from restart of reactor operation at Palisades. The Environmental Report does not
 
address conformance with the categorical exclusion criteria in C.F.R. §. (c)( ) but rather
 
discusses the continued relevance of the environmental impact determinations in the License
 
Renewal EIS Supplement. Specifically, the Environmental Report states that the License
 
Renewal EIS Supplement reports SMALL impacts in all categories for which an impact
 
determination was made and that HDI did not identify any new and significant information that
 
would change these determinations. 103 A SMALL impact determination means that [f]or the
 
issue, environmental effects are not detectable or are so minor that they will neither destabilize
 
nor noticeably alter any important attribute of the resource. 104 The Environmental Report further
 
states, Holtec considered that any new info rmation regarding environmental issues with
 
101 Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at -.
 
102 See C.F.R. §. (stating that Environmental report means a document submitted to the Commission by an applicant for a permit, license, or other form of permission, or an amendment to or renewal of a permit, license or other form of permission, or by a petitioner for rulemaking, in order to aid the Commission in complying with section ( ) of NEPA).
 
103 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
103 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
104 C.F.R. Part, App. B, Table B-n.. See also Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).


104 C.F.R. Part, App. B, Table B-n.. See also Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
MODERATE or LARGE impacts would be significant.105 Therefore, the Staff understands that the Environmental Report has the purpose of confirming that restart of Palisades would not have a significant environmental impact, consistent with the generic finding of no significant impact that the categorical exclusion cited by HDI represents.106 Moreover, the Environmental Report and the License Renewal EIS Supplement to which it relates are being considered by the Staff in its environmental review, which is assessing whether NRC approval of the restart-related actions would have a significant impact. As the Staff stated in its Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping:
 
To inform its environmental review, the NRC staff is considering a number of sources, including the previous NRC environmental review for [Palisades] license renewal that is documented in the October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement, Regarding Palisades Nuclear PlantFinal Report (hereafter License Renewal EIS Supplement). The License Renewal EIS Supplement addresses the environmental impacts of continued operation during the license renewal period, which is the same operating period applicable to HDIs requests for reauthorization of power operations. The NRC staff is also considering the environmental information that HDI submitted in Enclosure, Environmental New and Significant Review Proposed Resumption of Power Operations Palisades Nuclear Plant, of the September,, exemption request. As stated in the exemption request, Enclosure documents HDIs environmental review of potentially new and significant information, and environmental issues not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement.107 Therefore, the Environmental Report continues to relate to the environmental review for the restart-related amendment requests. As such, the Petitioners may challenge, and are indeed obligated to challenge, the Environmental Report under C.F.R. §.(f)(), which requires contentions to be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, including (as relevant here) the application, environmental report or other 105 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
MODERATE or LARGE impacts would be significant. 105 Therefore, the Staff understands that
106 See NEPA § (), U.S.C. § e() (providing that a categorical exclusion is a category of actions that a Federal agency has determined normally does not significantly affect the quality of the human environment within the meaning of section ()(C) of NEPA). See also C.F.R. §.(a).
 
107 Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, Fed. Reg. at,.
the Environmental Report has the purpose of confirming that restart of Palisades would not
 
have a significant environmental impact, consiste nt with the generic finding of no significant
 
impact that the categorical exclusion cited by HDI represents. 106
 
Moreover, the Environmental Report and the License Renewal EIS Supplement to which
 
it relates are being considered by the Staff in its environmental review, which is assessing
 
whether NRC approval of the restart-related actions would have a significant impact. As the
 
Staff stated in its Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping:
 
To inform its environmental review, the NRC staff is considering a number of sources, including the previous NRC environmental review for [Palisades] license renewal that is documented in the October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement, Regarding Palisades Nuclear PlantFinal Report (hereafter License Renewal EIS Supplement). The License Renewal EIS Supplement addresses the environmental impacts of continued operation during the license renewal period, which is the same operating period applicable to HDIs requests for reauthorization of power operations. The NRC staff is also considering the environmental information that HDI submitted in Enclosure, Environmental New and Significant Review Proposed Resumption of Power Operations Palisades Nuclear Plant, of the September,, exemption request. As stated in the exemption request, Enclosure documents HDIs environmental review of potentially new and significant information, and environmental issues not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement. 107
 
Therefore, the Environmental Report continues to relate to the environmental review for the
 
restart-related amendment requests. As such, the Petitioners may challenge, and are indeed
 
obligated to challenge, the Environmental Report under C.F.R. §. (f)( ), which requires
 
contentions to be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is
 
to be filed, including (as relevant here) the application, environmental report or other


105 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee. While subject to challenge, the Staff notes that the Environmental Report is being submitted voluntarily because NRC regulations do not require the submission of an Environmental Report for reactor license amendment requests in this context.108 Therefore, the environmental report content requirements of C.F.R. §.
 
and other Part regulations for the content of environmental reports do not apply to the instant Environmental Report. However, the Staffs environmental review is subject to, and will satisfy, the requirements of NEPA and NRC regulations for environmental assessments and associated determinations and findings, including discussion of the environmental impacts of the proposed actions.
106 See NEPA § (), U.S.C. § e() (providing that a categorical exclusion is a category of actions that a Federal agency has determined normally does not significantly affect the quality of the human environment within the meaning of section ( )(C) of NEPA). See also C.F.R. §. (a).
III.
 
The Petition Proffers a Contention of Omission that Is Admissible in Part A.
107 Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, Fed. Reg. at,.
Contention Admissibility Requirements The NRCs contention admissibility requirements are set forth in C.F.R. §.(f) of the Commissions Rules of Practice. To be admissible, a newly proffered contention must:
 
(i) Provide a specific statement of the issue of law or fact to be raised or controverted; (ii) Provide a brief explanation of the basis for the contention; (iii) Demonstrate that the issue raised in the contention is within the scope of the proceeding; (iv) Demonstrate that the issue raised in the contention is material to the findings the NRC must make to support the action that is involved in the proceeding; (v) Provide a concise statement of the alleged facts or expert opinions which support the requestor's/petitioner's position on the issue and on which the petitioner intends to rely at hearing, together with references to the specific sources and documents on which the requestor/petitioner intends to rely to support its position on the issue; and (vi) provide sufficient information to show that a genuine dispute exists with the applicant/licensee on a material issue of law or fact. This information must 108 See C.F.R. §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,  
supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee. While subject to challenge, the Staff
.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). Section.(d) refers to environmental reports for certain types of amendment requests, but these are not associated with restart of reactor operation for a plant in decommissioning.  
 
notes that the Environmental Report is being su bmitted voluntarily because NRC regulations do
 
not require the submission of an Environmental Report for reactor license amendment requests
 
in this context.108 Therefore, the environmental report content requirements of C.F.R. §.
 
and other Part regulations for the content of environmental reports do not apply to the instant
 
Environmental Report. However, the Staffs environmental review is subject to, and will satisfy,
 
the requirements of NEPA and NRC regulations for environmental assessments and associated
 
determinations and findings, including discussion of the environmental impacts of the proposed
 
actions.
 
III. The Petition Proffers a Contention of Omission that Is Admissible in Part
 
A. Contention Admissibility Requirements
 
The NRCs contention admissibility requirements are set forth in C.F.R. §. (f) of
 
the Commissions Rules of Practice. To be admissible, a newly proffered contention must:
 
(i) Provide a specific statement of the issue of law or fact to be raised or controverted;
 
(ii) Provide a brief explanation of the basis for the contention;
 
(iii) Demonstrate that the issue raised in the contention is within the scope of the proceeding;
 
(iv) Demonstrate that the issue raised in the contention is material to the findings the NRC must make to support the action that is involved in the proceeding;
 
(v) Provide a concise statement of the alleged facts or expert opinions which support the requestor's/petitioner's position on the issue and on which the petitioner intends to rely at hearing, together with references to the specific sources and documents on which the requestor/petitioner intends to rely to support its position on the issue; and
 
(vi) provide sufficient information to show that a genuine dispute exists with the applicant/licensee on a material issue of law or fact. This information must
 
108 See C.F.R. §. (a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,
.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). Section. (d) refers to environmental reports for certain types of amendment requests, but these are not associated with restart of reactor operation for a plant in decommissioning.
 
include references to specific portions of the application (including the applicant's environmental report and safety report) that the petitioner disputes and the supporting reasons for each dispute, or, if the petitioner believes that the application fails to contain information on a relevant matter as required by law, the identification of each failure and the supporting reasons for the petitioner's belief[.]109
 
Failure to satisfy any of the six pleading requirements renders a contention inadmissible. 110
 
Further, [c]ontentions must be based on documents or other information available at the time
 
the petition is to be filed, such as the application, supporting safety analysis report,
 
environmental report or other supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee, or
 
otherwise available to a petitioner. 111
 
The §. (f)() requirements are intended to focus litigation on concrete issues and
 
result in a clearer and more focused record for decision. 112 The Commission has stated that it
 
should not have to expend resources to support the hearing process unless there is an issue
 
that is appropriate for, and susceptible to, resolution in an NRC hearing. 113 The NRCs
 
contention admissibility requirements are strict by design and intended to ensure that
 
adjudicatory proceedings are triggered only by substantive safety or environmental issues,
 
rooted in a reasonably specific factual or legal ba sis and to screen out ill-defined, speculative,
 
or otherwise unsupported claims. 114 Further, a proposed contention must be rejected if it raises
 
issues beyond the scope of the proceeding as established by the Commission's hearing
 
109 C.F.R. §. (f)()(i)-(vi).
 
110 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point, Unit ) CLI--, NRC, ( ).
 
111 C.F.R. §. (f)( ).


include references to specific portions of the application (including the applicant's environmental report and safety report) that the petitioner disputes and the supporting reasons for each dispute, or, if the petitioner believes that the application fails to contain information on a relevant matter as required by law, the identification of each failure and the supporting reasons for the petitioner's belief[.]109 Failure to satisfy any of the six pleading requirements renders a contention inadmissible.110 Further, [c]ontentions must be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, such as the application, supporting safety analysis report, environmental report or other supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee, or otherwise available to a petitioner.111 The §.(f)() requirements are intended to focus litigation on concrete issues and result in a clearer and more focused record for decision.112 The Commission has stated that it should not have to expend resources to support the hearing process unless there is an issue that is appropriate for, and susceptible to, resolution in an NRC hearing.113 The NRCs contention admissibility requirements are strict by design and intended to ensure that adjudicatory proceedings are triggered only by substantive safety or environmental issues, rooted in a reasonably specific factual or legal basis and to screen out ill-defined, speculative, or otherwise unsupported claims.114 Further, a proposed contention must be rejected if it raises issues beyond the scope of the proceeding as established by the Commission's hearing 109 C.F.R. §.(f)()(i)-(vi).
110 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point, Unit ) CLI--, NRC, ().
111 C.F.R. §.(f)().
112 Changes to Adjudicatory Process, Fed. Reg., (Jan., ) (final rule).
112 Changes to Adjudicatory Process, Fed. Reg., (Jan., ) (final rule).
113 Id.
113 Id.
114 Exelon Generation Co. (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), CLI--, NRC, -
114 Exelon Generation Co. (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), CLI--, NRC, -
( ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
() (internal quotation marks omitted).  
 
notice.115 Moreover, C.F.R. §. forbids challenges to NRC regulations in adjudicatory
 
proceedings, absent a petition for waiver or exception (accompanied by affidavit) that
 
demonstrates prima facie that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the
 
particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation (or a provision of it)
 
would not serve the purposes for which the rule or regulation was adopted. 116
 
Presiding officers are expected to examine cited materials to verify that they do, in fact,
 
support a contention.117 Also, a document cited by a petitioner as the basis for a contention is
 
subject to scrutiny both for what it does and does not show. 118 A presiding officer may view a
 
petitioner's supporting information in a light favorable to the petitioner, 119 but the presiding
 
officer is not to search through pleadings or other materials to uncover arguments and support
 
never advanced by the petitioners themselves. 120
 
B. Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
Holtec seeks an exemption from the requirements of C.F.R. §., pursuant to C.F.R. §.. The proposed exemption would remove the C.F.R.
§. (a)( ) restriction that prohibits reactor power operations and retention of fuel in the reactor vessel when the reactor is in the process of decommissioning.
Holtecs proposed exemption does not comply with the requirements for an


115 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit ), NRC, ( )
notice.115 Moreover, C.F.R. §. forbids challenges to NRC regulations in adjudicatory proceedings, absent a petition for waiver or exception (accompanied by affidavit) that demonstrates prima facie that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation (or a provision of it) would not serve the purposes for which the rule or regulation was adopted.116 Presiding officers are expected to examine cited materials to verify that they do, in fact, support a contention.117 Also, a document cited by a petitioner as the basis for a contention is subject to scrutiny both for what it does and does not show.118 A presiding officer may view a petitioner's supporting information in a light favorable to the petitioner,119 but the presiding officer is not to search through pleadings or other materials to uncover arguments and support never advanced by the petitioners themselves.120 B.
Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
Holtec seeks an exemption from the requirements of C.F.R. §., pursuant to C.F.R. §.. The proposed exemption would remove the C.F.R.
§.(a)() restriction that prohibits reactor power operations and retention of fuel in the reactor vessel when the reactor is in the process of decommissioning.
Holtecs proposed exemption does not comply with the requirements for an 115 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit ), NRC, ()
(citing Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. (Marble Hill Nuclear Generating Station, Units and ),
(citing Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. (Marble Hill Nuclear Generating Station, Units and ),
ALAB-, NRC, - ()).
ALAB-, NRC, - ()).
116 C.F.R. §.(a)-(c). Whether special circumstances are present is assessed under the Millstone factors. Exelon Generation Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,
() (citing Dominion Nuclear Connecticut, Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Units and ),
CLI--, NRC, ()).
117 USEC, CLI--, NRC at.
118 NextEra Energy Seabrook, LLC (Seabrook Station, Unit ), CLI--, NRC, & n. ().
119 AmerGen Energy Co., LLC (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), CLI--, NRC,
().
120 USEC, CLI--, NRC at.


116 C.F.R. §. (a)-(c). Whether special circumstances are present is assessed under the Millstone factors. Exelon Generation Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,
exemption set forth in C.F.R. §.. Therefore, the NRC must not allow Holtec to use this exemption.121 In support of proposed Contention, the Petitioners provide several arguments challenging the Exemption Request and whether it meets the criteria for granting an exemption under C.F.R. §.. First, the Petitioners assert that Holtec has not demonstrated that exigent circumstances are present.122 Next, the Petitioners challenge Holtecs assertions that it meets the exemption criteria in §.(a)() that the exemption is authorized by law and will not present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security.123 Additionally, the Petitioners argue that the Exemption Request does not meet any of the criteria for demonstrating that special circumstances exist under §.(a)()(i)-(vi).124 Staff Response: The Petitioners describe the Exemption Request as the linchpin of Holtecs multifaceted scheme to remove Palisades from decommissioning status and return Palisades to active power operations.125 The Petitioners assert that because Holtec cannot meet the exemption criteria in §., the NRC must not grant Holtecs requested exemption.126 Specifically, the Petitioners argue that the Exemption Request must not be granted because the Exemption Request does not demonstrate that: ) exigent circumstances are present; ) the Exemption Request is authorized by law; ) there is no undue risk to public health and safety; and ) special circumstances exist. While the Staff agrees that the Petitioners may file contentions challenging the Exemption Request, the Staff concludes that proposed Contention is inadmissible because it raises arguments that are outside the scope of this 121 Petition at.
( ) (citing Dominion Nuclear Connecticut, Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Units and ),
CLI- -, NRC, ( )).
 
117 USEC, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
118 NextEra Energy Seabrook, LLC (Seabrook Station, Unit ), CLI--, NRC, & n. ( ).
 
119 AmerGen Energy Co., LLC (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), CLI- -, NRC,
( ).
 
120 USEC, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
exemption set forth in C.F.R. §.. Therefore, the NRC must not allow Holtec to use this exemption. 121
 
In support of proposed Contention, the Petitioners provide several arguments
 
challenging the Exemption Request and whether it meets the criteria for granting an exemption
 
under C.F.R. §.. First, the Petitioners assert that Holtec has not demonstrated that
 
exigent circumstances are present. 122 Next, the Petitioners challenge Holtecs assertions that it
 
meets the exemption criteria in §.(a)() that the exemption is authorized by law and will not
 
present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security. 123
 
Additionally, the Petitioners argue that the Exemption Request does not meet any of the criteria
 
for demonstrating that special circumstances exist under §.(a)( )(i)-(vi).124
 
Staff Response: The Petitioners describe the Exemption Request as the linchpin of
 
Holtecs multifaceted scheme to remove Pa lisades from decommissioning status and return
 
Palisades to active power operations. 125 The Petitioners assert that because Holtec cannot
 
meet the exemption criteria in §., the NRC must not grant Holtecs requested
 
exemption.126 Specifically, the Petitioners argue that the Exemption Request must not be
 
granted because the Exemption Request does not demonstrate that: ) exigent circumstances
 
are present; ) the Exemption Request is authorized by law; ) there is no undue risk to public
 
health and safety; and ) special circumstances exist. While the Staff agrees that the Petitioners
 
may file contentions challenging the Exemption Request, the Staff concludes that proposed
 
Contention is inadmissible because it raises arguments that are outside the scope of this
 
121 Petition at.
 
122 Petition at -.
122 Petition at -.
123 Petition at -.
123 Petition at -.
124 Petition at -.
124 Petition at -.
125 Petition at.
125 Petition at.
126 Petition at.


126 Petition at.
proceeding, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law.
 
The Exemption Request is Inextricably Intertwined with the Restart-Related Amendment Requests Although the Petitioners do not address this issue in their Petition, the Staff notes that the Exemption Request is inextricably intertwined to the restart-related amendment requests, and therefore, can be challenged through the filing of contentions in this license amendment proceeding. As the Commission has noted, when a requested exemption raises questions that are material to a proposed licensing action -- directly bears on whether the proposed action should be granted -- a petitioner in an adjudicatory proceeding on the licensing action may raise arguments relating to the exemption request.127 In the Staffs view, the Exemption Request is inextricably intertwined with the restart-related amendment requests because the NRC may not make the findings to issue these amendments without the Exemption Request being granted.128 Accordingly, the Exemption Request is subject to challenge in this license amendment proceeding.129 Although the Exemption Request is subject to challenge in this adjudicatory proceeding, as described below, proposed Contention is inadmissible because it raises arguments that are outside the scope of this proceeding, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the 127 See Palisades, CLI--, NRC at.
proceeding, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request,
128 NRC approval of the restart-related amendment requests would, among other things, amend the license to authorize power operations at Palisades. See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request, at. To grant the restart-related amendments, the NRC must find that the request complies with NRC regulations. See, e.g., C.F.R. §§.;.. However, to make these findings, the prohibition on operation found in C.F.R. §.(a)() must be removed for Palisades through the exemption process.
 
129 See Order of the Secretary (denying petition to intervene and request a hearing on the Exemption Request), at - (Dec., ) (unpublished) (MLA); Order of the Secretary (providing clarification to the Petitioners question regarding the Exemption Request), at - (Sept., )
unsupported, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material
(unpublished) (MLA).  
 
issue of fact or law.
 
. The Exemption Request is Inextricably Intertwined with the Restart-Related Amendment Requests
 
Although the Petitioners do not address this issue in their Petition, the Staff notes that
 
the Exemption Request is inextricably intertwined to the restart-related amendment requests,
 
and therefore, can be challenged through the filing of contentions in this license amendment
 
proceeding. As the Commission has noted, when a requested exemption raises questions that
 
are material to a proposed licensing action -- directly bears on whether the proposed action
 
should be granted -- a petitioner in an adjudicatory proceeding on the licensing action may raise
 
arguments relating to the exemption request. 127 In the Staffs view, the Exemption Request is
 
inextricably intertwined with the restart-re lated amendment requests because the NRC may not
 
make the findings to issue these amendment s without the Exemption Request being granted. 128
 
Accordingly, the Exemption Request is subject to challenge in this license amendment
 
proceeding.129
 
Although the Exemption Request is subject to challenge in this adjudicatory proceeding,
 
as described below, proposed Contention is inadmissible because it raises arguments that are
 
outside the scope of this proceeding, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the
 
127 See Palisades, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
128 NRC approval of the restart-related amendment requests would, among other things, amend the license to authorize power operations at Palisades. See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request, at. To grant the restart-related amendments, the NRC must find that the request complies with NRC regulations. See, e.g., C.F.R. §§. ;.. However, to make these findings, the prohibition on operation found in C.F.R. §. (a)( ) must be removed for Palisades through the exemption process.
 
129 See Order of the Secretary (denying petition to intervene and request a hearing on the Exemption Request), at - (Dec., ) (unpublished) (ML A ); Order of the Secretary (providing clarification to the Petitioners question regarding the Exemption Request), at - (Sept., )
(unpublished) (ML A ).
 
Exemption Request, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption
 
Request on a material issue of fact or law in accordance with C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii)-(vi).
 
. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding Exigent Circumstances Are Inadmissible Because They Concern Immaterial Issues and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Exemption Request on a Material Issue of Fact or Law
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners appear to assert that the Exemption Request
 
should be denied because it does not demonstrate that exigent circumstances are present. 130
 
However, the Petitioners do not demonstrate the materiality of their concern or that there is a
 
genuine, material dispute with the application because the Petitioners rely on outdated case law
 
and Commission policy that predates the current §. exemption standards promulgated in
 
( Specific Exemptions Rule) 131 that apply to the Exemption Request. For example, the
 
Petitioners quote from a D.C. Circuit case for its argument that exemptions under §.
 
are only available in the presence of exigent circumstances. 132 But the D.C. Circuit case, and
 
the WPPSS case it references, both predate the Specific Exemptions Rule. 133
 
Similarly, the Petitioners point to a Federal Register notice and assert that the
 
Commission has also emphasized that §. exemptions are to be granted sparingly and only
 
in cases of undue hardship, 134 but this notice also predates the Specific Exemptions Rule.


Exemption Request, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law in accordance with C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).
The Petitioners Arguments Regarding Exigent Circumstances Are Inadmissible Because They Concern Immaterial Issues and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Exemption Request on a Material Issue of Fact or Law In proposed Contention, the Petitioners appear to assert that the Exemption Request should be denied because it does not demonstrate that exigent circumstances are present.130 However, the Petitioners do not demonstrate the materiality of their concern or that there is a genuine, material dispute with the application because the Petitioners rely on outdated case law and Commission policy that predates the current §. exemption standards promulgated in
( Specific Exemptions Rule)131 that apply to the Exemption Request. For example, the Petitioners quote from a D.C. Circuit case for its argument that exemptions under §.
are only available in the presence of exigent circumstances.132 But the D.C. Circuit case, and the WPPSS case it references, both predate the Specific Exemptions Rule.133 Similarly, the Petitioners point to a Federal Register notice and assert that the Commission has also emphasized that §. exemptions are to be granted sparingly and only in cases of undue hardship,134 but this notice also predates the Specific Exemptions Rule.
130 Petition at -.
130 Petition at -.
131 Specific Exemptions; Clarification of Standards, Fed. Reg., (Dec., ) (final rule) (
131 Specific Exemptions; Clarification of Standards, Fed. Reg., (Dec., ) (final rule) (
Specific Exemptions Rule).
Specific Exemptions Rule).
 
132 Petition at (citing NRDC v. NRC, F.d (D.C. Cir. ) (citing Washington Public Power Supply System (WPPSS Nuclear Project Nos. and ), CLI--, NRC, ())).
132 Petition at (citing NRDC v. NRC, F. d (D.C. Cir. ) (citing Washington Public Power Supply System (WPPSS Nuclear Project Nos. and ), CLI- -, NRC, ())).
133 NRDC, F.d at ; WPPSS at. The Staff also notes that these cases pertain to Commission policy specifically related to exemptions from the requirements from §.(c) for site preparation activities, which is not relevant to HDIs Exemption Request from §.(a)(). Also, §.(b) provides specific criteria for exemptions from §..
 
133 NRDC, F. d at ; WPPSS at. The Staff also notes that these cases pertain to Commission policy specifically related to exemptions from the requirements from §.(c) for site preparation activities, which is not relevant to HDIs Exemption Request from §. (a)( ). Also, §.(b) provides specific criteria for exemptions from §..
 
134 Petition at (citing Pre-Construction Permit Activities, Fed. Reg.,,, (Apr., )).
134 Petition at (citing Pre-Construction Permit Activities, Fed. Reg.,,, (Apr., )).
The Staff notes that the portion of this Federal Register notice referenced in the Petition explains the Commission's policy of granting exemptions from §.(c) sparingly and only in cases of undue hardship.
The Staff notes that the portion of this Federal Register notice referenced in the Petition explains the Commission's policy of granting exemptions from §.(c) sparingly and only in cases of undue hardship.  
 
Further, the Petitioners point to the Commissions decision in Shoreham, which
 
held that exemptions under §. must demonstrate the presence of exigent or exceptional
 
circumstances that consider the equities of the situation. 135 Although Shoreham served as a
 
primary basis for the changes incorporated into the Specific Exemptions Rule,136 the final
 
version of the rule did not wholly adopt the equities considerations discussed in Shoreham.
 
Indeed, the Specific Exemptions Rule revised the standards for granting an exemption
 
under C.F.R. §., and added a provision in §.(a)( ) that the Commission will not
 
consider granting an exemption unless special circumstances are present. 137 The Specific
 
Exemptions Rule does not use the terminology that exigent circumstances or exceptional
 
circumstances must be present nor does it include all the equities considerations discussed in
 
Shoreham.138 Thus, the legal standard applicable to the Exemption Request is the version of


Further, the Petitioners point to the Commissions decision in Shoreham, which held that exemptions under §. must demonstrate the presence of exigent or exceptional circumstances that consider the equities of the situation.135 Although Shoreham served as a primary basis for the changes incorporated into the Specific Exemptions Rule,136 the final version of the rule did not wholly adopt the equities considerations discussed in Shoreham.
Indeed, the Specific Exemptions Rule revised the standards for granting an exemption under C.F.R. §., and added a provision in §.(a)() that the Commission will not consider granting an exemption unless special circumstances are present.137 The Specific Exemptions Rule does not use the terminology that exigent circumstances or exceptional circumstances must be present nor does it include all the equities considerations discussed in Shoreham.138 Thus, the legal standard applicable to the Exemption Request is the version of
§. promulgated in the Specific Exemptions Rule, not the case law cited in the Petition.
§. promulgated in the Specific Exemptions Rule, not the case law cited in the Petition.
 
Accordingly, to the extent the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request must demonstrate exigent or exceptional circumstances, these arguments are inadmissible because they do not reflect the current version of the requirements applicable to the Exemption Request, and therefore, are not material to the NRCs findings to issue the Exemption Request under  
Accordingly, to the extent the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request must demonstrate
§.(f)()(iv) and do not demonstrate a genuine dispute with the application on a material issue of fact or law under §.(f)()(vi).
 
135 Petition at (citing Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit ), CLI--,
exigent or exceptional circumstances, these arguments are inadmissible because they do not
NRC, n. (); Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit ),
 
LBP--, NRC, - ()).
reflect the current version of the requirements applicable to the Exemption Request, and
 
therefore, are not material to the NRCs findings to issue the Exemption Request under
 
§. (f)()(iv) and do not demonstrate a genuine dispute with the application on a material
 
issue of fact or law under §. (f)()(vi).
 
135 Petition at (citing Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit ), CLI- -,
NRC, n. ( ); Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit ),
LBP- -, NRC, - ( )).
 
136 Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,.
136 Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,.
137 Id. at,-.
138 Compare Shoreham, CLI--, NRC at n. with §.(a)()(i)-(vi) (describing the special circumstances criteria).


137 Id. at, -.
The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Is Not Authorized by Law Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not satisfy the criterion in §.(a)() that granting the exemption must be authorized by law.
 
Specifically, the Petitioners argue that Holtec does not cite any law that authorizes the exemption, but merely says that the Atomic Energy Act does not prohibit it.139 The Petitioners, however, do not accurately characterize HDIs justification in the Exemption Request. In its Exemption Request, HDI states that the requested exemption does not result in a violation of the Atomic Energy Act of, as amended, or the Commissions regulations, not simply that the AEA does not prohibit the exemption.140 Moreover, the Petitioners provide no legal basis for their assertions that HDIs justification in the Exemption Request is deficient or that affirmative legal authorization must be demonstrated.141 Indeed, HDIs justification is consistent with the preamble to the Specific Exemptions Rule which states, As in the existing rule, an exemption must be authorized by law. Apart from the very fact of granting the exemption relief itself, the granting of the exemption cannot be in violation of other applicable laws, such as the Atomic Energy Act or the National Environmental Policy Act.142 Thus, by demonstrating that the exemption is not in violation of the AEA or other applicable laws, a licensee effectively meets the §.(a) criterion that the exemption is authorized by law.
138 Compare Shoreham, CLI- -, NRC at n. with §.(a)( )(i)-(vi) (describing the special circumstances criteria).
The Petitioners also seem to take issue with HDIs reference to the PRM Denial and assert that in this denial, the Commission mentioned in passing that the existing regulations might be available, through an exemption, to accomplish the purpose, but §.
 
. The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Is Not Authorized by Law Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not
 
satisfy the criterion in §.(a)() that granting the exemption must be authorized by law.
 
Specifically, the Petitioners argue that Holtec does not cite any law that authorizes the
 
exemption, but merely says that the Atomic Energy Act does not prohibit it. 139 The Petitioners,
 
however, do not accurately characterize HDIs justification in the Exemption Request. In its
 
Exemption Request, HDI states that the requested exemption does not result in a violation of
 
the Atomic Energy Act of, as amended, or the Commissions regulations, not simply that
 
the AEA does not prohibit the exemption. 140 Moreover, the Petitioners provide no legal basis for
 
their assertions that HDIs justification in the Exemption Request is deficient or that affirmative
 
legal authorization must be demonstrated. 141 Indeed, HDIs justification is consistent with the
 
preamble to the Specific Exemptions Rule which states, As in the existing rule, an
 
exemption must be authorized by law. Apart from the very fact of granting the exemption relief
 
itself, the granting of the exemption cannot be in violation of other applicable laws, such as the
 
Atomic Energy Act or the National Environmental Policy Act. 142 Thus, by demonstrating that the
 
exemption is not in violation of the AEA or other applicable laws, a licensee effectively meets
 
the §.(a) criterion that the exemption is authorized by law.
 
The Petitioners also seem to take issue with HDIs reference to the PRM Denial
 
and assert that in this denial, the Commission mentioned in passing that the existing
 
regulations might be available, through an exemption, to accomplish the purpose, but §.
 
139 Petition at.
139 Petition at.
140 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
140 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
141 Petition at.
141 Petition at.
142 Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,.


142 Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,.
was not mentioned.143 However, in the PRM Denial, the Commission stated that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework.144 As discussed in Discussion Section II.A, the §. exemption process is part of the existing regulatory framework and, therefore, may be used by a licensee to seek approval to authorize restart of a reactor in decommissioning. Thus, to the extent that the Petitioners are challenging the existing regulatory framework or the exemption process in §., such challenges are disallowed by C.F.R. §. and are otherwise immaterial and outside the scope of this proceeding. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments that HDI has not demonstrated that the Exemption Request is authorized by law is inadmissible because it raises issues that are out of scope, immaterial, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv), and (vi).
 
The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Does Not Meet the No Undue Risk Standard Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application In proposed Contention, the Petitioners also argue that the Exemption Request does not satisfy the criteria in §.(a)() that granting the exemption will not present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security.145 The Petitioners challenge the Exemption Request by asserting that Holtec simply states that Palisades will be returned to the condition it was in prior to decommissioning146 which they claim is problematic because there were significant safety problems with the plant and risks to the public health and safety prompted Palisades to be shut down earlier than anticipated.147 As support, the Petitioners 143 Petition at -.
was not mentioned.143 However, in the PRM Denial, the Commission stated that the NRC
 
may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory
 
framework.144 As discussed in Discussion Section II.A, the §. exemption process is part of
 
the existing regulatory framework and, therefore, may be used by a licensee to seek approval to
 
authorize restart of a reactor in decommissioning. Thus, to the extent that the Petitioners are
 
challenging the existing regulatory framework or the exemption process in §., such
 
challenges are disallowed by C.F.R. §. and are otherwise immaterial and outside the
 
scope of this proceeding. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments that HDI has not
 
demonstrated that the Exemption Request is authorized by law is inadmissible because it raises
 
issues that are out of scope, immaterial, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption
 
Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii), (iv), and (vi).
 
. The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Does Not Meet the No Undue Risk Standard Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners also argue that the Exemption Request does
 
not satisfy the criteria in §.(a)() that granting the exemption will not present an undue risk
 
to the public health and safety and common defense and security. 145 The Petitioners challenge
 
the Exemption Request by asserting that Holtec simply states that Palisades will be returned to
 
the condition it was in prior to decommissioning 146 which they claim is problematic because
 
there were significant safety problems with the plant and risks to the public health and safety
 
prompted Palisades to be shut down earlier than anticipated. 147 As support, the Petitioners
 
143 Petition at -.
 
144 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at,.
144 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at,.
145 Petition at.
145 Petition at.
146 Petition at.
146 Petition at.
147 Petition at.


147 Petition at.
point to the declaration of their expert, Arnold Gundersen (Gundersen Declaration).148 Specifically, the Petitioners reference Mr. Gundersens assertions that [t]he overall design of the Palisades reactor is not licensable to st century standards, that Palisades is one of the worlds most decrepit and flawed nuclear reactors, and that when Entergy sold Palisades to Holtec, the reactor was operating with poorly maintained parts, woefully inadequate safety equipment and outmoded components.149 However, neither the Petition nor the Gundersen Declaration contain any factual basis to support these conclusory assertions. Conclusory assertions, even by an expert, do not support the admissibility of a contention.150 Moreover, the Petitioners, through their Petition and Gundersen Declaration, do not specifically challenge or dispute any portion of the Exemption Request or the restart-related amendments that are the subject of this proceeding.
 
Additionally, the Petitioners mischaracterize the arguments in the Exemption Request as simply stating that the plant will be returned to the condition it was in prior to decommissioning.
point to the declaration of their expert, Arnold Gundersen (Gundersen Declaration). 148
HDIs primary argument that the Exemption Request will not present an undue risk to public health and safety is based on its proposal to restore the Palisades licensing basis through NRC review and approval of the restart-related amendment requests and Restart Transfer Request, which will ensure compliance with NRC safety regulations.151 HDI further states in its Exemption Request that NRC inspection activities during development and implementation of the return to service plans provide added assurance that SSCs will function as required by the reinstated licensing basis.152 The Petitioners do not provide any information in the Petition or the 148 See Petition, Exhibit A (Gundersen Declaration).
 
Specifically, the Petitioners reference Mr. Gunder sens assertions that [t]he overall design of
 
the Palisades reactor is not licensable to st century standards, that Palisades is one of the
 
worlds most decrepit and flawed nuclear reactors, and that when Entergy sold Palisades to
 
Holtec, the reactor was operating with poorly maintained parts, woefully inadequate safety
 
equipment and outmoded components. 149 However, neither the Petition nor the Gundersen
 
Declaration contain any factual basis to suppor t these conclusory assertions. Conclusory
 
assertions, even by an expert, do not support the admissibility of a contention. 150 Moreover, the
 
Petitioners, through their Petition and Gundersen De claration, do not specifically challenge or
 
dispute any portion of the Exemption Request or the restart-related amendments that are the
 
subject of this proceeding.
 
Additionally, the Petitioners mischaracterize the arguments in the Exemption Request as
 
simply stating that the plant will be returned to the condition it was in prior to decommissioning.
 
HDIs primary argument that the Exemption Request will not present an undue risk to public
 
health and safety is based on its proposal to restore the Palisades licensing basis through NRC
 
review and approval of the restart-related amendment requests and Restart Transfer Request,
 
which will ensure compliance with NRC safety regulations. 151 HDI further states in its Exemption
 
Request that NRC inspection activities during de velopment and implementation of the return to
 
service plans provide added assurance that SSCs will function as required by the reinstated
 
licensing basis.152 The Petitioners do not provide any information in the Petition or the
 
148 See Petition, Exhibit A (Gundersen Declaration).
 
149 Petition at - (citing Gundersen Declaration, at, ).
149 Petition at - (citing Gundersen Declaration, at, ).
 
150 See USEC, CLI--, NRC at.
150 See USEC, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
151 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
151 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
152 Id.


152 Id.
Gundersen Declaration to address or challenge any of the justifications HDI presented in the Exemption Request.
 
Each of the restart-related licensing requests - the license amendment and transfer requests - address changes to the Palisades license, UFSAR, emergency preparedness plans, licensed operating authority, etc., for a reactor in operation, and each of these changes are subject to specific NRC safety regulations. Licensees must comply with NRC safety regulations, and compliance with NRC safety regulations is presumptively protective of public health and safety.153 With respect to licensing actions, the NRC adheres to the no undue risk standard, which the Commission has stated is equivalent to the adequate protection standard set out in AEA § a. ( U.S.C. § (a)), governing approval of licensing actions.154 Thus, any challenge to whether the plant will safely operate should address the safety regulations pertinent to these requests. While the Petitioners and their expert make many conclusory assertions regarding plant safety at Palisades, they do not assert that any specific safety regulations are unmet. Also, the restart-related amendment and transfer requests provide opportunities to raise concerns that the proposed restart does not satisfy the NRCs safety regulations. Therefore, the Petitioners challenge to the Exemption Request is effectively a back-door challenge to the NRCs existing safety regulations using the general no undue risk standard in §.(a)() and is barred under §..
Gundersen Declaration to address or challenge any of the justifications HDI presented in the
Further, contrary to the Petitioners assertions, the Staff notes that the submission of the  
 
§.(a)() certifications was a voluntary action on the part of Entergy, not the result of any NRC finding or action that a safety problem existed.155 The no undue risk standard in 153 See, e.g., AmerCen Energy Co., LLC (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), LBP--, NRC  
Exemption Request.
, () (citing Maine Yankee Atomic Power Company (Maine Yankee Atomic Power Station),
 
Each of the restart-related licensing requests - the license amendment and transfer
 
requests - address changes to the Palisades license, UFSAR, emergency preparedness plans,
 
licensed operating authority, etc., for a reactor in operation, and each of these changes are
 
subject to specific NRC safety regulations. Lice nsees must comply with NRC safety regulations,
 
and compliance with NRC safety regulations is pr esumptively protective of public health and
 
safety.153 With respect to licensing actions, the NRC adheres to the no undue risk standard,
 
which the Commission has stated is equivalent to the adequate protection standard set out in
 
AEA § a. ( U.S.C. § (a)), governing approval of licensing actions. 154 Thus, any
 
challenge to whether the plant will safely operate should address the safety regulations
 
pertinent to these requests. While the Petitioners and their expert make many conclusory
 
assertions regarding plant safety at Palisades, they do not assert that any specific safety
 
regulations are unmet. Also, the restart-related amendment and transfer requests provide
 
opportunities to raise concerns that the propos ed restart does not satisfy the NRCs safety
 
regulations. Therefore, the Petitioners challenge to the Exemption Request is effectively a
 
back-door challenge to the NRCs existing safety regulations using the general no undue risk
 
standard in §.(a)() and is barred under §..
 
Further, contrary to the Petitioners assertions, the Staff notes that the submission of the
 
§. (a)() certifications was a voluntary action on the part of Entergy, not the result of any
 
NRC finding or action that a safety problem existed. 155 The no undue risk standard in
 
153 See, e.g., AmerCen Energy Co., LLC (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), LBP- -, NRC
, ( ) (citing Maine Yankee Atomic Power Company (Maine Yankee Atomic Power Station),
ALAB-, AEC, ()).
ALAB-, AEC, ()).
154 Revision of Backfitting Process for Power Reactors, Fed. Reg.,,, (June, ) (Final Rule).
154 Revision of Backfitting Process for Power Reactors, Fed. Reg.,,, (June, ) (Final Rule).
155 See generally Palisades.(a)() Certifications.


155 See generally Palisades. (a)() Certifications.
§.(a)() is particularly pertinent where a licensee proposes meeting the underlying purpose of the specific safety requirements in NRC regulations in an alternate manner. In that case, the licensee must ordinarily show that the proposed alternate approach is another way to meet the general safety objective of the regulation. But §.(a)() does not impose specific safety requirements. It simply demarcates the point at which a licensee is no longer authorized to operate a reactor. Accordingly, there is no reason (and the Petitioners do not provide any reason) why meeting the NRCs safety regulations for operation would somehow fail to meet the no undue risk standard. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments challenging whether the Exemption Request has met the no undue risk standard are inadmissible because they are unsupported and do not present a genuine dispute with the application on a material issue of law or fact under C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).
 
The Petitioners also rely on Mr. Gundersens assertions challenging Holtecs void of corporate nuclear power plant construction and operating experience,156 and arguments that the project underestimates the extreme costs and duration for making repairs.157 However, these assertions regarding Holtecs purported lack of operating experience and extreme project costs appear to challenge Holtecs technical and financial qualifications to operate Palisades, which are issues relevant to the Restart Transfer Request and not any of the restart-related license amendment requests that are the subject of this proceeding or the Exemption Request that is intertwined with the amendment requests.158 Accordingly, these arguments, which the Petitioners could have properly raised within the scope of the license transfer proceeding, are 156 Petition at - (citing Gundersen Declaration, at ).
§.(a)() is particularly pertinent where a licensee proposes meeting the underlying purpose
 
of the specific safety requirements in NRC regulations in an alternate manner. In that case, the
 
licensee must ordinarily show that the proposed alternate approach is another way to meet the
 
general safety objective of the regulation. But §. (a)( ) does not impose specific safety
 
requirements. It simply demarcates the point at which a licensee is no longer authorized to
 
operate a reactor. Accordingly, there is no reason (and the Petitioners do not provide any
 
reason) why meeting the NRCs safety regulations for operation would somehow fail to meet the
 
no undue risk standard. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments challenging whether the
 
Exemption Request has met the no undue risk standard are inadmissible because they are
 
unsupported and do not present a genuine dispute with the application on a material issue of
 
law or fact under C.F.R. §. (f)()(vi).
 
The Petitioners also rely on Mr. Gundersens assertions challenging Holtecs void of
 
corporate nuclear power plant construction and operating experience, 156 and arguments that
 
the project underestimates the extreme costs and duration for making repairs. 157 However,
 
these assertions regarding Holtecs purported lack of operating experience and extreme project
 
costs appear to challenge Holtecs technical and financial qualifications to operate Palisades,
 
which are issues relevant to the Restart Transfer Request and not any of the restart-related
 
license amendment requests that are the subjec t of this proceeding or the Exemption Request
 
that is intertwined with the amendment requests. 158 Accordingly, these arguments, which the
 
Petitioners could have properly raised within the scope of the license transfer proceeding, are
 
156 Petition at - (citing Gundersen Declaration, at ).
 
157 Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration, at ).
157 Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration, at ).
158 See C.F.R. §.(b)()(i) (stating that a license transfer application for an operating license shall include, as much of the information described in §§. and. of this part with respect to the identity and technical and financial qualifications of the proposed transferee as would be required by those sections if the application were for an initial license). As noted above, three of the Petitioners filed a hearing request in the transfer proceeding; however, that request did not raise any challenges to Holtecs financial or technical qualifications.


158 See C.F.R. §. (b)()(i) (stating that a license transfer application for an operating license shall include, as much of the information described in §§. and. of this part with respect to the identity and technical and financial qualifications of the proposed transferee as would be required by those sections if the application were for an initial license). As noted above, three of the Petitioners filed a hearing request in the transfer proceeding; however, that request did not raise any challenges to Holtecs financial or technical qualifications.
inadmissible here because they fall outside the scope of this license amendment proceeding and are immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the restart-related license amendments and Exemption Request.
 
For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners have not demonstrated that granting the Exemption Request will present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security. Their contention is therefore inadmissible because it raises concerns that are out of scope, immaterial, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the application under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).
inadmissible here because they fall outside the scope of this license amendment proceeding
The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Does Not Meet Any of the Special Circumstances Criteria in §.(a)() Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, Unsupported, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet any of the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)().159 The regulations in  
 
§.(a)() only require the presence of one of the special circumstances listed in  
and are immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the restart-related license
§.(a)()(i)-(vi). Thus, in order to prevail in their assertion that the Exemption Request should be denied, the Petitioners must demonstrate that no special circumstances exist that warrant approval of the exemption. As explained below, the Petitioners present several flawed arguments that ultimately fail to demonstrate that the Exemption Request provides no special circumstances under §.(a)(). Accordingly, the Petitioners Contention is inadmissible because it raises issues that are out of scope, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request, unsupported, and does not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).
 
amendments and Exemption Request.
 
For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners have not demonstrated that granting
 
the Exemption Request will present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common
 
defense and security. Their contention is therefore inadmissible because it raises concerns that
 
are out of scope, immaterial, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the
 
application under C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii)-(vi).
 
. The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Does Not Meet Any of the Special Circumstances Criteria in §.(a)( ) Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, Unsupported, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not
 
meet any of the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)( ).159 The regulations in
 
§.(a)( ) only require the presence of one of the special circumstances listed in
 
§.(a)( )(i)-(vi). Thus, in order to prevail in th eir assertion that the Exemption Request
 
should be denied, the Petitioners must demonstrate that no special circumstances exist that
 
warrant approval of the exemption. As explained below, the Petitioners present several flawed
 
arguments that ultimately fail to demonstrate that the Exemption Request provides no special
 
circumstances under §.(a)( ). Accordingly, the Petitioners Contention is inadmissible
 
because it raises issues that are out of scope, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to
 
issue the Exemption Request, unsupported, and does not raise a genuine dispute with the
 
Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii)-(vi).
 
159 Petition at -.
159 Petition at -.
: a. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in
: a. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in  
§.(a)( )(ii) Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request
§.(a)()(ii) Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)()(ii) that application of the regulation in the particular circumstances would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule.160 Specifically, the Petitioners assert that the purpose of §. is to ensure that the reactor is certified to be in decommissioning status in order to facilitate decommissioning, and that [i]t is absurd to think that §. is not serving its purpose in this case considering that Palisades has been in the process of decommissioning since June.161 But the Petitioners seem to misunderstand the standard in §.(a)()(ii). To determine whether the special circumstances criteria in §.(a)()(ii) are met, the particular circumstances of the case must be considered.162 The particular circumstances of the case, as described in the Exemption Request, are that HDI, a licensee in decommissioning for which the  
 
§.(a) certifications have been docketed, is seeking to restart the reactor and exit the decommissioning process.163 Considering that HDI is seeking to restart the reactor and exit the decommissioning process, HDI must demonstrate that the §.(a)() prohibition on operation would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule under these particular circumstances. The Petitioners do not explain, nor does the Staff perceive, why the purpose of §.(a)()-(), or the regulation itself, should be interpreted to prohibit a licensee from requesting an exemption to restart operation of a plant in decommissioning if the licensee seeks to operate the reactor again. Ultimately, if restart is approved, the facility would still need to be decommissioned, 160 Petition at -.
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not
 
meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)( )(ii) that application of the
 
regulation in the particular circumstances would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule. 160
 
Specifically, the Petitioners assert that the purpose of §. is to ensure that the reactor is
 
certified to be in decommissioning status in order to facilitate decommissioning, and that [i]t is
 
absurd to think that §. is not serving its purpose in this case considering that Palisades
 
has been in the process of decommissioning since June.161
 
But the Petitioners seem to misunderstand the standard in §.(a)( )(ii). To determine
 
whether the special circumstances criteria in §.(a)( )(ii) are met, the particular
 
circumstances of the case must be considered. 162 The particular circumstances of the case, as
 
described in the Exemption Request, are that HDI, a licensee in decommissioning for which the
 
§. (a) certifications have been docketed, is seeking to restart the reactor and exit the
 
decommissioning process. 163 Considering that HDI is seeking to restart the reactor and exit the
 
decommissioning process, HDI must demonstrate that the §. (a)( ) prohibition on operation
 
would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule under these particular circumstances. The
 
Petitioners do not explain, nor does the Staff perceive, why the purpose of §. (a)()-( ), or
 
the regulation itself, should be interpreted to prohibit a licensee from requesting an exemption to
 
restart operation of a plant in decommissioning if the licensee seeks to operate the reactor
 
again. Ultimately, if restart is approved, the facility would still need to be decommissioned,
 
160 Petition at -.
 
161 Petition at.
161 Petition at.
162 C.F.R. §.(a)()(ii) (Application of the regulation in the particular circumstances would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule or is not necessary to achieve the underlying purpose of the rule).
163 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.


162 C.F.R. §.(a)( )(ii) (Application of the regulation in the particular circumstances would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule or is not necessary to achieve the underlying purpose of the rule).
following submission and docketing of the §.(a) certifications after any subsequent period of operation.
 
The Petitioners also challenge the statement in the Exemption Request that §.(a) serves to notify the NRC of the licensees intent to place the plant into a decommissioning status and argue that if the intent of the rule was to provide notification, then Holtec could rescind the certification.164 While it is clear on the face of the regulations that the §.(a) certifications serve the purpose of notifying the NRC of the licensees decommissioning plans,165 the Petitioners provide no legal basis for why an exemption from the §.(a)() restriction prohibiting power operation would be unnecessary to restart operations. Moreover, the Exemption Request provides another purpose for the §.(a)() rulethat the certifications also identify the point in time when a reactor formally enters the decommissioning process.166 The Staff notes that the statement that the certifications also identify the point in time when a reactor formally enters the decommissioning process167 is an accurate summary of the plain language of §.(a)()-() and the Petitioners do not dispute this purpose. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments are inadmissible because they do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).
163 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
: b. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in  
 
§.(a)()(iii) Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)()(iii) that compliance would 164 Petition at.
following submission and docketing of the §. (a) certifications after any subsequent period
165 See e.g., C.F.R. §.(a)()(i) (When a licensee has determined to permanently cease operations the licensee shall, within days, submit a written certification to the NRC....); §.(a)()(ii) (Once fuel has been permanently removed from the reactor vessel, the licensee shall submit a written certification to the NRC.... ).
 
of operation.
 
The Petitioners also challenge the statement in the Exemption Request that §. (a)
 
serves to notify the NRC of the licensees intent to place the plant into a decommissioning
 
status and argue that if the intent of the rule was to provide notification, then Holtec could
 
rescind the certification. 164 While it is clear on the face of the regulations that the §. (a)
 
certifications serve the purpose of notifying the NRC of the licensees decommissioning plans, 165
 
the Petitioners provide no legal basis for why an exemption from the §. (a)( ) restriction
 
prohibiting power operation would be unnecessary to restart operations. Moreover, the
 
Exemption Request provides another purpose for the §. (a)( ) rulethat the certifications
 
also identify the point in time when a reactor formally enters the decommissioning process. 166
 
The Staff notes that the statement that the certifications also identify the point in time when a
 
reactor formally enters the decommissioning process 167 is an accurate summary of the plain
 
language of §. (a)()-( ) and the Petitioners do not dispute this purpose. For these reasons,
 
the Petitioners arguments are inadmissible because they do not raise a genuine dispute with
 
the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §. (f)()(vi).
: b. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in
§.(a)( )(iii) Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not
 
meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)( )(iii) that compliance would
 
164 Petition at.
 
165 See e.g., C.F.R. §. (a)()(i) (When a licensee has determined to permanently cease operations the licensee shall, within days, submit a written certification to the NRC....); §. (a)()(ii) (Once fuel has been permanently removed from the reactor vessel, the licensee shall submit a written certification to the NRC.... ).
 
166 Exemption Request, Enclosure at.
166 Exemption Request, Enclosure at.
167 Id.


167 Id.
result in undue hardship or other costs that are significantly in excess of those contemplated when the regulation was adopted.168 The Exemption Request states that without the exemption, HDI would not be able to obtain authorization to operate Palisades which would result in an undue hardship, by preventing the return to the Michigan electrical grid of megawatts of safe and reliable carbon-free electricity, and a dependable baseload generation vital to Michigan residents and businesses, thus unfairly hindering economic development in the state.169 The Petitioners challenge this argument and assert that [e]ven if, as Holtec contends, reopening Palisades would benefit the people of Michigan (a concept with which Petitioners vehemently disagree), that does not show an undue hardship on Holtec.170 The Petitioners appear to be arguing that the Exemption Request does not show an undue hardship to Holtec itself.
 
However, the Petitioners provide no legal basis for the assertion that undue hardship must be experienced by the licensee or applicant itself. Therefore, the Petitioners do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request.
result in undue hardship or other costs that are significantly in excess of those contemplated
The Petitioners also point to NRDC v. NRC, and argue that Holtec has not demonstrated an exigent circumstance or undue hardship.171 However, as previously stated, NRDC v. NRC predates the Specific Exemptions rule that promulgated the version of §.(a)()
 
currently applicable to the Exemption Request, and is, therefore, inapplicable here. Regardless, the Petitioners do not explain how the case supports their position that HDI has not demonstrated undue hardship. Finally, to the extent the Petitioners are arguing that the Exemption Request should have considered the economic interest of others,172 these 168 Petition at -.
when the regulation was adopted. 168 The Exemption Request states that without the exemption,
 
HDI would not be able to obtain authorization to operate Palisades which would result in an
 
undue hardship, by preventing the return to the Michigan electrical grid of megawatts of
 
safe and reliable carbon-free electricity, and a dependable baseload generation vital to Michigan
 
residents and businesses, thus unfairly hindering economic development in the state. 169 The
 
Petitioners challenge this argument and assert that [e]ven if, as Holtec contends, reopening
 
Palisades would benefit the people of Michigan (a concept with which Petitioners vehemently
 
disagree), that does not show an undue hardship on Holtec. 170 The Petitioners appear to be
 
arguing that the Exemption Request does not show an undue hardship to Holtec itself.
 
However, the Petitioners provide no legal basis for the assertion that undue hardship must be
 
experienced by the licensee or applicant itself. Therefore, the Petitioners do not raise a genuine,
 
material dispute with the Exemption Request.
 
The Petitioners also point to NRDC v. NRC, and argue that Holtec has not demonstrated
 
an exigent circumstance or undue hardship. 171 However, as previously stated, NRDC v. NRC
 
predates the Specific Exemptions rule that promulgated the version of §.(a)( )
 
currently applicable to the Exemption Request, and is, therefore, inapplicable here. Regardless,
 
the Petitioners do not explain how the case supports their position that HDI has not
 
demonstrated undue hardship. Finally, to the extent the Petitioners are arguing that the
 
Exemption Request should have considered the economic interest of others, 172 these
 
168 Petition at -.
 
169 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
169 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
170 Petition at.
170 Petition at.
171 Petition at (citing NRDC, F.d at ).
172 Petition at (Regional grid planners, other utilities, business forecasters and their clients all have had to adjust to the decision. The class of those whose economic interests must be taken into consideration along with those of Holtec is quite extensive.).


171 Petition at (citing NRDC, F. d at ).
arguments appear to contradict the Petitioners prior argument that Holtec needs to show undue hardship on itself. For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners arguments are inadmissible because they do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).
 
: c. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in  
172 Petition at (Regional grid planners, other utilities, business forecasters and their clients all have had to adjust to the decision. The class of those whose economic interests must be taken into consideration along with those of Holtec is quite extensive.).
§.(a)()(vi) Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, Unsupported and Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)()(vi) that there is present any other material circumstance not considered when the regulation was adopted for which it would be in the public interest to grant an exemption.173 In doing so, the Petitioners provide several arguments that assert that Holtec has not demonstrated that the Exemption Request is in the public interest.174 The Petitioners arguments, however, rely on outdated legal authorities and standards that are inapplicable to HDIs Exemption Request from §.(a)(). Specifically, the Petitioners rely on CLI-- and CLI-- and characterize the public interest standard as stringent and note that exemptions of this sort are to be granted sparingly and only in extraordinary circumstances.175 But both of these cases predate the Specific Exemptions rule which promulgated the version of §. applicable to the Exemption Request and focus on exemptions under a different standard - §.(b), which applies only to exemption requests from the requirements in §. related to site preparation activities.176 173 Petition at -.
 
arguments appear to contradict the Petitioners prior argument that Holtec needs to show undue
 
hardship on itself. For the reasons discussed abov e, the Petitioners arguments are inadmissible
 
because they do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of
 
fact or law under C.F.R. §. (f)()(vi).
: c. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in
§.(a)( )(vi) Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, Unsupported and Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not
 
meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)( )(vi) that there is present any
 
other material circumstance not considered when the regulation was adopted for which it would
 
be in the public interest to grant an exemption. 173 In doing so, the Petitioners provide several
 
arguments that assert that Holtec has not dem onstrated that the Exemption Request is in the
 
public interest.174 The Petitioners arguments, however, rely on outdated legal authorities and
 
standards that are inapplicable to HDIs Exemption Request from §. (a)( ). Specifically, the
 
Petitioners rely on CLI- - and CLI- - and characterize the public interest standard as
 
stringent and note that exemptions of this sort are to be granted sparingly and only in
 
extraordinary circumstances. 175 But both of these cases predate the Specific Exemptions
 
rule which promulgated the version of §. applicable to the Exemption Request and focus
 
on exemptions under a different standard - §.(b), which applies only to exemption requests
 
from the requirements in §. related to site preparation activities. 176
 
173 Petition at -.
 
174 Petition at -.
174 Petition at -.
175 Petition at (citing United States Department of Energy (Clinch River Breeder Reactor Plant), CLI-
175 Petition at (citing United States Department of Energy (Clinch River Breeder Reactor Plant), CLI-
-, NRC, ( ) (citing WPPSS, CLI- -, NRC ())).
-, NRC, () (citing WPPSS, CLI--, NRC ())).
 
176 See Clinch River Breeder Reactor, CLI--, NRC at, - (applying the exemption standards in §.(b)); WPPSS, CLI--, NRC at (referencing the exemption standards in  
176 See Clinch River Breeder Reactor, CLI- -, NRC at, - (applying the exemption standards in §.(b)); WPPSS, CLI- -, NRC at (referencing the exemption standards in
§.(b)). See also C.F.R. §.(b).  
§.(b)). See also C.F.R. §.(b).
 
In the Exemption Request, HDI relies on the NRC regulatory basis document developed
 
in support of the proposed decommissioning rule and states that the NRC designed the
 
current CFR Part regulations for reactor decommissioning for plants that were expected to
 
be permanently shut down at the end of their operating license term. 177 The Exemption
 
Request also states that the current regulation in §. was not written to address the unique
 
[Palisades] circumstance of returning to power operations after the §. certifications have
 
been docketed by the NRC. 178 HDI also points to the support from the Michigan Governor
 
demonstrating the states urgency and necessity for the reauthorization of power operations
 
and Palisades.179
 
The Petitioners appear to challenge HDIs arguments and attempt to assert that the NRC
 
may have considered the possibility of restarting a reactor when it promulgated the
 
decommissioning rules,180 but they provide no support for this position, nor do they
 
acknowledge or challenge HDIs reference to the NRC regulatory basis document as support for
 
HDIs position. Similarly, the Petitioners s peculate, without any support, that if the NRC had
 
considered the possibility of restarting a decommissioning reactor, it would have provided for
 
that possibility in the rules. Moreover, the Petitioners assert that Holtec must establish that
 
restarting Palisades is in the public interest, 181 but they do not challenge the public interest
 
justification in the Exemption Request related to the State of Michigans urgency and necessity
 
for reauthorization of power operations at Palisades as a material circumstance not considered
 
177 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at (citing Regulatory Improvements for Power Reactors Transitioning to Decommissioning, Regulatory Basis Document (Nov., ) (MLA)).


In the Exemption Request, HDI relies on the NRC regulatory basis document developed in support of the proposed decommissioning rule and states that the NRC designed the current CFR Part regulations for reactor decommissioning for plants that were expected to be permanently shut down at the end of their operating license term.177 The Exemption Request also states that the current regulation in §. was not written to address the unique
[Palisades] circumstance of returning to power operations after the §. certifications have been docketed by the NRC.178 HDI also points to the support from the Michigan Governor demonstrating the states urgency and necessity for the reauthorization of power operations and Palisades.179 The Petitioners appear to challenge HDIs arguments and attempt to assert that the NRC may have considered the possibility of restarting a reactor when it promulgated the decommissioning rules,180 but they provide no support for this position, nor do they acknowledge or challenge HDIs reference to the NRC regulatory basis document as support for HDIs position. Similarly, the Petitioners speculate, without any support, that if the NRC had considered the possibility of restarting a decommissioning reactor, it would have provided for that possibility in the rules. Moreover, the Petitioners assert that Holtec must establish that restarting Palisades is in the public interest,181 but they do not challenge the public interest justification in the Exemption Request related to the State of Michigans urgency and necessity for reauthorization of power operations at Palisades as a material circumstance not considered 177 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at (citing Regulatory Improvements for Power Reactors Transitioning to Decommissioning, Regulatory Basis Document (Nov., ) (MLA)).
178 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at -.
178 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at -.
179 Id. at.
179 Id. at.
180 Petition at.
180 Petition at.
181 Petition at.


181 Petition at.
when §. was approved.182 For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments are unsupported and do not demonstrate that a genuine dispute exists with the application on a material issue of fact or law.
 
Next, the Petitioners appear to challenge Holtecs approach to seeking reauthorization to restart power operations at Palisades. The Petitioners state that Holtec insists that its scheme to restart is just a simple matter of getting the requested exemption and then a few license amendments.183 The Petitioners then quote a portion of an interview with Commissioner Crowell and assert that Commissioner Crowell acknowledges that a Palisades restart would be a difficult and complicated process.184 The Petitioners arguments here, however, are not clear and they do not explain how the Commissioners statements support their position that the criteria in §.(a)()(vi) have not been met. To the extent that the Petitioners are challenging Holtecs use of the existing regulatory framework, such arguments are precluded by C.F.R. §. and are otherwise immaterial and outside the scope of this proceeding.
when §. was approved.182 For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments are unsupported
The Petitioners also argue that Holtec relies on the fact of having monetary support appropriated by the Michigan legislature to support its argument that restarting Palisades is in the public interest.185 However, this assertion lacks any factual basis. The Exemption Request does not appear to rely on monetary support in the justification of the §.(a)()(vi) criteria, and the Petitioners provide no specific references or page numbers to any such discussion.
 
Accordingly, these arguments are unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the application.
and do not demonstrate that a genuine dispute exists with the application on a material issue of
 
fact or law.
 
Next, the Petitioners appear to challenge Holtecs approach to seeking reauthorization to
 
restart power operations at Palisades. The Petitioners state that Holtec insists that its scheme
 
to restart is just a simple matter of getting the requested exemption and then a few license
 
amendments.183 The Petitioners then quote a portion of an interview with Commissioner
 
Crowell and assert that Commissioner Crowell acknowledges that a Palisades restart would be
 
a difficult and complicated process. 184 The Petitioners arguments here, however, are not clear
 
and they do not explain how the Commissioners statements support their position that the
 
criteria in §.(a)( )(vi) have not been met. To the extent that the Petitioners are challenging
 
Holtecs use of the existing regulatory fr amework, such arguments are precluded by
 
C.F.R. §. and are otherwise immaterial and outside the scope of this proceeding.
 
The Petitioners also argue that Holtec relies on the fact of having monetary support
 
appropriated by the Michigan legislature to support its argument that restarting Palisades is in
 
the public interest.185 However, this assertion lacks any factual basis. The Exemption Request
 
does not appear to rely on monetary support in the justification of the §.(a)( )(vi) criteria,
 
and the Petitioners provide no specific references or page numbers to any such discussion.
 
Accordingly, these arguments are unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with
 
the application.
 
182 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
182 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.
183 Petition at.
183 Petition at.
184 Petition at -.
184 Petition at -.
185 Petition at.


185 Petition at.
The Petitioners argue that political support of Holtec does not equate to a scientific or technical basis for the restart scheme.186 As support, the Petitioners attempt to rely on their expert, Mark Z. Jacobson, who purportedly makes it clear that nuclear power is not the energy source of the future, and consequently restarting Palisades is not in the public interest.187 However, the Petitioners claims appear to lack sufficient expert support as the discussion referenced in the Petition does not actually appear in Mr. Jacobsons Declaration that is attached as Exhibit C to the Petition.188 Moreover, to the extent that the Petitioners arguments here seek to challenge the State of Michigans decision-making with respect to its energy and economic policies related to nuclear power, the Staff notes that those matters fall outside the NRCs regulatory authority.189 Accordingly, the Petitioners assertions are unsupported and immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request.
 
The Petitioners also rely on statements from Kevin Kamps and Arnold Gundersen regarding Holtecs fixed-price power purchase agreement to assert that public monetary support from the State of Michigan and Federal Government does not mean Holtecs scheme is in the public interest.190 However, these assertions also appear to lack expert support as neither Kevin Kamps nor Arnold Gundersen purport to be experts regarding the financial arguments raised by the Petitioners in proposed Contention.191 Moreover, as noted above, the Petitioners 186 Petition at -. The Staff notes that the Petitioners statements regarding political support appear to be based on monetary support as discussed in the Petitioners preceding sentence. Id.
The Petitioners argue that political support of Holtec does not equate to a scientific or
 
technical basis for the restart scheme. 186 As support, the Petitioners attempt to rely on their
 
expert, Mark Z. Jacobson, who purportedly makes it clear that nuclear power is not the energy
 
source of the future, and consequently restarting Palisades is not in the public interest. 187
 
However, the Petitioners claims appear to lack sufficient expert support as the discussion
 
referenced in the Petition does not actually appear in Mr. Jacobsons Declaration that is
 
attached as Exhibit C to the Petition. 188 Moreover, to the extent that the Petitioners arguments
 
here seek to challenge the State of Michigans decision-making with respect to its energy and
 
economic policies related to nuclear power, the Staff notes that those matters fall outside the
 
NRCs regulatory authority.189 Accordingly, the Petitioners assertions are unsupported and
 
immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request.
 
The Petitioners also rely on statements from Kevin Kamps and Arnold Gundersen
 
regarding Holtecs fixed-price power purchase agreement to assert that public monetary support
 
from the State of Michigan and Federal Government does not mean Holtecs scheme is in the
 
public interest.190 However, these assertions also appear to lack expert support as neither
 
Kevin Kamps nor Arnold Gundersen purport to be experts regarding the financial arguments
 
raised by the Petitioners in proposed Contention.191 Moreover, as noted above, the Petitioners
 
186 Petition at -. The Staff notes that the Petitioners statements regarding political support appear to be based on monetary support as discussed in the Petitioners preceding sentence. Id.
 
187 Petition at.
187 Petition at.
188 Compare Petition at with Petition, Exhibit C (Declaration of Mark Z. Jacobson). The Petitioners cite to page of Exhibit C, but the th page appears to be an unrelated portion of Mr. Jacobsons Curriculum Vitae (CV).
188 Compare Petition at with Petition, Exhibit C (Declaration of Mark Z. Jacobson). The Petitioners cite to page of Exhibit C, but the th page appears to be an unrelated portion of Mr. Jacobsons Curriculum Vitae (CV).
 
189 See Environmental Review for Renewal of Nuclear Power Plant Operating Licenses, Fed. Reg.  
189 See Environmental Review for Renewal of Nuclear Power Plant Operating Licenses, Fed. Reg.
,,, (June, ) (The NRC acknowledges the primacy of State regulators and utility officials in defining energy requirements and determining the energy mix within their jurisdictions.).
,,, (June, ) (The NRC acknowledges the primacy of State regulators and utility officials in defining energy requirements and determining the energy mix within their jurisdictions.).
190 Petition at -.
190 Petition at -.
191 The Declaration of Kevin Kamps describes Mr. Kamps as a radioactive waste specialist, and does not include a resume or CV. See Petition, Exhibit B (Kamps Declaration). Similarly, based on a review of


191 The Declaration of Kevin Kamps describes Mr. Kamps as a radioactive waste specialist, and does not include a resume or CV. See Petition, Exhibit B (Kamps Declaration). Similarly, based on a review of
do not challenge the specific public interest justifications in the Exemption Request. Additionally, to the extent the Petitioners challenge Holtecs scientific or technical basis for restart, they do not assert that any specific safety regulations are unmet or specify some sort of deficiency with the restart-related amendments subject to this proceeding. Therefore, the Petitioners do not demonstrate that there is a genuine, material dispute with the application.
 
For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners assertions are inadmissible because they are out of scope, immaterial, unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request under §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).
do not challenge the specific public interest justifications in the Exemption Request. Additionally,
: d. The Petitioners Do Not Challenge or Do Not Otherwise Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in §.(a)()(i), (iv), and (v)
 
The Petitioners also mention the special circumstances criteria under §.(a)() that HDI does not rely upon in its Exemption Request, including §.(a)()(i), (iv), and (v). The Petitioners do not appear to raise any challenges with respect to the criteria in §.(a)()(i) and (v), and acknowledge that Holtec does not rely on these criteria in the Exemption Request.192 Regarding the criteria in §.(a)()(iv) that special circumstances are present where [t]he exemption would result in benefit to public health and safety that compensates for any decrease in safety that may result from the grant of the exemption, the Petitioners assert that restart of Palisades would result in harm to public health and safety.193 Specifically, the Petitioners rely on statements from Kevin Kamps regarding Palisades embrittled reactor.194 his Declaration and CV, the Staff notes that Mr. Gundersen, who has a Masters degree in Nuclear Engineering and extensive background in nuclear engineering, does not appear to have formal education or training relevant to the financial topics discussed in proposed Contention. See Petition, Exhibit A.
to the extent the Petitioners challenge Holtecs scientific or technical basis for restart, they do
 
not assert that any specific safety regulations are unmet or specify some sort of deficiency with
 
the restart-related amendments subject to this proceeding. Therefore, the Petitioners do not
 
demonstrate that there is a genuine, material dispute with the application.
 
For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners assertions are inadmissible because
 
they are out of scope, immaterial, unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with
 
the Exemption Request under §. (f)()(iii)-(vi).
: d. The Petitioners Do Not Challenge or Do Not Otherwise Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in §.(a)( )(i), (iv), and (v)
 
The Petitioners also mention the special circumstances criteria under §.(a)( ) that
 
HDI does not rely upon in its Exemption Request, including §.(a)( )(i), (iv), and (v). The
 
Petitioners do not appear to raise any challenges with respect to the criteria in §.(a)( )(i)
 
and (v), and acknowledge that Holtec does not rely on these criteria in the Exemption
 
Request.192 Regarding the criteria in §.(a)( )(iv) that special circumstances are present
 
where [t]he exemption would result in benefit to public health and safety that compensates for
 
any decrease in safety that may result from the grant of the exemption, the Petitioners assert
 
that restart of Palisades would result in harm to public health and safety. 193 Specifically, the
 
Petitioners rely on statements from Kevin Kamps regarding Palisades embrittled reactor. 194
 
his Declaration and CV, the Staff notes that Mr. Gundersen, who has a Masters degree in Nuclear Engineering and extensive background in nuclear engineering, does not appear to have formal education or training relevant to the financial topics discussed in proposed Contention. See Petition, Exhibit A.
 
192 Petition at,.
192 Petition at,.
193 Petition at.
193 Petition at.
194 Petition at (citing Petition, Exhibit B, at ).


194 Petition at (citing Petition, Exhibit B, at ).
However, Mr. Kamps provides no factual basis for his conclusory assertions,195 nor does he establish his expertise on the subject of embrittlement.196 Nevertheless, as the Petitioners acknowledge, Holtec does not actually rely §.(a)()(iv) to support their justification in the Exemption request. Accordingly, the Petitioners assertions are inadmissible because they are unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request under  
 
§.(f)()(v)-(vi).
However, Mr. Kamps provides no factual basis for his conclusory assertions, 195 nor does he
For the reasons discussed above, proposed Contention is not admissible under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv), (v), and (vi).
 
C.
establish his expertise on the subject of embrittlement. 196 Nevertheless, as the Petitioners
Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Claims that Are Immaterial and Lack Factual Support Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
An Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), not an Environmental Assessment (EA), must be compiled for the proposed restart of the Palisades reactor. An EIS is required because of the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec.197 In proposed Contention, Petitioners argue that Holtec is seeking the issuance or renewal of a reactor operating license and that, consequently, the Staff must prepare an EIS in accordance with C.F.R. §.(b).198 Petitioners also assert that there is no regulatory pathway to restart reactor operations at Palisades other than by applying for a new operating license under C.F.R. Part,199 and that even if the existing regulatory framework could be used, an EIS would still be required under C.F.R. §.(b)().200 Petitioners additionally claim that Holtec has failed to submit an environmental report and that the environmental 195 See USEC, CLI--, NRC at.
acknowledge, Holtec does not actually rely §.(a)( )(iv) to support their justification in the
 
Exemption request. Accordingly, the Petitioners assertions are inadmissible because they are
 
unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request under
 
§. (f)()(v)-(vi).
 
For the reasons discussed above, proposed Contention is not admissible under
 
C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii), (iv), (v), and (vi).
 
C. Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Claims that Are Immaterial and Lack Factual Support
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
An Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), not an Environmental Assessment (EA), must be compiled for the proposed restart of the Palisades reactor. An EIS is required because of the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec. 197
 
In proposed Contention, Petitioners argue that Holtec is seeking the issuance or
 
renewal of a reactor operating license and that, consequently, the Staff must prepare an EIS in
 
accordance with C.F.R. §. (b).198 Petitioners also assert that there is no regulatory
 
pathway to restart reactor operations at Palisades other than by applying for a new operating
 
license under C.F.R. Part,199 and that even if the existing regulatory framework could be
 
used, an EIS would still be required under C.F.R. §. (b)( ).200 Petitioners additionally
 
claim that Holtec has failed to submit an environmental report and that the environmental
 
195 See USEC, CLI- -, NRC at.
 
196 As explained previously, the Kamps Declaration describes Mr. Kamps as a radioactive waste specialist, and does not include a resume or CV. See Kamps Declaration.
196 As explained previously, the Kamps Declaration describes Mr. Kamps as a radioactive waste specialist, and does not include a resume or CV. See Kamps Declaration.
197 Petition at.
197 Petition at.
198 Id. at.
198 Id. at.
199 Id. at.
199 Id. at.
200 Id. at.


200 Id. at.
document Holtec did submit fails to comply with NRC requirements for environmental reports.201 Finally, Petitioners assert that the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades is a major federal action under NEPA,202 and that an EIS is required due to the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec.203 Staff Response: Proposed Contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), (v),
 
and (vi) and therefore is inadmissible because it () addresses matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, () lacks adequate factual support, and () does not demonstrate a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact.
document Holtec did submit fails to comply with NRC requirements for environmental reports. 201
First, Petitioners assert that Holtec seeks the issuance or renewal of a full power or design capacity license to operate Palisades, i.e., an operating license.204 This is incorrect. As part of the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades, HDI has submitted four license amendment requestswhich are the subject of this proceedingamong other related requests.
 
Finally, Petitioners assert that the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades is a major
 
federal action under NEPA,202 and that an EIS is required due to the major regulatory decision
 
sought by Holtec.203
 
Staff Response: Proposed Contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv), (v),
 
and (vi) and therefore is inadmissible because it ( ) addresses matters that are immaterial to the
 
NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, ( ) lacks adequate factual
 
support, and ( ) does not demonstrate a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue
 
of law or fact.
 
First, Petitioners assert that Holtec seeks the issuance or renewal of a full power or
 
design capacity license to operate Palisades, i.e., an operating license. 204 This is incorrect. As
 
part of the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades, HDI has submitted four license
 
amendment requestswhich are the subject of this proceedingamong other related requests.
 
HDI has not submitted an application for a new or renewed operating license under C.F.R.
HDI has not submitted an application for a new or renewed operating license under C.F.R.
Part.
Part.
 
Second, Petitioners claim that with the end of operations at Palisades, Holtec now has an operating license with conditions that permanently shut down the reactor.205 As a result, Petitioners assert, [t]here is no regulatory pathway by which Holtec may restart the reactor other than through submission of a new operating license application under C.F.R. Part,206 201 Id. at.
Second, Petitioners claim that with the end of operations at Palisades, Holtec now has
 
an operating license with conditions that permanently shut down the reactor. 205 As a result,
 
Petitioners assert, [t]here is no regulatory pathway by which Holtec may restart the reactor
 
other than through submission of a new operating license application under C.F.R. Part,206
 
201 Id. at.
 
202 Id. at -.
202 Id. at -.
203 Id. at.
203 Id. at.
204 Id. at.
204 Id. at.
205 Id.
205 Id.
206 Id. at.


206 Id. at.
and that, as a consequence, the Staff must prepare an EIS.207 But as discussed in Discussion Section II.A above, the Staffs consideration of all restart-related requests is governed by the existing regulations and Commission-established policy that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework.208 In carrying out this Commission policy, the Staff has concluded, generally, that a facility licensee in decommissioning may apply to use the license amendment, transfer, and exemption processes, as applicable, to seek approval for the actions necessary to authorize the restart of a reactor in decommissioning.
 
As explained in Discussion Section II.A above, the Staff reached this conclusion in part because the C.F.R. Part operating license for a reactor in decommissioning continues in effect during the decommissioning process until it is terminated, such that entering the decommissioning process effectuates a change in license authority but does not change the form of the license itself.209 In other words, the Palisades license remains a renewed facility operating license until terminated at the conclusion of the decommissioning process.210 This conclusion is also supported by other regulatory provisions, including C.F.R. §§. and  
and that, as a consequence, the Staff must prepare an EIS. 207 But as discussed in Discussion
. and the Decommissioning Rule, as well as by Commission precedent and by the Palisades license itself.211 As a result, the NRCs regulatory requirements for operating licenses continue to apply to Palisades, and licensing and regulatory requests within the existing regulatory framework, 207 Id. (citing C.F.R. §.(b)() (requiring preparation of an EIS for a new or renewed license to operate a nuclear power reactor under C.F.R. Part )).
 
Section II.A above, the Staffs consideration of all restart-related requests is governed by the
 
existing regulations and Commission-establishe d policy that the NRC may consider requests
 
from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework. 208 In carrying out
 
this Commission policy, the Staff has concluded, generally, that a facility licensee in
 
decommissioning may apply to use the license amendment, transfer, and exemption processes,
 
as applicable, to seek approval for the actions necessary to authorize the restart of a reactor in
 
decommissioning.
 
As explained in Discussion Section II.A above, the Staff reached this conclusion in part
 
because the C.F.R. Part operating license for a reactor in decommissioning continues in
 
effect during the decommissioning process until it is terminated, such that entering the
 
decommissioning process effectuates a change in license authority but does not change the
 
form of the license itself. 209 In other words, the Palisades license remains a renewed facility
 
operating license until terminated at the conclusion of the decommissioning process. 210 This
 
conclusion is also supported by other regulatory provisions, including C.F.R. §§. and
 
. and the Decommissioning Rule, as well as by Commission precedent and by the
 
Palisades license itself.211
 
As a result, the NRCs regulatory requirements for operating licenses continue to apply
 
to Palisades, and licensing and regulatory requests wi thin the existing regulatory framework,
 
207 Id. (citing C.F.R. §. (b)( ) (requiring preparation of an EIS for a new or renewed license to operate a nuclear power reactor under C.F.R. Part )).
 
208 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at, (denying a petition for rulemaking).
208 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at, (denying a petition for rulemaking).
209 See supra Discussion Section II.A; C.F.R. §.(b) (Each license for a facility that has permanently ceased operations, continues in effect beyond the expiration date to authorize ownership and possession of the production or utilization facility, until the Commission notifies the licensee in writing that the license is terminated.) (emphasis added).
209 See supra Discussion Section II.A; C.F.R. §.(b) (Each license for a facility that has permanently ceased operations, continues in effect beyond the expiration date to authorize ownership and possession of the production or utilization facility, until the Commission notifies the licensee in writing that the license is terminated.) (emphasis added).
210 See supra Discussion Section II.A.
210 See supra Discussion Section II.A.
211 See id.


211 See id.
including license amendment, transfer, and exemption requests, may be used to restore the licensed authority for reactor operation.212 In accordance with this Commission policy and acting within the existing regulatory framework, HDI submitted four license amendment requests, among other related requests, to support the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades.
 
The Staff accepted these requests for docketing and is in the process of conducting its detailed technical review to determine their sufficiency; no approvals have been granted. Therefore, the Petitioners argument is incorrect.
including license amendment, transfer, and exemption requests, may be used to restore the
Petitioners also assert that an EIS must still be prepared even if it is assumed, arguendo, that the existing regulatory framework could be used to enable restart of a reactor in decommissioning, because C.F.R. §.(b)() requires preparation of an EIS.213 But this provision applies to applications for new or renewed operating licenses and is irrelevant to this proceeding on HDIs license amendment requests.214 Petitioners arguments related to the purported need for an EIS are therefore inadmissible under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), (v), and (vi) because they address matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, lack adequate factual support, and fail to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact.
 
Third, Petitioners argue that Holtec has not submitted an environmental report and that the Staff is incorrectly treating Enclosure of the Exemption Request as an environmental report.215 But as discussed in Discussion Section II.B above, the new and significant environmental review found in Enclosure of the Exemption Request was submitted to aid the NRC in its environmental review, which the Staff is conducting under NEPA § (), among 212 See id.
licensed authority for reactor operation. 212 In accordance with this Commission policy and acting
 
within the existing regulatory framework, HDI submitted four license amendment requests,
 
among other related requests, to support the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades.
 
The Staff accepted these requests for docketing and is in the process of conducting its detailed
 
technical review to determine their sufficiency; no approvals have been granted. Therefore, the
 
Petitioners argument is incorrect.
 
Petitioners also assert that an EIS must still be prepared even if it is assumed,
 
arguendo, that the existing regulatory framework could be used to enable restart of a reactor in
 
decommissioning, because C.F.R. §. (b)( ) requires preparation of an EIS.213 But this
 
provision applies to applications for new or renewed operating licenses and is irrelevant to this
 
proceeding on HDIs license amendment requests. 214 Petitioners arguments related to the
 
purported need for an EIS are therefore inadmissible under C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv), (v), and
 
(vi) because they address matters that are imma terial to the NRC findings necessary to grant
 
the license amendment requests, lack adequate factual support, and fail to show that a genuine
 
dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact.
 
Third, Petitioners argue that Holtec has not submitted an environmental report and that
 
the Staff is incorrectly treating Enclosure of the Exemption Request as an environmental
 
report.215 But as discussed in Discussion Section II.B above, the new and significant
 
environmental review found in Enclosure of the Exemption Request was submitted to aid the
 
NRC in its environmental review, which the Staff is conducting under NEPA § ( ), among
 
212 See id.
 
213 Petition at.
213 Petition at.
214 C.F.R. §.(b)() (requiring an EIS for the [i]ssuance or renewal of a full power or design capacity license to operate a nuclear power reactor under C.F.R. Part ).
215 Petition at.


214 C.F.R. §. (b)( ) (requiring an EIS for the [i]ssuance or renewal of a full power or design capacity license to operate a nuclear power reactor under C.F.R. Part ).
other provisions. Enclosure therefore meets the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §..216 Petitioners also claim that the requirements in C.F.R. §§. and. apply to HDIs Environmental Report and that the Environmental Report fails to comply with those requirements.217 This is incorrect because HDI is not an applicant for a new or renewed operating license or otherwise requesting a licensing action of the type to which those sections apply.218 But even assuming either §§. or. were applicable here, Petitioners do not explain how the Environmental Report fails to comply with the requirements in those provisions or point to specific portions of the Environmental Report that are deficient. Nor do Petitioners explain how their assertion of deficiencies in the Environmental Report is relevant to proposed Contention, which relates to whether the NRC must prepare an EIS in the first instance instead of an EA. Petitioners arguments related to the Environmental Report address matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, lack factual support, and fail to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact, and therefore are inadmissible under C.F.R..(f)()(iv), (v), and (vi).
 
Lastly, Petitioners argue that restarting reactor operations at Palisades is a major federal action under NEPA,219 and the caption for proposed Contention asserts that the NRC 216 C.F.R. §. (defining Environmental Report as a document submitted to the Commission by an applicant for a permit, license, or other form of permission, or an amendment to or renewal of a permit, license or other form of permission, or by a petitioner for rulemaking, in order to aid the Commission in complying with section () of NEPA) (emphasis added).
215 Petition at.
 
other provisions. Enclosure therefore meets the definition of Environmental Report in
 
C.F.R. §..216
 
Petitioners also claim that the requirements in C.F.R. §§. and. apply to
 
HDIs Environmental Report and that the Environmental Report fails to comply with those
 
requirements.217 This is incorrect because HDI is not an applicant for a new or renewed
 
operating license or otherwise requesting a licensi ng action of the type to which those sections
 
apply.218 But even assuming either §§. or. were applicable here, Petitioners do not
 
explain how the Environmental Report fails to comply with the requirements in those provisions
 
or point to specific portions of the Environmental Report that are deficient. Nor do Petitioners
 
explain how their assertion of deficiencies in the Environmental Report is relevant to proposed
 
Contention, which relates to whether the NRC must prepare an EIS in the first instance
 
instead of an EA. Petitioners arguments related to the Environmental Report address matters
 
that are immaterial to the NRC findings neces sary to grant the license amendment requests,
 
lack factual support, and fail to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or
 
fact, and therefore are inadmissible under C.F.R.. (f)()(iv), (v), and (vi).
 
Lastly, Petitioners argue that restarting reactor operations at Palisades is a major
 
federal action under NEPA,219 and the caption for proposed Contention asserts that the NRC
 
216 C.F.R. §. (defining Environmental Report as a document submitted to the Commission by an applicant for a permit, license, or other form of permission, or an amendment to or renewal of a permit, license or other form of permission, or by a petitioner for rulemaking, in order to aid the Commission in complying with section ( ) of NEPA) (emphasis added).
 
217 Petition at.
217 Petition at.
218 See C.F.R. §.(b)-(c) (specifying environmental-report requirements applicable to new and renewed operating license applicants); §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by
§§.,.,.,.,.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). Section.(d) refers to environmental reports for certain types of amendment requests, but these are not associated with restart of reactor operation for a plant in decommissioning.
219 Petition at -.


218 See C.F.R. §. (b)-(c) (specifying environmental-report requirements applicable to new and renewed operating license applicants); §. (a) (referring to environmental reports required by
must prepare an EIS because of the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec.220 But whether an EIS must be prepared does not turn on whether a proposed NRC action is a major federal action under NEPA. Pursuant to NEPA § ()(C), a detailed statement (i.e., an EIS) must be prepared for major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.221 As the Staff stated in its Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, the Staff does not yet know the significance of potential impacts from the proposed actions and is preparing an EA to evaluate the proposed actions environmental impacts.222 If the Staff determines in its EA that the proposed license amendments would significantly affect the quality of the human environment, the Staff would be required to prepare an EIS. The mere fact that a proposed action is a major federal action under NEPA, however, does not on its own necessitate preparation of an EIS. Indeed, the statutory text of NEPA itself indicates that the term major federal action may be associated with an EA as well as an EIS.223 Proposed Contention is thus inadmissible under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), (v), and (vi) because it addresses matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, lacks factual support, and fails to show that there is a genuine dispute on a material issue of law or fact.
§§.,.,.,.,.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). Section. (d) refers to environmental reports for certain types of amendment requests, but these are not associated with restart of reactor operation for a plant in decommissioning.
For all of the reasons stated above, proposed Contention is inadmissible and should be rejected.
 
219 Petition at -.
 
must prepare an EIS because of the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec. 220 But
 
whether an EIS must be prepared does not turn on whether a proposed NRC action is a major
 
federal action under NEPA. Pursuant to NEPA § ( )(C), a detailed statement (i.e., an EIS)
 
must be prepared for major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human
 
environment.221
 
As the Staff stated in its Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, the Staff
 
does not yet know the significance of potential impacts from the proposed actions and is
 
preparing an EA to evaluate the proposed actions environmental impacts. 222 If the Staff
 
determines in its EA that the proposed license amendments would significantly affect the quality
 
of the human environment, the Staff would be required to prepare an EIS. The mere fact that a
 
proposed action is a major federal action under NEPA, however, does not on its own
 
necessitate preparation of an EIS. Indeed, the statutory text of NEPA itself indicates that the
 
term major federal action may be associated with an EA as well as an EIS. 223 Proposed
 
Contention is thus inadmissible under C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv), (v), and (vi) because it
 
addresses matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license
 
amendment requests, lacks factual support, and fails to show that there is a genuine dispute on
 
a material issue of law or fact.
 
For all of the reasons stated above, proposed Contention is inadmissible and should
 
be rejected.
 
220 Id. at.
220 Id. at.
 
221 NEPA § ()(C), U.S.C. ()(C) (emphasis added); see also C.F.R. §.(a) (requiring preparation of an EIS where the proposed NRC action is a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment).
221 NEPA § ( )(C), U.S.C. ( )(C) (emphasis added); see also C.F.R. §. (a) (requiring preparation of an EIS where the proposed NRC action is a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment).
 
222 Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, Fed. Reg. at,.
222 Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, Fed. Reg. at,.
223 See NEPA § (h)()(B)(iii), U.S.C. § a(h)()(b)(iii) (providing that for certain congressional reports, agencies are to provide the date on which they issued a notice of intent to prepare the environmental assessment or environmental impact statement for the major Federal action).


223 See NEPA § (h)( )(B)(iii), U.S.C. § a(h)( )(b)(iii) (providing that for certain congressional reports, agencies are to provide the date on whic h they issued a notice of intent to prepare the environmental assessment or environmental impact statement for the major Federal action).
D.
 
Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Immaterial and Unsupported Claims Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
D. Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Immaterial and Unsupported Claims
Presently, pursuant to C.F.R. §.(a)(), the current Palisades operating license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel in the reactor vessel. What Holtec obtained from Entergy when Holtec purchased Palisades, and what Holtec now has, is an operating license conditioned by the certification that nuclear fuel has permanently been removed from the core, and consequently no new fuel may be introduced into the Palisades reactor, nor may it be operated to produce electricity. In order to resume power operations at Palisades, Holtec must obtain a new operating license.224 The proposed contentions Basis argues that [b]oth Holtec and the NRC have admitted that there is no provision in the AEA or NRC regulations for reversing a permanent shutdown and restarting a nuclear reactor that has been placed in decommissioning status.225 The Petitioners further assert that the Palisades license is subject to a condition prohibiting fuel loading and operation, and that [w]ithout an unconditioned operating license, Holtec cannot simply amend what it does not have.226 Finally, Petitioners state that Holtec has not cited to any law or regulation that would allow the proposed amendment of a terminated license and that [t]here is no procedure in the NRC rules for reinstating the operating license.227 Staff Response: Proposed Contention does not meet the contention admissibility criteria in §.(f)()(iv), (v), or (vi) because it raises immaterial and unsupported claims that are based on an inaccurate understanding of the current Palisades license and the NRCs regulatory processes. As discussed above in Discussion Section II.A, existing regulatory 224 Petition at.
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
Presently, pursuant to C.F.R. §. (a)( ), the current Palisades operating license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel in the reactor vessel. What Holtec obtained from Entergy when Holtec purchased Palisades, and what Holtec now has, is an operating license conditioned by the certification that nuclear fuel has permanently been removed from the core, and consequently no new fuel may be introduced into the Palisades reactor, nor may it be operated to produce electricity. In order to resume power operations at Palisades, Holtec must obtain a new operating license.224
 
The proposed contentions Basis argues that [b]oth Holtec and the NRC have admitted that
 
there is no provision in the AEA or NRC regulations for reversing a permanent shutdown and
 
restarting a nuclear reactor that has been placed in decommissioning status. 225 The Petitioners
 
further assert that the Palisades license is subject to a condition prohibiting fuel loading and
 
operation, and that [w]ithout an unconditioned operating license, Holtec cannot simply amend
 
what it does not have.226 Finally, Petitioners state that Holtec has not cited to any law or
 
regulation that would allow the proposed amendment of a terminated license and that [t]here is
 
no procedure in the NRC rules for reinstating the operating license. 227
 
Staff Response: Proposed Contention does not meet the contention admissibility
 
criteria in §. (f)()(iv), (v), or (vi) because it raises immaterial and unsupported claims that
 
are based on an inaccurate understanding of the current Palisades license and the NRCs
 
regulatory processes. As discussed above in Discussion Section II.A, existing regulatory
 
224 Petition at.
 
225 Id.
225 Id.
226 Id. at -.
226 Id. at -.
227 Id. at. The Basis also repeats the claim from proposed Contention that an EIS is required for restart and references exemption arguments from proposed Contention. Id. at -. Those claims are fully addressed above and will not be further considered here except as necessary to address the arguments of this proposed contention.


227 Id. at. The Basis also repeats the claim from proposed Contention that an EIS is required for restart and references exemption arguments from proposed Contention. Id. at -. Those claims are fully addressed above and will not be further considered here except as necessary to address the arguments of this proposed contention.
processes, including the license amendment process, may be used to restore the authority to operate the reactor because HDI still holds an operating license. The Palisades license is still a renewed facility operating license, even during decommissioning, because the license continues in effect after permanent cessation of operation until the license is terminated.228 While the docketing of the §.(a)() certifications means that reactor operation is no longer authorized, that is a change in license authority, not a change to the form of the license.
 
Moreover, several other NRC regulations and the license itself all indicate that the Palisades license is a renewed facility operating license.229 Thus, Petitioners claim that NRC rules lack a procedure for reinstating the operating license is inapposite.
processes, including the license amendment process, may be used to restore the authority to
As explained previously, the Palisades license no longer authorizes reactor operation because () §.(a)() currently prohibits reactor operation and () previously approved amendments removed the authorities and requirements for reactor operation from the license.
 
However, the exemption process in C.F.R. §. may be used to remove regulatory restrictions, including the one in §.(a)(), provided that special circumstances, as required by C.F.R. §.(a)() are present, and the license amendment process may be used to restore the authorities and requirements for reactor operation that were removed by previous amendments. The Petitioners neither explain why changes that were made by license amendment may not be undone by the same process nor explain how doing so would violate NRC requirements for license amendments.
operate the reactor because HDI still holds an oper ating license. The Palisades license is still a
The Petitioners argue that Holtec and the NRC have admitted that there is no provision in the AEA or NRC regulations for restart,230 but Petitioners cite no support for this assertion.
 
The Staff acknowledges that the AEA and NRC regulations do not specifically address restart of 228 C.F.R. §.(b).
renewed facility operating license, even during decommissioning, because the license
229 See Discussion Section II.A 230 Petition at.  
 
continues in effect after permanent cessation of operation until the license is terminated. 228
 
While the docketing of the §. (a)() certifications means that reactor operation is no longer
 
authorized, that is a change in license authority, not a change to the form of the license.


Moreover, several other NRC regulations and the license itself all indicate that the Palisades
reactors in decommissioning, but the general regulatory provisions for amendment of licenses, exemptions, and transfers adequately cover the approvals needed for reactor restart, as explained above in Discussion Section II.A. And no provision of the AEA or NRC regulations specifically prohibit restart. The Petitioners do not address the license amendment provisions, much less explain why they could not apply, by their terms, and together with the exemption request, to exit decommissioning and restart a reactor, generally, or to restart Palisades, specifically. The Staffs detailed technical review is underway and no decisions to approve restart have been made, but the Staff has identified no legal barrier to HDI requesting to exit decommissioning and restart operation of Palisades.
 
The Petitioners claim that Holtec has not cited to any law or regulation that would allow the proposed amendment of a terminated license is unsupported and incorrect on two counts.
license is a renewed facility operating license. 229 Thus, Petitioners claim that NRC rules lack a
First, the amendment requests cite to the regulations for license amendments.231 Second, the Palisades license has not been terminated and is still in effect. In accordance with C.F.R.  
 
§.(a)(), termination of the license would not occur until the completion of dismantlement in accordance with an approved license termination plan and a final radiation survey showing that the site and facility meet the decommissioning criteria in C.F.R. Part, Subpart E.
procedure for reinstating the operating license is inapposite.
These events have not occurred and would not occur until well into the future even if HDI was not seeking to restart operation of Palisades.
 
Finally, Petitioners contend that §.(a)() conditions the license to prevent fuel load and operation and that [w]ithout an unconditioned operating license, Holtec cannot simply amend what it does not have.232 However, the exemption process in C.F.R. §. applies to all the regulations in C.F.R. Part and may, therefore, form the basis for a request to remove the restriction regarding loading fuel and operation in §.(a)(), as discussed 231 See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request at, (citing C.F.R. §§.,.,.).
As explained previously, the Palisades license no longer authorizes reactor operation
232 Petition at.  
 
because () §. (a)( ) currently prohibits reactor operation and ( ) previously approved
 
amendments removed the authorities and requirements for reactor operation from the license.
 
However, the exemption process in C.F.R. §. may be used to remove regulatory
 
restrictions, including the one in §. (a)( ), provided that special circumstances, as required
 
by C.F.R. §.(a)( ) are present, and the license amendment process may be used to
 
restore the authorities and requirements for reactor operation that were removed by previous
 
amendments. The Petitioners neither explain why changes that were made by license
 
amendment may not be undone by the same process nor explain how doing so would violate
 
NRC requirements for license amendments.
 
The Petitioners argue that Holtec and the NRC have admitted that there is no provision
 
in the AEA or NRC regulations for restart, 230 but Petitioners cite no support for this assertion.
 
The Staff acknowledges that the AEA and NRC regulations do not specifically address restart of
 
228 C.F.R. §.(b).
 
229 See Discussion Section II.A
 
230 Petition at.
 
reactors in decommissioning, but the general regulatory provisions for amendment of licenses,
 
exemptions, and transfers adequately cover the approvals needed for reactor restart, as
 
explained above in Discussion Section II.A. A nd no provision of the AEA or NRC regulations
 
specifically prohibit restart. The Petitioners do not address the license amendment provisions,
 
much less explain why they could not apply, by their terms, and together with the exemption
 
request, to exit decommissioning and restart a reactor, generally, or to restart Palisades,
 
specifically. The Staffs detailed technical review is underway and no decisions to approve
 
restart have been made, but the Staff has identified no legal barrier to HDI requesting to exit
 
decommissioning and restart operation of Palisades.
 
The Petitioners claim that Holtec has not cited to any law or regulation that would allow
 
the proposed amendment of a terminated license is unsupported and incorrect on two counts.
 
First, the amendment requests cite to the regulations for license amendments. 231 Second, the
 
Palisades license has not been terminated and is still in effect. In accordance with C.F.R.
 
§. (a)(), termination of the license would not occur until the completion of dismantlement
 
in accordance with an approved license termination plan and a final radiation survey showing
 
that the site and facility meet the decommissioning criteria in C.F.R. Part, Subpart E.
 
These events have not occurred and would not occur until well into the future even if HDI was
 
not seeking to restart operation of Palisades.
 
Finally, Petitioners contend that §. (a)( ) conditions the license to prevent fuel load
 
and operation and that [w]ithout an unconditioned operating license, Holtec cannot simply
 
amend what it does not have. 232 However, the exemption process in C.F.R. §. applies
 
to all the regulations in C.F.R. Part and may, therefore, form the basis for a request to
 
remove the restriction regarding loading fuel and operation in §. (a)( ), as discussed
 
231 See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request at, (citing C.F.R. §§.,.,. ).
 
232 Petition at.
 
above, and Petitioners proposed Contention that contests the Exemption Request is
 
inadmissible. To the extent Petitioners may be presenting a general argument that only an
 
unconditioned operating license may be amended, that argument is incorrect. All NRC-issued
 
operating licenses have conditions, and NRC regulations provide for the amendment of
 
licenses.233 By its very nature, the amendment of a license includes adding, removing, or
 
otherwise modifying conditions of the license. Therefore, this argument also does not support
 
contention admissibility.
 
For the reasons discussed above, proposed Contention raises immaterial issues, lacks
 
adequate support, and does not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the application.
 
Therefore, proposed Contention does not satisfy §. (f)()(iv), (v), or (vi).
 
E. Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Immaterial, Unsupported, and Out of Scope Arguments that Impermissibly Challenge NRC Regulations
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
Holtec and the NRC admit that there is no provision in law or regulation for the NRC to authorize the restart of Palisades as a closed reactor. They are cobbling together a pathway to restart, using a creative procedure based on existing regulations that they believe allows Holtec to bypass the requirement of compiling a new Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR) in favor of returning the UFSAR Revision, which was in place when the Palisades reactor was closed. Since there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec. 234
 
The Petitioners offer four distinct arguments in support of Contention that the Staff will
 
address as Bases A, B, C, and D. 235 Under Basis A, the Petitioners claim that authorizing the
 
restart of a reactor in decommissioning is a major question lacking clear Congressional
 
233 See C.F.R. §§.,.,..


above, and Petitioners proposed Contention that contests the Exemption Request is inadmissible. To the extent Petitioners may be presenting a general argument that only an unconditioned operating license may be amended, that argument is incorrect. All NRC-issued operating licenses have conditions, and NRC regulations provide for the amendment of licenses.233 By its very nature, the amendment of a license includes adding, removing, or otherwise modifying conditions of the license. Therefore, this argument also does not support contention admissibility.
For the reasons discussed above, proposed Contention raises immaterial issues, lacks adequate support, and does not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the application.
Therefore, proposed Contention does not satisfy §.(f)()(iv), (v), or (vi).
E.
Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Immaterial, Unsupported, and Out of Scope Arguments that Impermissibly Challenge NRC Regulations Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
Holtec and the NRC admit that there is no provision in law or regulation for the NRC to authorize the restart of Palisades as a closed reactor. They are cobbling together a pathway to restart, using a creative procedure based on existing regulations that they believe allows Holtec to bypass the requirement of compiling a new Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR) in favor of returning the UFSAR Revision, which was in place when the Palisades reactor was closed. Since there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.234 The Petitioners offer four distinct arguments in support of Contention that the Staff will address as Bases A, B, C, and D.235 Under Basis A, the Petitioners claim that authorizing the restart of a reactor in decommissioning is a major question lacking clear Congressional 233 See C.F.R. §§.,.,..
234 Petition at.
234 Petition at.
235 These four bases correspond to Subsections A through D under the header Facts Upon Which Petitioners Intend to Rely In Support of This Contention. Id. at -.


235 These four bases correspond to Subsections A through D under the header Facts Upon Which Petitioners Intend to Rely In Support of This Contention. Id. at -.
authority.236 The Petitioners further assert the NRC lacks regulatory authority to grant the requested amendments because there is no set procedure in the NRC regulations for restarting a closed reactor.237 In Basis B, the Petitioners argue that HDI cannot use the C.F.R. §.
 
process to reinstate UFSAR Revision because §. allows only narrow and minimal changes.238 The Petitioners specifically contend that HDI will need to make changes as a result of climate change that will exceed the minimum change thresholds of C.F.R.  
authority.236 The Petitioners further assert the NRC lacks regulatory authority to grant the
§.(c)().239 For Basis C, the Petitioners criticize HDIs practices in maintaining the steam generators during decommissioning and argue that HDIs strategy to repair the steam generators tubes is a major engineered change and may cause additional unforeseen troubles.240 Under Basis D, the Petitioners claim that there was a [m]ass destruction of quality assurance (QA) records that will make restoration of operations very difficult or impossible.241 Staff Response: Proposed Contention, which claims that the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec,242 is inadmissible because it rests on immaterial, unsupported, and out-of-scope arguments that do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with HDI. In addition, the fundamental argument of the proposed contention, that the NRC lacks authority to approve the amendments, impermissibly challenges NRC regulations. Moreover, three of the four Bases are not related to the proposed contention; regardless, the assertions therein are immaterial, unsupported, and out of scope. For this 236 Id. at.
 
requested amendments because there is no set procedure in the NRC regulations for restarting
 
a closed reactor.237 In Basis B, the Petitioners argue that HDI cannot use the C.F.R. §.
 
process to reinstate UFSAR Revision because §. allows only narrow and minimal
 
changes.238 The Petitioners specifically contend that HDI will need to make changes as a result
 
of climate change that will exceed the minimum change thresholds of C.F.R.
 
§. (c)( ).239 For Basis C, the Petitioners criticize HDIs practices in maintaining the steam
 
generators during decommissioning and argue that HDIs strategy to repair the steam
 
generators tubes is a major engineered change and may cause additional unforeseen
 
troubles.240 Under Basis D, the Petitioners claim that there was a [m]ass destruction of quality
 
assurance (QA) records that will make restoration of operations very difficult or impossible. 241
 
Staff Response: Proposed Contention, which claims that the NRC has no authority to
 
approve the license amendments requested by Holtec, 242 is inadmissible because it rests on
 
immaterial, unsupported, and out-of-scope arguments that do not demonstrate a genuine,
 
material dispute with HDI. In addition, the f undamental argument of the proposed contention,
 
that the NRC lacks authority to approve the amendments, impermissibly challenges NRC
 
regulations. Moreover, three of the four Bases are not related to the proposed contention;
 
regardless, the assertions therein are immaterial, unsupported, and out of scope. For this
 
236 Id. at.
 
237 Id.
237 Id.
238 Id. at.
238 Id. at.
239 Id. at.
239 Id. at.
240 Id. at -.
240 Id. at -.
241 Id. at.
241 Id. at.
242 Petition at.


242 Petition at.
reason, proposed Contention does not satisfy §.(f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), and raises challenges barred by §..  
 
. The Petitioners Basis A Major Questions Doctrine Arguments Are Inadmissible The Petitioners arguments under Basis A are inadmissible because they are immaterial and inadequately supported; do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the licensee; and challenge NRC regulations.243 To begin, the situation here comes nowhere close to implicating the major questions doctrine. In West Virginia v. EPA, the Court held that the doctrine applied where the Federal agency claimed to discover unheralded power representing a transformative expansion in its regulatory authority in the vague language of an ancillary provision of a long-extant and rarely used statutory provision that had been designed as a gap filler.244 Other major questions decisions discussed by the Court similarly involved a major asserted expansion of agency authority based on cryptic or otherwise unclear text.245 As the Court stated, Extraordinary grants of regulatory authority are rarely accomplished through modest words, vague terms, or subtle device[s].246 Here, however, the Staff is not asserting a major expansion of hitherto unclaimed statutory authority. Rather, the Staff is evaluating amendment and exemption requests from an existing licensee under NRC regulations for a plant already licensed and regulated by the NRC to determine whether it is safe to operate again under a proposed licensing basis similar to what the plant was operated under before.
reason, proposed Contention does not satisfy §. (f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), and raises
In addition, the Staff is considering these requests under clear and long-standing license amendment and exemption authorities. For example, the Staff is applying its long-standing license amendment regulations, and long-standing AEA provisions establish the NRCs 243 See C.F.R. §§.(f)()(iv), (v), (vi);..
 
244 West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S., - () (cleaned up).
challenges barred by §..
 
. The Petitioners Basis A Major Questions Doctrine Arguments Are Inadmissible
 
The Petitioners arguments under Basis A are inadmissible because they are immaterial
 
and inadequately supported; do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the licensee; and
 
challenge NRC regulations. 243 To begin, the situation here comes nowhere close to implicating
 
the major questions doctrine. In West Virginia v. EPA, the Court held that the doctrine applied
 
where the Federal agency claimed to discover unheralded power representing a
 
transformative expansion in its regulatory authority in the vague language of an ancillary
 
provision of a long-extant and rarely used statutory provision that had been designed as
 
a gap filler.244 Other major questions decisions discu ssed by the Court similarly involved a
 
major asserted expansion of agency authority based on cryptic or otherwise unclear text. 245 As
 
the Court stated, Extraordinary grants of regulatory authority are rarely accomplished through
 
modest words, vague terms, or subtle device[s]. 246 Here, however, the Staff is not asserting
 
a major expansion of hitherto unclaimed statutory authority. Rather, the Staff is evaluating
 
amendment and exemption requests from an ex isting licensee under NRC regulations for a
 
plant already licensed and regulat ed by the NRC to determine whether it is safe to operate
 
again under a proposed licensing basis similar to what the plant was operated under before.
 
In addition, the Staff is considering these requests under clear and long-standing license
 
amendment and exemption authorities. For exampl e, the Staff is applying its long-standing
 
license amendment regulations, and long-st anding AEA provisions establish the NRCs
 
243 See C.F.R. §§. (f)()(iv), (v), (vi);..
 
244 West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S., - ( ) (cleaned up).
 
245 Id. at -.
245 Id. at -.
246 Id. at (quoting Whitman v. American Trucking Assns., Inc., U.S., ()) (alteration in original)


246 Id. at (quoting Whitman v. American Trucking Assns., Inc., U.S., ( )) (alteration in original)
authority to issue license amendments.247 Similarly, the Staff is applying the criteria in its exemption regulation, §., which attained its current form in a final rule that affirmed the NRCs statutory authority to issue exemptions.248 Neither the Staff nor HDI is proposing novel or unusual interpretations of the NRCs existing statutory authority or employing vague, ancillary statutory provisions to justify expansions of that statutory authority. Indeed, as explained above, the restart-related amendment requests largely aim to undo previously-issued license amendments that removed, at the licensees request, the authority to operate. And the Exemption Request seeks relief from a regulatory (not statutory) prohibition on operation of a plant in decommissioning that applies to Palisades only because of a voluntary choice by Entergy, not due to safety concerns.
 
The Petitioners contend that the major questions doctrine applies in cases addressing issues of economic and political significance,249 but the doctrine is not as expansive as that.
authority to issue license amendments. 247 Similarly, the Staff is applying the criteria in its
True, the Court referenced economic and political significance, but only in combination with consideration of the history and the breadth of the authority that [the agency] has asserted,250 which is illustrated by the discussion above on cases where the agency argued for a major expansion of statutory authority on thin bases. The Petitioners also cite the decision by the U.S.
 
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in Texas v. NRC,251 but that case was wrongly decided because, like the Petitioners, the court of appeals applied the major questions doctrine based solely on the economic and political significance of the issue, and not the other relevant factors 247 See C.F.R. §§.,.,.; AEA §§ b.,, U.S.C. §§ (b),.
exemption regulation, §., which attained its current form in a final rule that affirmed
248 See Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,-.
 
the NRCs statutory authority to issue exemptions. 248 Neither the Staff nor HDI is proposing
 
novel or unusual interpretations of the NRCs existing statutory authority or employing vague,
 
ancillary statutory provisions to justify expansions of that statutory authority. Indeed, as
 
explained above, the restart-related amendment requests largely aim to undo previously-issued
 
license amendments that removed, at the licensees request, the authority to operate. And the
 
Exemption Request seeks relief from a regulatory (not statutory) prohibition on operation of a
 
plant in decommissioning that applies to Palisades only because of a voluntary choice by
 
Entergy, not due to safety concerns.
 
The Petitioners contend that the major questions doctrine applies in cases addressing
 
issues of economic and political significance, 249 but the doctrine is not as expansive as that.
 
True, the Court referenced economic and political significance, but only in combination with
 
consideration of the history and the breadth of the authority that [the agency] has asserted, 250
 
which is illustrated by the discussion above on cases where the agency argued for a major
 
expansion of statutory authority on thin bases. The Petitioners also cite the decision by the U.S.
 
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in Texas v. NRC,251 but that case was wrongly decided
 
because, like the Petitioners, the court of appeals applied the major questions doctrine based
 
solely on the economic and political significance of the issue, and not the other relevant factors
 
247 See C.F.R. §§.,.,. ; AEA §§ b.,, U.S.C. §§ (b),.
 
248 See Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at, -.
 
249 Petition at.
249 Petition at.
250 West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at (internal quotation marks omitted, alteration in original).
250 West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at (internal quotation marks omitted, alteration in original).
251 Petition at (citing Texas v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, F.th (th Cir. ), cert.
granted sub nom. NRC v. Texas, No. -, WL (U.S. Oct., ), and cert. granted sub nom. Interim Storage Partners, LLC v. Texas, No. -, WL (U.S. Oct., )).


251 Petition at (citing Texas v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, F. th ( th Cir. ), cert.
cited in West Virginia v. EPA.252 The court of appeals analysis of the issue, amounting to two paragraphs, does not constitute a persuasive application of West Virginia v. EPA.
granted sub nom. NRC v. Texas, No. -, WL (U.S. Oct., ), and cert. granted sub nom. Interim Storage Partners, LLC v. Texas, No. -, WL (U.S. Oct., )).
Regarding economic and political significance, the Petitioners argue that restart of Palisades is unprecedented and has national implications for the potential restart of two other plants.253 However, the requested restart of Palisades involves the use of long-standing licensing and regulatory processes as discussed above. Also, the economic decision of Palisades owners to seek restart is not connected to the economic decisions of other owners of other plants in decommissioning. Further, the Staff fails to see how the requests challenged hereinvolving potentially reauthorizing operation of an already-built reactor at an existing site under an existing license with a proposed licensing basis similar to what the plant previously operated underhas substantially more economic and political significance than licensing construction and operation of a new power reactor, which may also involve a new site and a new licensing basis. Petitioners also contend that restart of Palisades is more significant than the reinstatement of the terminated construction permit for Bellefonte.254 Similarly, the Staff does not understand how the requests challenged here have substantially more economic and political significance than reinstating a terminated construction permit that authorizes continued construction of a power reactor (with the ultimate purpose of licensed operation). Thus, if the challenged restart requests involve an issue of such economic and political significance that the major questions doctrine applies, then the doctrine would appear to apply to all new reactor licensing, a result that would undermine the Courts characterization of the doctrine as one reserved for extraordinary cases.255 252 Compare Texas v. EPA, F.th at with West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at -, -.
 
cited in West Virginia v. EPA.252 The court of appeals analysis of the issue, amounting to two
 
paragraphs, does not constitute a persuasive application of West Virginia v. EPA.
 
Regarding economic and political significance, the Petitioners argue that restart of
 
Palisades is unprecedented and has national implications for the potential restart of two other
 
plants.253 However, the requested restart of Palisades involves the use of long-standing
 
licensing and regulatory processes as discussed above. Also, the economic decision of
 
Palisades owners to seek restart is not connected to the economic decisions of other owners of
 
other plants in decommissioning. Further, the Staff fails to see how the requests challenged
 
hereinvolving potentially reauthorizing operation of an already-built reactor at an existing site
 
under an existing license with a proposed licensing bas is similar to what the plant previously
 
operated underhas substantially more economic and political significance than licensing
 
construction and operation of a new power reactor, which may also involve a new site and a
 
new licensing basis. Petitioners also contend that restart of Palisades is more significant than
 
the reinstatement of the terminated construction permit for Bellefonte. 254 Similarly, the Staff does
 
not understand how the requests challenged here have substantially more economic and
 
political significance than reinstating a terminated construction permit that authorizes continued
 
construction of a power reactor (with the ultimate purpose of licensed operation). Thus, if the
 
challenged restart requests involve an issue of such economic and political significance that
 
the major questions doctrine applies, then the doctrine would appear to apply to all new
 
reactor licensing, a result that would undermine the Courts characterization of the doctrine as
 
one reserved for extraordinary cases. 255
 
252 Compare Texas v. EPA, F. th at with West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at -, -.
 
253 Petition at.
253 Petition at.
254 Petition at.
254 Petition at.
255 West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at.


255 West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at.
Further, even if the major questions doctrine applied, it would serve only as a guide for interpreting statutory language.256 The Petitioners neglect to even cite the statutory language they believe is implicated by the restart-related amendment and exemption requests, much less explain how the NRC is improperly interpreting this language or why it could not be applied to the licensee requests being challenged here. As explained above, the proposed use of the amendment and exemption processes are well within the NRCs statutory authority. Therefore, as explained above, Basis A does not satisfy the contention admissibility criteria in  
 
§.(f)()(iv), (vi).
Further, even if the major questions doctrine applied, it would serve only as a guide for
Moreover, the Petitioners do not argue in Basis A that the standards for license amendments and exemptions are not satisfied. Instead, the Petitioners appear to be challenging the license amendment and exemption processes, themselves, arguing that these processes may not be applied to restart of Palisades.257 This represents a challenge to the NRCs regulations, which §. forbids absent a petition for waiver or exception (accompanied by affidavit) that demonstrates prima facie that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation (or a provision of it) would not serve the purposes for which the rule or regulation was adopted.258 The Petitioners have not cited §., much less submitted a petition for waiver or exception (with affidavit) that meets the requirements of §..
 
Finally, the Petitioners other Basis A arguments are similarly unavailing. For example, the Petitioners claim that the NRC has no regulatory authority to grant the license amendments requested by Holtec because there is no set procedure in the NRC regulations for restarting a 256 Id. at -.
interpreting statutory language. 256 The Petitioners neglect to even cite the statutory language
 
they believe is implicated by the restart-related amendment and exemption requests, much less
 
explain how the NRC is improperly interpreting this language or why it could not be applied to
 
the licensee requests being challenged here. As explained above, the proposed use of the
 
amendment and exemption processes are well within the NRCs statutory authority. Therefore,
 
as explained above, Basis A does not satisfy the contention admissibility criteria in
 
§. (f)()(iv), (vi).
 
Moreover, the Petitioners do not argue in Basis A that the standards for license
 
amendments and exemptions are not satisfied. Instead, the Petitioners appear to be challenging
 
the license amendment and exemption processes, themselves, arguing that these processes
 
may not be applied to restart of Palisades. 257 This represents a challenge to the NRCs
 
regulations, which §. forbids absent a petition for waiver or exception (accompanied by
 
affidavit) that demonstrates prima facie that special circumstances with respect to the subject
 
matter of the particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation (or a
 
provision of it) would not serve the purposes for which the rule or regulation was adopted. 258
 
The Petitioners have not cited §., much less submitted a petition for waiver or exception
 
(with affidavit) that meets the requirements of §..
 
Finally, the Petitioners other Basis A argum ents are similarly unavailing. For example,
 
the Petitioners claim that the NRC has no regul atory authority to grant the license amendments
 
requested by Holtec because there is no set procedure in the NRC regulations for restarting a
 
256 Id. at -.
 
257 Petition at -.
257 Petition at -.
258 C.F.R. §.(a)-(c). Whether special circumstances are present is assessed under the Millstone factors. Exelon Generation Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,
() (citing Dominion Nuclear Connecticut, Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Units and ),
CLI--, NRC, ()).


258 C.F.R. §. (a)-(c). Whether special circumstances are present is assessed under the Millstone factors. Exelon Generation Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,
closed reactor.259 The Petitioners also contend that the decommissioning process set forth in C.F.R. §. does not indicat[e] or hint that the decommissioning process leading to license termination can be reversed.260 While the Petitioners are correct that there is no specific NRC regulation that addresses exiting decommissioning and restarting a reactor, the Petitioners arguments do not relate to or support the Basis A assertion that the NRC lacks statutory authority to grant the amendment and exemption requests. The Petitioners also overlook the Commissions policy that requests to exit decommissioning and restart a reactor could be considered under the existing regulatory framework.261 Also, the Petitioners assertions here largely mirror arguments in their inadmissible proposed Contention, and the Petitioners do not explain which criteria in the license amendment or exemption regulations are unsatisfied, much less provide a supported argument therefor that is sufficient to demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI. For example, that §.(a) does not hint that a plant in decommissioning may restart operation does not establish that an exemption seeking authority to exit decommissioning and restart operation of the reactor is inappropriate because the exemption process exists to address matters not contemplated during rulemakings.262 Therefore, this aspect of Basis A does not satisfy §.(f)()(iv)-(vi).
( ) (citing Dominion Nuclear Connecticut, Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Units and ),
The Petitioners also assert that the overall design of the Palisades reactor is not licensable to st century standards,263 but this claim does not relate to, much less support, the statutory authorization concerns made in Basis A or the claim made in the proposed contention 259 Petition at.
CLI- -, NRC, ( )).
 
closed reactor.259 The Petitioners also contend that the decommissioning process set forth in
 
C.F.R. §. does not indicat[e] or hint that the decommissioning process leading to
 
license termination can be reversed. 260 While the Petitioners are correct that there is no specific
 
NRC regulation that addresses exiting decommissioning and restarting a reactor, the
 
Petitioners arguments do not relate to or support the Basis A assertion that the NRC lacks
 
statutory authority to grant the amendment and exemption requests. The Petitioners also
 
overlook the Commissions policy that requests to exit decommissioning and restart a reactor
 
could be considered under the existing regulatory framework. 261 Also, the Petitioners assertions
 
here largely mirror arguments in their inadmissible proposed Contention, and the Petitioners
 
do not explain which criteria in the license amendment or exemption regulations are unsatisfied,
 
much less provide a supported argument therefor that is sufficient to demonstrate a genuine
 
dispute with HDI. For example, that §. (a) does not hint that a plant in decommissioning
 
may restart operation does not establish that an exemption seeking authority to exit
 
decommissioning and restart operation of the reactor is inappropriate because the exemption
 
process exists to address matters not contemplated during rulemakings. 262 Therefore, this
 
aspect of Basis A does not satisfy §. (f)()(iv)-(vi).
 
The Petitioners also assert that the overall design of the Palisades reactor is not
 
licensable to st century standards,263 but this claim does not relate to, much less support, the
 
statutory authorization concerns made in Basis A or the claim made in the proposed contention
 
259 Petition at.
 
260 Id. at.
260 Id. at.
261 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at,.
261 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at,.
262 See Specific Exemptions Rule, Reg. at, (stating, The Commission believes that it is not possible for its regulations to predict and accommodate every conceivable circumstance).
262 See Specific Exemptions Rule, Reg. at, (stating, The Commission believes that it is not possible for its regulations to predict and accommodate every conceivable circumstance).
263 Petition at.


263 Petition at.
that the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.264 Even considered independently, the assertion regarding st century standards is not admissible because the Petitioners do not (a) identify specific portions of the application that are deficient, (b) show that the issues raised are material to the NRC findings necessary to issue the amendments, (c) or provide sufficient information to demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI on a material issue of law or fact, as required by §.(f)()(iv), (vi). Also, the Petitioners and their expert offer only conclusory assertions and vague, speculative hypothetical scenarios in support of the argument,265 which do not support contention admissibility.266 For the reasons given above, the Petitioners Basis A arguments do not meet  
 
§.(f)()(iv)-(vi) and represent an impermissible attack on NRC regulations contrary to  
that the NRC has no authority to approve t he license amendments requested by Holtec.264
§..  
 
. The Petitioners Basis B Section. Process Arguments Are Inadmissible The Petitioners Basis B arguments regarding Holtecs use of the §. process are inadmissible under §.(f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), and (vi) because they do not constitute a basis for the contention, are immaterial and outside the scope of the proceeding, rely on unsupported speculation, and do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with HDI. As discussed below, Basis B is inadmissible because it does not provide support for the proposed contention and otherwise challenges the use of processes outside the scope of this proceeding rather than the specific UFSAR content that the restart-related amendment requests rely on. Also, the Petitioners arguments reflect a misunderstanding of how changes to the UFSAR may be 264 Id. at.
Even considered independently, the assertion regarding st century standards is not
 
admissible because the Petitioners do not (a) identify specific portions of the application that are
 
deficient, (b) show that the issues raised are material to the NRC findings necessary to issue
 
the amendments, (c) or provide sufficient information to demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI
 
on a material issue of law or fact, as required by §. (f)()(iv), (vi). Also, the Petitioners and
 
their expert offer only conclusory assertions and vague, speculative hypothetical scenarios in
 
support of the argument,265 which do not support contention admissibility. 266
 
For the reasons given above, the Petitioners Basis A arguments do not meet
 
§. (f)()(iv)-(vi) and represent an impermissible attack on NRC regulations contrary to
 
§..
 
. The Petitioners Basis B Section. Process Arguments Are Inadmissible
 
The Petitioners Basis B arguments regarding Holtecs use of the §. process are
 
inadmissible under §. (f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), and (vi) because they do not constitute a basis
 
for the contention, are immaterial and outside the scope of the proceeding, rely on unsupported
 
speculation, and do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with HDI. As discussed below,
 
Basis B is inadmissible because it does not provide support for the proposed contention and
 
otherwise challenges the use of processes outside the scope of this proceeding rather than the
 
specific UFSAR content that the restart-related amendment requests rely on. Also, the
 
Petitioners arguments reflect a misunderstanding of how changes to the UFSAR may be
 
264 Id. at.
 
265 Petition at ; Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.
265 Petition at ; Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.
 
266 Entergy Nuclear Generation Co. (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI--, NRC, ()
266 Entergy Nuclear Generation Co. (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI--, NRC, ( )
(stating, Bare assertions and speculation, even by an expert, are insufficient to trigger a full adjudicatory proceeding) (internal quotation marks omitted); Power Authority of the State of New York (James A.
(stating, Bare assertions and speculation, even by an expert, are insufficient to trigger a full adjudicatory proceeding) (internal quotation marks omitted); Power Authority of the State of New York (James A.
Fitzpatrick Nuclear Power Plant & Indian Point Nuclear Generating Unit No. ), CLI- -, NRC,
Fitzpatrick Nuclear Power Plant & Indian Point Nuclear Generating Unit No. ), CLI--, NRC,
( ) (stating, Unsupported hypothetical theories or projections, even in the form of an affidavit, will not support invocation of the hearing process).
() (stating, Unsupported hypothetical theories or projections, even in the form of an affidavit, will not support invocation of the hearing process).  
 
approved via license amendment, and how current regulations ensure that the UFSAR will be
 
updated to reflect the outcome of approved license amendments. Further, Basis B relies on
 
unsupported speculation regarding changes that Petitioners believe HDI will need to make in
 
response to climate change. Finally, to the ex tent that Basis B challenges NRC regulations on
 
license amendment and change control processes, those challenges are not cognizable in this
 
proceeding.
 
To begin, the Petitioners claims regarding the §. process do not appear to relate
 
to, much less support, the only affirmative claim presented in proposed Contention : Since
 
there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no
 
authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec. 267 Therefore, the Basis B
 
arguments do not support the contention as required by §. (f)()(ii). To the extent the
 
Petitioners may be challenging the NRCs authority to approve updated FSAR content via
 
license amendment or challenge §. itself, those challenges are inconsistent with NRC
 
regulations (e.g., §§.,., and. ) and are therefore prohibited by C.F.R. §..


approved via license amendment, and how current regulations ensure that the UFSAR will be updated to reflect the outcome of approved license amendments. Further, Basis B relies on unsupported speculation regarding changes that Petitioners believe HDI will need to make in response to climate change. Finally, to the extent that Basis B challenges NRC regulations on license amendment and change control processes, those challenges are not cognizable in this proceeding.
To begin, the Petitioners claims regarding the §. process do not appear to relate to, much less support, the only affirmative claim presented in proposed Contention : Since there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.267 Therefore, the Basis B arguments do not support the contention as required by §.(f)()(ii). To the extent the Petitioners may be challenging the NRCs authority to approve updated FSAR content via license amendment or challenge §. itself, those challenges are inconsistent with NRC regulations (e.g., §§.,., and.) and are therefore prohibited by C.F.R. §..
Regardless, the Petitioners focus on HDIs reference to using the C.F.R. §.
Regardless, the Petitioners focus on HDIs reference to using the C.F.R. §.
process to update the FSAR is misplaced because it concerns the implementation of processes outside the scope of the proceeding. The fundamental objective of §. is to determine whether certain changes to matters described in the FSAR (or tests or experiments not described in the FSAR) require NRC approval in the form of a license amendment.268 In other words, §. is procedural in nature and implemented to determine whether to submit a license amendment request. Any amendment request would come later, and the process for evaluating amendment requests is separate from the §. process. Moreover, the Primary 267 Petition at.
268 See C.F.R. §.(c). See also Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant),
LBP--, NRC, () (citing C.F.R. §.(c)()).


process to update the FSAR is misplaced because it concerns the implementation of processes
Amendment Request describes HDIs plan to implement[] the §. process coincident with the associated license amendments.269 Thus, HDIs planned use of the §. process would occur upon implementation of the amendments if they are approved and, therefore, is not part of this proceeding on whether the amendments should be approved in the first place. And while use of the §. process may lead to future license amendment requests, the Commission has stated, the prospect of a future license amendment does not create a present hearing opportunity.270 Consequently, the Petitioners challenge to the use of the §. process does not satisfy §.(f)()(iii), (iv), and (vi) because it is outside the scope of the proceeding and immaterial to the findings the NRC must make to issue the restart-related amendment requests.
 
The instant proceeding provides members of the public the opportunity to challenge the proposed content of the UFSAR for restart, but the Petitioners have not specifically done so. In accordance with C.F.R. §.(a), the NRCs determination on the amendment requests will be guided by the considerations which govern the issuance of initial licenses to the extent applicable and appropriate. Those considerations include the FSAR content requirements of C.F.R. §.(b) for matters within the scope of the proposed amendments.
outside the scope of the proceeding. The fundamental objective of §. is to determine
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners acknowledge that HDI proposes to update the UFSAR to reflect Revision, the version in effect prior to the plant entering decommissioning.271 The Primary Amendment Request has numerous references to UFSAR Revision throughout, both as a general matter and as support for specific license changes.272 The Primary Amendment Request also includes the ADAMS accession number for this revision of the 269 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at.
 
270 Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,  
whether certain changes to matters described in the FSAR (or tests or experiments not
- ().
 
described in the FSAR) require NRC approval in the form of a license amendment. 268 In other
 
words, §. is procedural in nature and implemented to determine whether to submit a
 
license amendment request. Any amendment request would come later, and the process for
 
evaluating amendment requests is separate from the §. process. Moreover, the Primary
 
267 Petition at.
 
268 See C.F.R. §. (c). See also Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant),
LBP--, NRC, ( ) (citing C.F.R. §. (c)()).
 
Amendment Request describes HDIs plan to implement[] the §. process coincident with
 
the associated license amendments. 269 Thus, HDIs planned use of the §. process would
 
occur upon implementation of the amendments if they are approved and, therefore, is not part of
 
this proceeding on whether the amendments should be approved in the first place. And while
 
use of the §. process may lead to future license amendment requests, the Commission
 
has stated, the prospect of a future license amendment does not create a present hearing
 
opportunity.270 Consequently, the Petitioners challenge to the use of the §. process does
 
not satisfy §. (f)()(iii), (iv), and (vi) because it is outside the scope of the proceeding and
 
immaterial to the findings the NRC must make to issue the restart-related amendment requests.
 
The instant proceeding provides members of the public the opportunity to challenge the
 
proposed content of the UFSAR for restart, but the Petitioners have not specifically done so. In
 
accordance with C.F.R. §. (a), the NRCs determination on the amendment requests
 
will be guided by the considerations which govern the issuance of initial licenses to the
 
extent applicable and appropriate. Those considerations include the FSAR content
 
requirements of C.F.R. §. (b) for matters within the scope of the proposed amendments.
 
In proposed Contention, the Petitioners acknowledge that HDI proposes to update the UFSAR
 
to reflect Revision, the version in effect prior to the plant entering decommissioning. 271 The
 
Primary Amendment Request has numerous references to UFSAR Revision throughout,
 
both as a general matter and as support for specific license changes. 272 The Primary
 
Amendment Request also includes the ADAMS a ccession number for this revision of the
 
269 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at.
 
270 Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,
- ( ).
 
271 Petition at,.
271 Petition at,.
272 See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at,.


272 See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at,.
Updated FSAR.273 The other restart-related amendment requests also reference UFSAR Revision.274 The Petitioners could have specifically explained any purported deficiencies in the content of UFSAR Revision for restart or in how HDI is using Revision in support of specific changes to the license, but the Petitioners neglected to do so. In addition, the Petitioners note that numerous technical specification changes are necessary to restart a plant in decommissioning.275 But the restart-related amendments requests address these changes to the technical specifications, and the Petitioners have not specifically challenged them. As such, the Petitioners have not identified the specific portions of the application they dispute and have not demonstrated a genuine, material dispute with the application as required by C.F.R.  
 
§.(f)()(vi).
Updated FSAR.273 The other restart-related amendment requests also reference UFSAR
Moreover, even though implementation of §. is outside the scope of the proceeding, the Staff will, in the interests of eliminating confusion, explain how C.F.R.  
 
§§.(c)() and.(e) address updates to the FSAR for information in approved license amendment requests. Taking the latter regulation first, licensees are required by §.(e) to periodically update the FSAR to reflect (among other things) all safety analyses and evaluations performed by the applicant or licensee in support of approved license amendments. Additionally, §.(c)() addresses updates to the FSAR to reflect changes made between the periodic updates under §.(e): In implementing this paragraph, the FSAR (as updated) is considered to include FSAR changes resulting from evaluations performed pursuant to this section and analyses performed pursuant to §. since submittal of the last update of the final safety analysis report pursuant to §. of this part. The analyses performed pursuant to §. are those included or referenced in license 273 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at.
Revision.274 The Petitioners could have specifically explained any purported deficiencies in
 
the content of UFSAR Revision for restart or in how HDI is using Revision in support of
 
specific changes to the license, but the Petitioners neglected to do so. In addition, the
 
Petitioners note that numerous technical specific ation changes are necessary to restart a plant
 
in decommissioning.275 But the restart-related amendments requests address these changes to
 
the technical specifications, and the Petitioners have not specifically challenged them. As such,
 
the Petitioners have not identified the specific portions of the application they dispute and have
 
not demonstrated a genuine, material dispute with the application as required by C.F.R.
 
§. (f)()(vi).
 
Moreover, even though implementation of §. is outside the scope of the
 
proceeding, the Staff will, in the interests of eliminating confusion, explain how C.F.R.
 
§§. (c)( ) and.(e) address updates to the FSAR for information in approved license
 
amendment requests. Taking the latter regulat ion first, licensees are required by §.(e) to
 
periodically update the FSAR to reflect (among other things) all safety analyses and
 
evaluations performed by the applicant or licensee in support of approved license
 
amendments. Additionally, §. (c)( ) addresses updates to the FSAR to reflect changes
 
made between the periodic updates under §.(e): In implementing this paragraph, the
 
FSAR (as updated) is considered to include FSAR changes resulting from evaluations
 
performed pursuant to this section and analyses performed pursuant to §. since submittal
 
of the last update of the final safety analysis report pursuant to §. of this part. The
 
analyses performed pursuant to §. are those included or referenced in license
 
273 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at.
 
274 Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; MSLB Amendment Request, Enclosure at,.
274 Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; MSLB Amendment Request, Enclosure at,.
275 Petition at.


275 Petition at.
amendment requests.276 Therefore, if the restart-related amendments are approved, existing regulations would require the updated FSAR to reflect those licensee analyses and evaluations submitted in the amendment requests, including the proposed FSAR content described or referenced therein.277 Further, §.(c) would require the licensee to assess subsequent changes to the facility and procedures in support of authorized restart against that updated FSAR to determine whether NRC approval is required. The criteria of §.(c) would require a license amendment for significant changes,278 and any amendment request would be subject to a hearing opportunity.
 
The Petitioners also cite a Holtec press release regarding replacement of the component cooling water (CCW) heat exchangers and speculate that the licensee will be required to make numerous plant changes due to climate change that will require license amendments under  
amendment requests.276 Therefore, if the restart-related amendments are approved, existing
§..279 However, as explained above, the licensees implementation of the §. process is outside the scope of the proceeding and immaterial to the required NRC findings to issue the amendments. Also, the Petitioners never identify a purported deficiency in the application regarding the CCW heat exchangers. Rather, the Petitioners state that the heat exchanger is 276 See C.F.R. §. (application requirements for license amendments); C.F.R. §. (allowing applicants to incorporate by reference information contained in previous applications, statements or reports filed with the Commission).
 
regulations would require the updated FSAR to reflect those licensee analyses and evaluations
 
submitted in the amendment requests, including the proposed FSAR content described or
 
referenced therein.277 Further, §. (c) would require the licensee to assess subsequent
 
changes to the facility and procedures in support of authorized restart against that updated
 
FSAR to determine whether NRC approval is required. The criteria of §. (c) would require a
 
license amendment for significant changes, 278 and any amendment request would be subject to
 
a hearing opportunity.
 
The Petitioners also cite a Holtec press release regarding replacement of the component
 
cooling water (CCW) heat exchangers and speculate that the licensee will be required to make
 
numerous plant changes due to climate change that will require license amendments under
 
§..279 However, as explained above, the licensees implementation of the §. process
 
is outside the scope of the proceeding and immateri al to the required NRC findings to issue the
 
amendments. Also, the Petitioners never identify a purported deficiency in the application
 
regarding the CCW heat exchangers. Rather, the Petitioners state that the heat exchanger is
 
276 See C.F.R. §. (application requirements for license amendments); C.F.R. §. (allowing applicants to incorporate by reference information contained in previous applications, statements or reports filed with the Commission).
 
277 Although existing regulations address updates to the UFSAR pursuant to approved license amendments as a general matter, the issued amendment may also specify that information within the scope of the NRCs approval that is to be included in the UFSAR. See, e.g., Letter from Robert F. Kuntz, NRC, to David P. Rhoades, Constellation Energy Generation, LLC, LaSalle County Station, Units and  
277 Although existing regulations address updates to the UFSAR pursuant to approved license amendments as a general matter, the issued amendment may also specify that information within the scope of the NRCs approval that is to be included in the UFSAR. See, e.g., Letter from Robert F. Kuntz, NRC, to David P. Rhoades, Constellation Energy Generation, LLC, LaSalle County Station, Units and  
- Issuance of Amendment Nos. and Re: Revised Design Bases of Lower Downcomer Braces (EPID L- -LLA- ), Enclosure at (Feb., ) (ML A ) (stating that [i]mplementation of the amendment shall also include revision of the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report as described in the licensees letter dated January, ).
- Issuance of Amendment Nos. and Re: Revised Design Bases of Lower Downcomer Braces (EPID L--LLA-), Enclosure at (Feb., ) (MLA) (stating that [i]mplementation of the amendment shall also include revision of the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report as described in the licensees letter dated January, ).
 
278 See C.F.R. §.(c)() (requiring a license amendment for changes that would meet any one of eight criteria, including those that result in more than a minimal increase in the likelihood or consequences of accidents or of malfunctions of SSCs important to safety).
278 See C.F.R. §. (c)( ) (requiring a license amendment for changes that would meet any one of eight criteria, including those that result in more than a minimal increase in the likelihood or consequences of accidents or of malfunctions of SSCs important to safety).
279 Petition at -.  
 
279 Petition at -.
 
not a safety system or component that must be addressed within a Safety Analysis Report 280
 
the Staff notes that the CCW heat exchangers are in fact discussed in UFSAR Revision,281
 
but the Petitioners statement shows they are not attempting to challenge the application content
 
regarding the CCW heat exchangers. Further, the Petitioners claims regarding potential
 
changes to the rest of the plant are vague and conclusory in nature and founded in
 
speculationneither they nor their expert provide a factually supported prediction of how
 
climate change will specifically affect the area around Palisades and how such changes would
 
affect how specific components meet the specific design basis parameters and characteristics in
 
the referenced UFSAR Revision such that a change under §. would need to be
 
considered. Vague, unsupported speculation, even by an expert, does not support contention
 
admissibility.282 Finally, even if Petitioners speculation is correcti.e., that the licensee makes
 
changes in the future that cross the thresholds in §. (c)( )the licensee would be required
 
to seek a license amendment from the NRC at that time, and the Petitioners would have an
 
opportunity to challenge that amendment request. Thus, the Petitioners have not demonstrated
 
a dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact as required by §. (f)()(vi).
 
For the reasons given above, the Petitioners Basis B arguments regarding Holtecs use
 
of the §. process are inadmissible under §. (f)()(iii), (iv), (v), and (vi).
 
. The Petitioners Basis C Steam Generator Arguments Are Inadmissible
 
In Basis C, the Petitioners criticize the licensees maintenance of the steam generators
 
during decommissioning and claim that HDIs strategy to repair the steam generators tubes (as
 
described in a news article) is a major engineered change and may cause additional
 
280 Petition at.


not a safety system or component that must be addressed within a Safety Analysis Report280 the Staff notes that the CCW heat exchangers are in fact discussed in UFSAR Revision,281 but the Petitioners statement shows they are not attempting to challenge the application content regarding the CCW heat exchangers. Further, the Petitioners claims regarding potential changes to the rest of the plant are vague and conclusory in nature and founded in speculationneither they nor their expert provide a factually supported prediction of how climate change will specifically affect the area around Palisades and how such changes would affect how specific components meet the specific design basis parameters and characteristics in the referenced UFSAR Revision such that a change under §. would need to be considered. Vague, unsupported speculation, even by an expert, does not support contention admissibility.282 Finally, even if Petitioners speculation is correcti.e., that the licensee makes changes in the future that cross the thresholds in §.(c)()the licensee would be required to seek a license amendment from the NRC at that time, and the Petitioners would have an opportunity to challenge that amendment request. Thus, the Petitioners have not demonstrated a dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact as required by §.(f)()(vi).
For the reasons given above, the Petitioners Basis B arguments regarding Holtecs use of the §. process are inadmissible under §.(f)()(iii), (iv), (v), and (vi).
. The Petitioners Basis C Steam Generator Arguments Are Inadmissible In Basis C, the Petitioners criticize the licensees maintenance of the steam generators during decommissioning and claim that HDIs strategy to repair the steam generators tubes (as described in a news article) is a major engineered change and may cause additional 280 Petition at.
281 See e.g., UFSAR Revision, at §§... and... (MLA).
281 See e.g., UFSAR Revision, at §§... and... (MLA).
282 USEC, CLI--, NRC at ; Pilgrim, CLI--, NRC at ; Fitzpatrick, CLI--, NRC at


282 USEC, CLI- -, NRC at ; Pilgrim, CLI--, NRC at ; Fitzpatrick, CLI- -, NRC at
unforeseen troubles.283 The Petition also suggests that the steam generators ought to be replaced rather than repaired.284 However, as discussed below, Basis C does not support the contention, raises immaterial issues that are outside the scope of the proceeding, does not contest the information in the application on steam generators, and does not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. Therefore, Basis C does not satisfy §.(f)()(ii),
 
unforeseen troubles.283 The Petition also suggests that the steam generators ought to be
 
replaced rather than repaired. 284 However, as discussed below, Basis C does not support the
 
contention, raises immaterial issues that are outside the scope of the proceeding, does not
 
contest the information in the application on steam generators, and does not demonstrate a
 
genuine, material dispute with the licensee. Therefore, Basis C does not satisfy §. (f)()(ii),
 
(iii), (iv), or (vi) and is, thus, inadmissible.
(iii), (iv), or (vi) and is, thus, inadmissible.
 
First, the Petitioners steam generator claims do not relate to or support proposed Contention, which claims that [s]ince there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.285 Therefore, the Basis C arguments do not support the contention as required by  
First, the Petitioners steam generator claims do not relate to or support proposed
§.(f)()(ii).
 
Second, Basis C does not reference or dispute the applications specific content on steam generators. The Primary Amendment Request has literally hundreds of references to steam generator or its abbreviation SG.286 These include discussion of TSs..,.., and  
Contention, which claims that [s]ince there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting
.. on steam generator tube integrity, the steam generator program, and reports of licensee inspections.287 Further, the UFSAR Revision referenced in the application addresses steam generator tube plugging in the Chapter accident analysis, which the Petition never 283 Id. at - (italicization removed). See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.
 
a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by
 
Holtec.285 Therefore, the Basis C arguments do not support the contention as required by
 
§. (f)()(ii).
 
Second, Basis C does not reference or dispute the applications specific content on
 
steam generators. The Primary Amendment Request has literally hundreds of references to
 
steam generator or its abbreviation SG. 286 These include discussion of TSs..,.., and
 
.. on steam generator tube integrity, the steam generator program, and reports of licensee
 
inspections.287 Further, the UFSAR Revision referenced in the application addresses steam
 
generator tube plugging in the Chapter accident analysis, which the Petition never
 
283 Id. at - (italicization removed). See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.
 
284 Petition at.
284 Petition at.
285 Petition at.
285 Petition at.
286 See, generally, Primary Amendment Request.
286 See, generally, Primary Amendment Request.
287 Id., Enclosure at,, ; Enclosure, Attach. at..-,..-,.- to.-,.-,.-.
TS.. addresses the integrity of the steam generator tubes (including plugging) as this relates to the primary containment pressure boundary function of the steam generators; TS.. addresses the steam generator program (including provisions for tube integrity criteria, repair criteria, monitoring, and inspection); and TS.. addresses the submission of reports of licensee inspections conducted under TS... Id.


287 Id., Enclosure at,, ; Enclosure, Attach. at..-,..-,. - to. -,. -,. -.
discusses.288 Therefore, contrary to C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi), Basis C does not specifically identify the portions of the application information on steam generators that Petitioners dispute and the reasons for each dispute, or demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the application.
TS.. addresses the integrity of the steam generator tubes (including plugging) as this relates to the primary containment pressure boundary function of the steam generators; TS.. addresses the steam generator program (including provisions for tube integrity criteria, repair criteria, monitoring, and inspection); and TS.. addresses the submission of reports of licensee inspections conducted under TS... Id.
Third, Basis C never establishes the materiality of the concerns raised therein to this proceeding. The Petitioners never reference NRC regulatory requirements, much less explain how applicable regulations remain unsatisfied. They suggest that the steam generators be replaced but point to no NRC requirement that they must be replaced. They raise concerns with HDIs repair strategy, but in doing so they take issue with the content of a news article, not the application.289 They also never explain why NRC regulations would make the licensees specific repair strategy part of this amendment proceeding. The content of the TSs and UFSAR is part of this proceeding, but the Petitioners do not contest this content. The licensees activities to comply with the operating reactor TSs and comport with an operating reactor UFSAR are subject to NRC inspection and oversight outside of the proceeding. Similarly, HDIs past maintenance of the steam generators is outside this proceeding. Therefore, Basis C does not demonstrate that it raises material arguments as required by §.(f)()(iv), (vi), and to the extent it challenges licensee activities outside the amendment process, Basis C also does not satisfy §.(f)()(iii).
 
Ultimately, if the restart-related requests are approved, restart would be subject to NRC requirements in the TSs and the regulations (including the requirements in §. that control changes to the UFSAR). The licensees compliance with these requirements (including those related to steam generator tube integrity) would be subject to NRC inspection and oversight.
discusses.288 Therefore, contrary to C.F.R. §. (f)()(vi), Basis C does not specifically
 
identify the portions of the application information on steam generators that Petitioners dispute
 
and the reasons for each dispute, or demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the
 
application.
 
Third, Basis C never establishes the materiality of the concerns raised therein to this
 
proceeding. The Petitioners never reference NRC regulatory requirements, much less explain
 
how applicable regulations remain unsatisfied. They suggest that the steam generators be
 
replaced but point to no NRC requirement that they must be replaced. They raise concerns with
 
HDIs repair strategy, but in doing so they take issue with the content of a news article, not the
 
application.289 They also never explain why NRC regulati ons would make the licensees specific
 
repair strategy part of this amendment proceeding. The content of the TSs and UFSAR is part of
 
this proceeding, but the Petitioners do not contest this content. The licensees activities to
 
comply with the operating reactor TSs and comport with an operating reactor UFSAR are
 
subject to NRC inspection and oversight outside of the proceeding. Similarly, HDIs past
 
maintenance of the steam generators is outside this proceeding. Therefore, Basis C does not
 
demonstrate that it raises material arguments as required by §. (f)()(iv), (vi), and to the
 
extent it challenges licensee activities outside the amendment process, Basis C also does not
 
satisfy §. (f)()(iii).
 
Ultimately, if the restart-related requests are approved, restart would be subject to NRC
 
requirements in the TSs and the regulations (including the requirements in §. that control
 
changes to the UFSAR). The licensees compliance with these requirements (including those
 
related to steam generator tube integrity) would be subject to NRC inspection and oversight.
 
288 See, e.g., UFSAR Revision, §§.,.,. (MLA).
288 See, e.g., UFSAR Revision, §§.,.,. (MLA).
289 See Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration at ¶ ); Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ - (citing the repair strategy as described in a Reuters news article).


289 See Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration at ¶ ); Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ - (citing the repair strategy as described in a Reuters news article).
Reactor operation would only be permitted to the extent that the licensee meets the requirements for operation. And the Staff can, and will, take action (including the issuance of orders, if necessary) to ensure that any restart of operation at Palisades is safe. Finally, if HDIs repair strategy requires NRC approval in the form of the license amendment, the Petitioners and their contact would have an opportunity to challenge a new amendment request or a supplement to an existing amendment request on the matter.290 As explained above, the Basis C arguments regarding steam generator issues at Palisades do not support admissibility of proposed Contention because they do not satisfy  
 
§.(f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), and (vi).  
Reactor operation would only be permitted to the extent that the licensee meets the
. The Petitioners Basis D QA Records Arguments Are Inadmissible Under Basis D, the Petitioners claim that there was a [m]ass destruction of quality assurance (QA) records that will make restoration of operations very difficult or impossible.291 However, Basis D does not support the proposed contention and is itself unsupported, immaterial, and outside the scope of the proceeding, contrary to §.(f)()(ii)-(vi).
 
First, the Petitioners QA records claims do not relate to or support proposed Contention  
requirements for operation. And the Staff can, and will, take action (including the issuance of
, which asserts that [s]ince there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.292 Therefore, Basis D does not satisfy §.(f)()(ii).
 
Second, Basis D raises arguments within the scope of the transfer proceeding, not this proceeding on the amendment requests. As stated in the Amendments Notice, this proceeding is limited to the four restart-related amendment requests listed therein, while the Restart 290 HDI indicated at an October,, meeting of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards (ACRS) that it intended to submit a license amendment request on the steam generators, but the NRC has not yet received a submission from the licensee. The transcript for this ACRS meeting has not yet been released.
orders, if necessary) to ensure that any restart of operation at Palisades is safe. Finally, if HDIs
 
repair strategy requires NRC approval in the form of the license amendment, the Petitioners and
 
their contact would have an opportunity to challenge a new amendment request or a
 
supplement to an existing amendment request on the matter. 290
 
As explained above, the Basis C arguments regarding steam generator issues at
 
Palisades do not support admissibility of proposed Contention because they do not satisfy
 
§. (f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), and (vi).
 
. The Petitioners Basis D QA Records Arguments Are Inadmissible
 
Under Basis D, the Petitioners claim that there was a [m]ass destruction of quality
 
assurance (QA) records that will make restoration of operations very difficult or impossible. 291
 
However, Basis D does not support the proposed contention and is itself unsupported,
 
immaterial, and outside the scope of the proceeding, contrary to §. (f)()(ii)-(vi).
 
First, the Petitioners QA records claims do not relate to or support proposed Contention
 
, which asserts that [s]ince there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed
 
reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec. 292
 
Therefore, Basis D does not satisfy §. (f)()(ii).
 
Second, Basis D raises arguments within the scope of the transfer proceeding, not this
 
proceeding on the amendment requests. As stated in the Amendments Notice, this proceeding
 
is limited to the four restart-related amendment requests listed therein, while the Restart
 
290 HDI indicated at an October,, meeting of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards (ACRS) that it intended to submit a license amendment request on the steam generators, but the NRC has not yet received a submission from the licensee. The transcript for this ACRS meeting has not yet been released.
 
291 Id. at.
291 Id. at.
292 Petition at.


292 Petition at.
Transfer Request was the subject of a separate notice.293 The QA matters raised in Basis D are addressed in the Restart Transfer Request, not the amendment requests. Regarding QA records, the Restart Transfer Request states:
 
Transfer Request was the subject of a separate notice. 293 The QA matters raised in Basis D are
 
addressed in the Restart Transfer Request, not the amendment requests. Regarding QA
 
records, the Restart Transfer Request states:
 
(d) Quality Assurance Program
(d) Quality Assurance Program
[Palisades] is currently operating under its Fleet Decommissioning Quality Assurance Program. Coincident with the transfer of operational authority, HDI will reinstate a power operations [Quality Assurance Program Manual (QAPM)]
[Palisades] is currently operating under its Fleet Decommissioning Quality Assurance Program. Coincident with the transfer of operational authority, HDI will reinstate a power operations [Quality Assurance Program Manual (QAPM)]
pursuant to CFR. (a). Upon transfer, OPCO will retain authority and responsibility for the functions necessary to fulfill the quality assurance requirements required by the POTS [i.e., power operations technical specifications] and as specified in the power operations QAPM.
pursuant to CFR.(a). Upon transfer, OPCO will retain authority and responsibility for the functions necessary to fulfill the quality assurance requirements required by the POTS [i.e., power operations technical specifications] and as specified in the power operations QAPM.
 
HDI has maintained IT infrastructure and records required to comply with NRC recordkeeping requirements that will apply upon reinstatement of the POLB [i.e.,
HDI has maintained IT infrastructure and records required to comply with NRC recordkeeping requirements that will appl y upon reinstatement of the POLB [i.e.,
power operations licensing basis]. OPCO will have full access to all such assets and records following transfer of operational authority.294 Subsequently, HDI supplemented the transfer application to include a proposed QA program manual for NRC review (QA Program Manual Supplement).295 [A] proposed contention must be rejected if it raises issues beyond the scope of the proceeding as established by the Commission's hearing notice.296 Thus, if the Petitioners wished to raise QA matters regarding proposed restart of Palisades, they were required to do so in the transfer proceeding, but they did not file any such claims. Therefore, Basis D is outside the scope of this proceeding and is not material to the required NRC findings to issue the amendments, and Basis D consequently does not satisfy §.(f)()(iii), (iv), or (vi).
power operations licensing basis]. OPCO will have full access to all such assets and records following transfer of operational authority. 294
 
Subsequently, HDI supplemented the transfer application to include a proposed QA program
 
manual for NRC review (QA Program Manual Supplement). 295 [A] proposed contention must be
 
rejected if it raises issues beyond the scope of the proceeding as established by the
 
Commission's hearing notice. 296 Thus, if the Petitioners wished to raise QA matters regarding
 
proposed restart of Palisades, they were required to do so in the transfer proceeding, but they
 
did not file any such claims. Therefore, Basis D is outside the scope of this proceeding and is
 
not material to the required NRC findings to issue the amendments, and Basis D consequently
 
does not satisfy §. (f)()(iii), (iv), or (vi).
 
293 Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at,.
293 Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at,.
294 Restart Transfer Request, Enclosure at - (emphasis added).
294 Restart Transfer Request, Enclosure at - (emphasis added).
295 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Supplement to Application for Order Consenting to Transfer of Control of License and Approving Conforming License Amendments, Proposed Power Operations Quality Assurance Program Manual, Revision (May,
) (MLA) (QA Program Manual Supplement).
296 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit ), LBP--, NRC,
() (citing Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. (Marble Hill Nuclear Generating Station, Units and ),
ALAB-, NRC, - ()).


295 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Supplement to Application for Order Consenting to Transfer of Control of License and Approving Conforming License Amendments, Proposed Power Operations Quality Assurance Program Manual, Revision (May,
Third, even if Basis D were somehow within the scope of this proceeding, the arguments therein are unsupported, do not contest the application, and do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. Based on the Gundersen Declaration, the Petitioners claim a
) (ML A) (QA Program Manual Supplement).
[m]ass destruction of QA records occurred in,297 but the Gundersen Declaration does not support the assertion that QA records were, in fact, destroyed. The Gundersen Declaration cites a partial exemption from the QA record retention requirements,298 and Petitioners assume that QA records were actually destroyed on a massive scale. But this is a factually unsupported leap in logic. And as stated in the Restart Transfer Request, HDI has maintained IT infrastructure and records required to comply with NRC recordkeeping requirements that will apply upon reinstatement of the POLB.299 The Petitioners do not address, much less provide a sufficiently supported dispute contesting, this statement.300 Therefore, Basis D does not satisfy  
 
§.(f)()(v), (vi).
296 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit ), LBP- -, NRC,
For the reasons given above, proposed Contention should not be admitted because it does not satisfy the contention admissibility requirements of §.(f)()(ii)-(vi).
( ) (citing Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. (Marble Hill Nuclear Generating Station, Units and ),
F.
ALAB-, NRC, - ()).
Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Is Moot Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
There is no purpose and need statement appearing in the document the NRC considers to suffice for Holtecs Environmental Report. Pursuant to C.F.R.  
Third, even if Basis D were somehow within the scope of this proceeding, the arguments
§., an Environmental Report must contain a statement of the purpose for the project.301 297 Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration).
 
therein are unsupported, do not contest the application, and do not demonstrate a genuine,
 
material dispute with the licensee. Based on the Gundersen Declaration, the Petitioners claim a
 
[m]ass destruction of QA records occurred in,297 but the Gundersen Declaration does not
 
support the assertion that QA records were, in fact, destroyed. The Gundersen Declaration cites
 
a partial exemption from the QA record retention requirements, 298 and Petitioners assume that
 
QA records were actually destroyed on a massive scale. But this is a factually unsupported leap
 
in logic. And as stated in the Restart Transfer Request, HDI has maintained IT infrastructure
 
and records required to comply with NRC recordkeeping requirements that will apply upon
 
reinstatement of the POLB.299 The Petitioners do not address, much less provide a sufficiently
 
supported dispute contesting, this statement. 300 Therefore, Basis D does not satisfy
 
§. (f)()(v), (vi).
 
For the reasons given above, proposed Contention should not be admitted because it
 
does not satisfy the contention admissibility requirements of §. (f)()(ii)-(vi).
 
F. Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Is Moot
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
There is no purpose and need statement appearing in the document the NRC considers to suffice for Holtecs Environmental Report. Pursuant to C.F.R.
§., an Environmental Report must contain a statement of the purpose for the project.301
 
297 Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration).
 
298 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.
298 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.
299 Restart Transfer Request, Enclosure at -.
299 Restart Transfer Request, Enclosure at -.
300 By noting that this HDI statement is uncontroverted does not mean that the Staff is claiming that there has been no destruction of any QA records. As noted in an NRC inspection report, some records associated with simulator scenario based testing were lost, but the licensee addressed the issue by reperforming the affected testing, and simulator fidelity was determined to not be impacted. Letter to Mike Mlynarek, HDI, from April M. Nguyen, NRC, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Plant Reference Simulator Inspection Report /, Enclosure at (Mar., ) (MLA).
301 Petition at - (internal footnote omitted).


300 By noting that this HDI statement is uncontroverted does not mean that the Staff is claiming that there has been no destruction of any QA records. As noted in an NRC inspection report, some records associated with simulator scenario based testing were lost, but the licensee addressed the issue by reperforming the affected testing, and simulator fidelity was determined to not be impacted. Letter to Mike Mlynarek, HDI, from April M. Nguyen, NRC, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Plant Reference Simulator Inspection Report /, Enclosure at (Mar., ) (ML A).
The Basis for proposed Contention includes the Petitioners arguments for why a purpose and need statement is required.302 Staff Response: Proposed Contention is inadmissible because HDI submitted a response to a request for additional information (RAI) that moots the contention. Proposed Contention is framed as a contention of omission, and such contentions become moot when the applicant supplies the omitted information.303 On October,, HDI supplied a purpose and need statement in an RAI response, which serves to supplement the amendment request and cure the omission.304 Since the asserted omission has been cured, proposed Contention does not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact as required by §.(f)()(vi). Therefore, proposed Contention is inadmissible.305 G.
 
Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Does Not Demonstrate a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Licensee Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
301 Petition at - (internal footnote omitted).
There is no presentation of alternatives, nor discussion of the no-action alternative, found in the document the NRC and Holtec claim to suffice as an Environmental Report.306 302 Id. at -.
 
The Basis for proposed Contention includes the Petitioners arguments for why a purpose and
 
need statement is required. 302
 
Staff Response: Proposed Contention is inadmissible because HDI submitted a
 
response to a request for additional information (RAI) that moots the contention. Proposed
 
Contention is framed as a contention of omission, and such contentions become moot when
 
the applicant supplies the omitted information. 303 On October,, HDI supplied a purpose
 
and need statement in an RAI response, which serves to supplement the amendment request
 
and cure the omission.304 Since the asserted omission has been cured, proposed Contention  
 
does not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact as
 
required by §. (f)()(vi). Therefore, proposed Contention is inadmissible.305
 
G. Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Does Not Demonstrate a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Licensee
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
There is no presentation of alternatives, nor discussion of the no-action alternative, found in the document the NRC and Holtec claim to suffice as an Environmental Report.306
 
302 Id. at -.
 
303 Florida Power & Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Units & ), LBP--, NRC,
303 Florida Power & Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Units & ), LBP--, NRC,
( ).
().
 
304 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Response to Requests for Additional Information Regarding the Proposed Reauthorization of Power Operations of Palisades Nuclear Plant under Renewed Facility Operating License Number DPR-, Enclosure (Oct.  
304 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Response to Requests for Additional Information Regarding the Proposed Reauthorization of Power Operations of Palisades Nuclear Plant under Renewed Facility Operating License Number DPR-, Enclosure (Oct.
, ) (MLA) (This RAI response became publicly available in ADAMS on October, )
, ) (ML A ) (This RAI response became publicly available in ADAMS on October, )
(Environmental RAI Response).
(Environmental RAI Response).
305 The Staff notes that there are other arguments made in the proposed contention with which the Staff disagrees. For example, the Petitioners state without support that the Environmental Report submitted by Holtec is not an environmental report. However, as explained previously, the Environmental Report submitted with the Exemption Request and referenced in three of the four amendment requests falls within the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §.. Also, the Petitioners claim that the Environmental Report is subject to the requirements of §., but as discussed above, this regulation does not apply to the restart-related amendment requests. See §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context).
306 Petition at.


305 The Staff notes that there are other arguments made in the proposed contention with which the Staff disagrees. For example, the Petitioners state without support that the Environmental Report submitted by Holtec is not an environmental report. However, as explained previously, the Environmental Report submitted with the Exemption Request and referenced in three of the four amendment requests falls within the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §.. Also, the Petitioners claim that the Environmental Report is subject to the requirements of §., but as discussed above, this regulation does not apply to the restart-related amendment requests. See §. (a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context).
In the Basis for proposed Contention, the Petitioners argue that the Environmental Report is required to include a discussion of alternatives, particularly the no-action alternative.307 Staff Response: Proposed Contention, formulated as a contention of omission, does not satisfy the contention admissibility requirements in §.(f)()(vi) because it does not identify a failure of the application to contain information on a relevant matter as required by law or establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact. The Petitioners assert that the Environmental Report does not present alternatives or discuss the no-action alternative, but both of these claims are untrue. The Environmental Report discusses the no-action alternative in Section. of the report and references a separate HDI document for the environmental effects associated with this alternative.308 Thus, the Environmental Report presents alternatives by discussing the no-action alternative. Consequently, proposed Contention has no factual basis, does not identify an omission of information required by law, and does not establish a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. The proposed contention also does not specify any other alternative that the Environmental Report must address. For the Petitioners to have satisfied the contention admissibility requirements for some other alternative, the Petitioners would have had to specifically identify the missing alternative and supplied sufficient factual and legal support to establish that this particular alternative must be described in the Environmental Report. The Petitioners did not do this. Regardless, the Environmental RAI Response does discuss energy and system alternatives.309 Therefore, as discussed above, proposed Contention is inadmissible because it does not satisfy §.(f)()(vi).
 
H.
306 Petition at.
Proposed Contention Is Admissible, in Part Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
In the Basis for proposed Contention, the Petitioners argue that the Environmental Report is
 
required to include a discussion of alternatives, particularly the no-action alternative. 307
 
Staff Response: Proposed Contention, formulated as a contention of omission, does
 
not satisfy the contention admissibility requirements in §. (f)()(vi) because it does not
 
identify a failure of the application to contain information on a relevant matter as required by law
 
or establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact. The
 
Petitioners assert that the Environmental Report does not present alternatives or discuss the
 
no-action alternative, but both of these claims are untrue. The Environmental Report discusses
 
the no-action alternative in Section. of the report and references a separate HDI document
 
for the environmental effects associated with this alternative. 308 Thus, the Environmental Report
 
presents alternatives by discussing the no-action alternative. Consequently, proposed
 
Contention has no factual basis, does not identify an omission of information required by law,
 
and does not establish a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. The proposed contention
 
also does not specify any other alternative that the Environmental Report must address. For the
 
Petitioners to have satisfied the contention admissi bility requirements for some other alternative,
 
the Petitioners would have had to specifically identify the missing alternative and supplied
 
sufficient factual and legal support to establish that this particular alternative must be described
 
in the Environmental Report. The Petitioners did not do this. Regardless, the Environmental RAI
 
Response does discuss energy and system alternatives. 309 Therefore, as discussed above,
 
proposed Contention is inadmissible because it does not satisfy §. (f)()(vi).
 
H. Proposed Contention Is Admissible, in Part
 
Proposed Contention is stated as follows:
 
307 Id. at -.
307 Id. at -.
308 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
308 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).
309 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure.


309 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure.
The proposed license amendments and supporting documents, including the document that the NRC and Holtec claim to suffice as an Environmental Report, contain no meaningful identification nor discussion of the effects of anthropocene climate change on the functioning and componentry of the plant, nor is there any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health.310 The proposed contentions Basis argues that Holtecs Environmental Report omits the relevant discussions of climate change, which Petitioner asserts are required by Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations and the NRCs NEPA implementing regulations in C.F.R. Part.311 Petitioners also argue that the Environmental Report must contain a discussion of ) climate change impacts on the functioning and componentry of the plant (i.e.,
 
safe operation of the plant and routine operational challenges), ) an analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, (i.e., greenhouse gas emissions) and ) an analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on the physical environment and public health (i.e., proposed action impacts considered with climate change).312 Staff Response: Proposed Contention is admissible, in part. Proposed Contention states that the Environmental Report does not contain any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on Anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health. As discussed below, the NRC considers the impacts of the proposed action as they relate to climate change by considering and analyzing the )
The proposed license amendments and supporting documents, including the document that the NRC and Holtec claim to suffice as an Environmental Report, contain no meaningful identification nor discussion of the effects of anthropocene climate change on the functioning and componentry of the plant, nor is there any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health. 310
greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment. As the Environmental Report does not contain these 310 Petition at (internal footnote omitted).
 
The proposed contentions Basis argues that Holtecs Environmental Report omits the relevant
 
discussions of climate change, which Petitioner asserts are required by Council on
 
Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations and the NRCs NEPA implementing regulations in
 
C.F.R. Part.311 Petitioners also argue that the Environmental Report must contain a
 
discussion of ) climate change impacts on the functioning and componentry of the plant (i.e.,
 
safe operation of the plant and routine operational challenges), ) an analysis of the effects that
 
restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, (i.e., greenhouse gas
 
emissions) and ) an analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on the
 
physical environment and public health (i.e., pro posed action impacts considered with climate
 
change).312
 
Staff Response: Proposed Contention is admissible, in part. Proposed Contention  
 
states that the Environmental Report does not contain any identification or analysis of the
 
effects that restored plant operations would have on Anthropocene climate change, the physical
 
environment and public health. As discussed below, the NRC considers the impacts of the
 
proposed action as they relate to climate change by considering and analyzing the )
 
greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline
 
environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a
 
discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the
 
same in this new baseline environment. As t he Environmental Report does not contain these
 
310 Petition at (internal footnote omitted).
 
311 Petition at -.
311 Petition at -.
312 See Petition at.


312 See Petition at.
climate change discussions, the Staff agrees that proposed Contention is admissible to the extent that it identifies that the Environmental Report omits these climate change discussions.
 
However, the portion of the contention that raises operational issues is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv) and (vi). Finally, the portion of the contention that raises safety concerns is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv) and (vi).
climate change discussions, the Staff agrees that proposed Contention is admissible to the
The Commission has stated, We expect the Staff to include consideration of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions in its environmental reviews for major licensing actions.313 Based on this decision, the Staff considers climate change to be within the scope of the NEPA environmental review for major licensing actions, a term that the Staff concludes would apply to the restart and resumption of operations at Palisades.
 
Although the licensees requests for approval of the licensing actions and exemption required for restart do not constitute an application for a new construction permit or license, the Staffs guidance for conducting environmental reviews for other major licensing actions is instructive here. In the Staffs guidance for implementing CLI-- in new reactor environmental reviews, the Staff determined that the environmental reviews for these major licensing actions will include ) greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.314 The NRC 313 Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (William States Lee III Nuclear Station, Units and ), CLI--, NRC
extent that it identifies that the Environment al Report omits these climate change discussions.
, - ().
 
314 See Regulatory Guide., Revision Preparation of Environmental Reports for Nuclear Power Stations Section., at (Sept. ) (MLA). See also Interim staff guidance; issuance; Environmental Issues Associated with New Reactors, Fed. Reg., (Sept., ).
However, the portion of the contention that raises operational issues is inadmissible for failing to
 
meet C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii), (iv) and (vi). Finally, the portion of the contention that raises
 
safety concerns is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv) and (vi).
 
The Commission has stated, We expect the Staff to include consideration of carbon
 
dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions in its environmental reviews for major licensing
 
actions.313 Based on this decision, the Staff considers climate change to be within the scope of
 
the NEPA environmental review for major licensing actions, a term that the Staff concludes
 
would apply to the restart and resumption of operations at Palisades.
 
Although the licensees requests for approval of the licensing actions and exemption
 
required for restart do not constitute an application for a new construction permit or license, the


Staffs guidance for conducting environmental reviews for other major licensing actions is
determined in the and LR GEISs that these same climate change issues are to be evaluated during license renewal environmental reviews.315 The Environmental Report HDI submitted in connection with the proposed restart and resumption of operation of Palisades does not contain these discussions of climate change, as discussed below.316 While HDI was not required to submit an Environmental Report for the restart-related amendment requests,317 HDI voluntarily developed the Environmental Report, which describes its scope in broad terms:
 
Holtec Decommissioning International LLC (Holtec) has prepared an environmental review of the proposed resumption of power operations at Palisades Nuclear Plant (PNP) specifically to () provide updated status of the plants permits, licenses, and authorizations, () provide updated information on the Palisades Nuclear Plants (PNP) site and environs, () provide a review of potentially new and significant information since the Nuclear Regulatory Commissions (NRC) findings in its October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement, Regarding Palisades Nuclear Plant [herein called SEIS] to determine if the SEIS findings remain bounding, and () provide an assessment of Category and environmental issues not addressed in Supplement. (NMC ; NRC  
instructive here. In the Staffs guidance for implementing CLI- - in new reactor
).318 As stated in Discussion Section II.B, above, Holtec referenced the Environmental Report in three of the four amendment requests. Also, C.F.R. §.(f)() and Commission precedent establish that petitioners are obligated to address environmental information in the application 315 See Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, NUREG-,
 
environmental reviews, the Staff determined that the environmental reviews for these major
 
licensing actions will include ) greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a
 
description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a
 
result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either
 
increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment. 314 The NRC
 
313 Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (William States Lee III Nuclear Station, Units and ), CLI- -, NRC
, - ( ).
 
314 See Regulatory Guide., Revision Preparation of Environmental Reports for Nuclear Power Stations Section., at (Sept. ) (MLA ). See also Interim staff guidance; issuance; Environmental Issues Associated with New Reactors, Fed. Reg., (Sept., ).
 
determined in the and LR GEISs that these same climate change issues are to be
 
evaluated during license renewal environmental reviews. 315
 
The Environmental Report HDI submitted in connection with the proposed restart and
 
resumption of operation of Palisades does not contain these discussions of climate change, as
 
discussed below.316 While HDI was not required to submit an Environmental Report for the
 
restart-related amendment requests, 317 HDI voluntarily developed the Environmental Report,
 
which describes its scope in broad terms:
 
Holtec Decommissioning International LLC (Holtec) has prepared an environmental review of the proposed resumption of power operations at Palisades Nuclear Plant (PNP) specifically to ( ) provide updated status of the plants permits, licenses, and authorizations, ( ) provide updated information on the Palisades Nuclear Plants (PNP) site and environs, ( ) provide a review of potentially new and significant information since the Nuclear Regulatory Commissions (NRC) findings in its October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement, Regarding Palisades Nuclear Plant [herein called SEIS] to determine if the SEIS findings remain bounding, and ( ) provide an assessment of Category and environmental issues not addressed in Supplement. (NMC ; NRC
).318
 
As stated in Discussion Section II.B, above, Holtec referenced the Environmental Report in
 
three of the four amendment requests. Also, C.F.R. §. (f)( ) and Commission precedent
 
establish that petitioners are obligated to address environmental information in the application
 
315 See Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, NUREG-,
Rev., Vol., Section.. (June ) (MLA) ( LR GEIS); Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, NUREG-, Rev., Vol., Section. (Aug. )
Rev., Vol., Section.. (June ) (MLA) ( LR GEIS); Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, NUREG-, Rev., Vol., Section. (Aug. )
(ML A ) ( LR GEIS).
(MLA) ( LR GEIS).
 
316 The Environmental Report assessed the Category and environmental issues from the LR GEIS that were not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement. The License Renewal EIS Supplement does not contain the relevant discussions of climate change.
316 The Environmental Report assessed the Category and environmental issues from the LR GEIS that were not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement. The License Renewal EIS Supplement does not contain the relevant discussions of climate change.
 
317 See C.F.R. §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,  
317 See C.F.R. §. (a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,
.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). There is no other provision of C.F.R. Part that requires an environmental report in this context.
.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). There is no other provision of C.F.R. Part that requires an environmental report in this context.
318 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at (Environmental Report).


318 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at (Environmental Report).
even if the applicant was not required to submit it.319 Given the stated breadth of the Environmental Report and Commission requirements regarding the filing of contentions thereon, the Staff concludes that proposed Contention is admissible to the extent it identifies the omissions of ) a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment for the proposed action might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how impacts of the proposed action would either increase, decrease or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
 
As explained below, the remainder of proposed Contention is inadmissible as it raises safety and operational issues that are outside the scope of the NEPA environmental review, are not material to the findings the NRC must make, and do not demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI on an issue of material fact or law. Therefore, proposed Contention should be admitted in a narrowed form, as discussed below.
even if the applicant was not required to submit it. 319 Given the stated breadth of the
The Portions of Proposed Contention that Identify the Omissions of ) a Discussion of Greenhouse Gas Emissions of the Proposed Action and ) a Description of How the Baseline Environment in the Environmental Review Might Change as a Result of Climate Change and a Discussion of How Proposed Action Impacts Would Either Increase, Decrease, or Remain the Same in this New Baseline Environment.
 
Proposed Contention identifies omissions in the Environmental Report that are within the scope of the environmental review. The Petitioners assert that the Environmental Report does not contain any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health. The Staff agrees, with some exceptions.
Environmental Report and Commission requirements regarding the filing of contentions thereon,
319 See C.F.R. §.(f)() (stating that contentions must be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, including (as relevant here) the application, environmental report or other supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee); Palisades, CLI--
 
the Staff concludes that proposed Contention is admissible to the extent it identifies the
 
omissions of ) a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a
 
description of how the baseline environment for the proposed action might change as a result of
 
climate change and a discussion of how impacts of the proposed action would either increase,
 
decrease or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
 
As explained below, the remainder of proposed Contention is inadmissible as it raises
 
safety and operational issues that are outside the scope of the NEPA environmental review, are
 
not material to the findings the NRC must make, and do not demonstrate a genuine dispute with
 
HDI on an issue of material fact or law. Therefore, proposed Contention should be admitted in
 
a narrowed form, as discussed below.
 
. The Portions of Proposed Contention that Identify the Omissions of ) a Discussion of Greenhouse Gas Emissions of the Proposed Action and ) a Description of How the Baseline Environment in the Environmental Review Might Change as a Result of Climate Change and a Discussion of How Proposed Action Impacts Would Either Increase, Decrease, or Remain the Same in this New Baseline Environment.
 
Proposed Contention identifies omissions in the Environmental Report that are within
 
the scope of the environmental review. The Petitioners assert that the Environmental Report
 
does not contain any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations
 
would have on anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health. The
 
Staff agrees, with some exceptions.
 
319 See C.F.R. §. (f)( ) (stating that contentions must be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, including (as relevant here) the application, environmental report or other supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee); Palisades, CLI- -
, NRC at (explaining that petitioners were obligated to file contentions challenging the statements in the license transfer application regarding the applicability of the proposed categorical exclusion);
, NRC at (explaining that petitioners were obligated to file contentions challenging the statements in the license transfer application regarding the applicability of the proposed categorical exclusion);
C.F.R. Part (which does not require an applicant to address the applicability of categorical exclusions).
C.F.R. Part (which does not require an applicant to address the applicability of categorical exclusions).  
 
As to the first omission, the Environmental Report does not discuss the greenhouse gas
 
emissions that would be caused by the restart and resumption of operations at Palisades. In
 
table. - of the Environmental Report, Holtec provided an assessment of Category and
 
environmental issues from the LR GEIS that were not addressed in the License Renewal
 
EIS Supplement, but did not include a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions enumerated in
 
section... of the LR GEIS, which implemented the Commissions direction in CLI- -
 
.320 Holtec, in response to the Staffs RAI, RAI-MET-, provided the emissions Inventory
 
Report for Palisades.321 However, this emission data does not represent operational conditions,
 
as the fuel was permanently removed from the Palisades reactor vessel in.322 Therefore,
 
the Petitioners have identified that this Environmental Report omits the required discussion of
 
greenhouse gas emissions from the proposed restart and resumed operation of Palisades.
 
As to the second omission, the Environmental Report does not contain a description of
 
how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate
 
change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or
 
remain the same in this new baseline environment. In table. - of the Environmental Report,
 
Holtec did not include a discussion of climate change impacts enumerated in Sections...
 
and.. of the LR GEIS, which implemented the Commissions direction in CLI- -.
 
An omission in an applicants environmental report of the impact on water availability and
 
aquatic resources in light of reasonably foreseeable climate changes considered together with
 
320 While this action is not a license renewal, the Environmental Report uses the categories of the LR GEIS to identify any information that may be new and significant. The LR GEIS identified greenhouse gas emissions and climate change as an issue to be analyzed to implement the Commissions direction for major licensing actions in CLI- -.


As to the first omission, the Environmental Report does not discuss the greenhouse gas emissions that would be caused by the restart and resumption of operations at Palisades. In table.- of the Environmental Report, Holtec provided an assessment of Category and environmental issues from the LR GEIS that were not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement, but did not include a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions enumerated in section... of the LR GEIS, which implemented the Commissions direction in CLI--
.320 Holtec, in response to the Staffs RAI, RAI-MET-, provided the emissions Inventory Report for Palisades.321 However, this emission data does not represent operational conditions, as the fuel was permanently removed from the Palisades reactor vessel in.322 Therefore, the Petitioners have identified that this Environmental Report omits the required discussion of greenhouse gas emissions from the proposed restart and resumed operation of Palisades.
As to the second omission, the Environmental Report does not contain a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment. In table.- of the Environmental Report, Holtec did not include a discussion of climate change impacts enumerated in Sections...
and.. of the LR GEIS, which implemented the Commissions direction in CLI--.
An omission in an applicants environmental report of the impact on water availability and aquatic resources in light of reasonably foreseeable climate changes considered together with 320 While this action is not a license renewal, the Environmental Report uses the categories of the LR GEIS to identify any information that may be new and significant. The LR GEIS identified greenhouse gas emissions and climate change as an issue to be analyzed to implement the Commissions direction for major licensing actions in CLI--.
321 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure.
321 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure.
322 Palisades.(a)() Certifications, at.


322 Palisades. (a)() Certifications, at.
the proposed action has previously been admitted by a Board for a hearing.323 Therefore, the Petitioners have identified that this Environmental Report omits the required description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how impacts discussed in the environmental review would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
 
The NRC staff notes that this portion of proposed Contention is admissible only as a contention of omission based on the absence of a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions and the climate change impacts to the environmental resources that are incrementally affected by the proposed action, generally. The NRC Staff would like to provide clarification regarding HDIs replacement of the Component Cooling Water (CCW) heat exchangers. Petitioners expert, Mr.
the proposed action has previously been admitted by a Board for a hearing. 323 Therefore, the
Gundersen, uses a press release issued by Holtec about the replacement of the heat exchangers to form his factual basis for specific environmental impacts from the proposed action that climate change will intensify.324 However, the CCW heat exchangers are a part of the auxiliary support systems that provide cooling to reactor components, not a part of the primary steam cycle as understood by Mr. Gundersen.325 These CCW heat exchangers cool the CCW loop using service water that is drawn from Lake Michigan and is returned either to the Makeup 323 Exelon Nuclear Texas Holdings, LLC, (Victoria County Station Site), LBP--, NRC, -
 
Petitioners have identified that this Environmental Report omits the required description of how
 
the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate
 
change and a discussion of how impacts discussed in the environmental review would either
 
increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
 
The NRC staff notes that this portion of proposed Contention is admissible only as a
 
contention of omission based on the absence of a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions and
 
the climate change impacts to the environmental resources that are incrementally affected by
 
the proposed action, generally. The NRC Staff would like to provide clarification regarding HDIs
 
replacement of the Component Cooling Water (CCW) heat exchangers. Petitioners expert, Mr.
 
Gundersen, uses a press release issued by Holtec about the replacement of the heat
 
exchangers to form his factual basis for spec ific environmental impacts from the proposed
 
action that climate change will intensify. 324 However, the CCW heat exchangers are a part of the
 
auxiliary support systems that provide cooling to reactor components, not a part of the primary
 
steam cycle as understood by Mr. Gundersen. 325 These CCW heat exchangers cool the CCW
 
loop using service water that is drawn from Lake Michigan and is returned either to the Makeup
 
323 Exelon Nuclear Texas Holdings, LLC, (Victoria County Station Site), LBP--, NRC, -
().
().
324 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -, -. (The basis for the claim by Holtec Palisades that a new
324 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -, -. (The basis for the claim by Holtec Palisades that a new
[heat exchanger] was needed is undoubtedly questionable. Simply put, the water from Lake Michigan does not cool Holtec Palisades; instead it is cooled by water circulating through two banks of cooling towers. Water from the cooling towers cools the condenser, NOT water from Lake Michigan. However, Holtec Palisades assertion that the increasing lake temperature is the cause for installing a new condenser is false because atmospheric heat transf er from the cooling towers is what cools the condenser.).
[heat exchanger] was needed is undoubtedly questionable. Simply put, the water from Lake Michigan does not cool Holtec Palisades; instead it is cooled by water circulating through two banks of cooling towers. Water from the cooling towers cools the condenser, NOT water from Lake Michigan. However, Holtec Palisades assertion that the increasing lake temperature is the cause for installing a new condenser is false because atmospheric heat transfer from the cooling towers is what cools the condenser.).
 
325 Environmental RAI Response at Enclosure. See also UFSAR Revision, at §§. and  
325 Environmental RAI Response at Enclosure. See also UFSAR Revision, at §§. and
... (MLA). See also NRC Technical Training Center, Reactor Concepts Manual, Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) Systems, at - (Sept., ) (MLA) (showing a simplified figure of a typical PWR CCW system for illustrative purposes only).  
... (MLA). See also NRC Technical Training Center, Reactor Concepts Manual, Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) Systems, at - (Sept., ) (ML A ) (showing a simplified figure of a typical PWR CCW system for illustrative purposes only).
 
Basin or discharged to Lake Michigan via the Mixing Basin. 326 While Holtec has acknowledged
 
that climate change, in part, was a motivating reason for the installation of the new CCW heat
 
exchangers to provide operational capacity for the heat exchangers, 327 Holtec has also
 
explained that the replacement of these CCW heat exchangers provides operational flexibility
 
unrelated to climate change. 328 Therefore, Mr. Gundersens declaration is premised on a
 
misunderstanding. Based on this misunderstanding, Mr. Gundersen discusses six purported
 
environmental impacts, but the CCW heat exchanger replacement is unrelated to these
 
impacts.329 And Mr. Gundersens discussion of these six purported impacts consists of
 
unsupported speculation. As a result, Mr. Gundersen offers only speculative assertions without
 
any factual support. Bare assertions and speculation, even by an expert, are insufficient to
 
demonstrate an inadequacy in an Environmental Report. 330 Therefore, while proposed
 
Contention identifies an omission in the Environmental Report as a general matter, the
 
Petitioners arguments regarding the CCW heat exchangers and specific environmental impacts
 
are unsupported and do not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of
 
law or fact, as required by §. (f)()(v), and (vi).


Basin or discharged to Lake Michigan via the Mixing Basin.326 While Holtec has acknowledged that climate change, in part, was a motivating reason for the installation of the new CCW heat exchangers to provide operational capacity for the heat exchangers,327 Holtec has also explained that the replacement of these CCW heat exchangers provides operational flexibility unrelated to climate change.328 Therefore, Mr. Gundersens declaration is premised on a misunderstanding. Based on this misunderstanding, Mr. Gundersen discusses six purported environmental impacts, but the CCW heat exchanger replacement is unrelated to these impacts.329 And Mr. Gundersens discussion of these six purported impacts consists of unsupported speculation. As a result, Mr. Gundersen offers only speculative assertions without any factual support. Bare assertions and speculation, even by an expert, are insufficient to demonstrate an inadequacy in an Environmental Report.330 Therefore, while proposed Contention identifies an omission in the Environmental Report as a general matter, the Petitioners arguments regarding the CCW heat exchangers and specific environmental impacts are unsupported and do not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact, as required by §.(f)()(v), and (vi).
326 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure. (The [Service Water] System is the open loop system that serves as the ultimate heat sink for [Palisades] and draws water from Lake Michigan and returns water to the Circulating Water System at the Makeup Basin (the source of water to the cooling towers (when in service) or discharge to Lake Michigan via the Mixing Basin (the interface with the surface water environment).)
326 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure. (The [Service Water] System is the open loop system that serves as the ultimate heat sink for [Palisades] and draws water from Lake Michigan and returns water to the Circulating Water System at the Makeup Basin (the source of water to the cooling towers (when in service) or discharge to Lake Michigan via the Mixing Basin (the interface with the surface water environment).)
327 Petition at. (To meet the project rising lake water temperature).
327 Petition at. (To meet the project rising lake water temperature).
328 Environmental RAI Response at Enclosure (The proposed replacement CCWHXs will be two percent capacity shell and tube horizontal single-pass heat exchangers. The installation of percent capacity heat exchangers will allow the operational flexibility to remove one of them from service by isolating both the CCW (Shell side) and SW (tube side) and allowing maintenance on one heat exchanger at a time.)
328 Environmental RAI Response at Enclosure (The proposed replacement CCWHXs will be two percent capacity shell and tube horizontal single-pass heat exchangers. The installation of percent capacity heat exchangers will allow the operational flexibility to remove one of them from service by isolating both the CCW (Shell side) and SW (tube side) and allowing maintenance on one heat exchanger at a time.)
329 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶.-.
329 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶.-.
330 Entergy Nuclear Generation Company (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI--, NRC,
330 Entergy Nuclear Generation Company (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI--, NRC,
( ).
().  
 
Also, to the extent that the Petition is challenging Holtecs press release on the CCW
 
heat exchangers, the staff notes that §. (f)()(vi) requires contentions to challenge the
 
application and to identify the specific portions of the application that are being challenged. A
 
challenge to the press release, without more, does not challenge the application and therefore
 
does not support contention admissibility.
 
In sum, proposed Contention identifies two omissions on issues material to the findings
 
the NRC must make to support the action that is involved in this proceeding and satisfies the
 
admissibility criteria in C.F.R. §. (f)()(i)-(vi) as a contention of omission. However, the
 
Petitioners arguments regarding the CCW heat exchangers and specific environmental impacts
 
do not support contention admissibility. Therefore, proposed Contention should be admitted
 
based on the omission, in general, of a discussion of ) greenhouse gas emissions of the
 
proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental
 
review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action
 
impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
 
. The Remainder of Proposed Contention, Which Raises Safety and Operational Issues, Is Not Admissible as it Fails to Meet the Admissibility Criteria of C.F.R. §. (iii), (iv), and (vi).
 
Proposed Contention, an environmental contention, 331 asserts that the Environmental
 
Report contain[s] no meaningful identification nor discussion of the effects of anthropocene
 
climate change on the functioning and componentry of the plant. 332 Petitioners raise
 
operational and safety concerns due to climate change, such as speculation that the plant may
 
331 Petitioners have framed this contention as a challenge to the Environmental Report based on NEPA, CEQ regulations, and C.F.R. Part.
 
332 Petition at. See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶,,.
 
face operational constraints that could cause the plant to derate 333 or may increase the intensity
 
of an external hazard.334
 
Petitioners do not provide any legal authority requiring the Environmental Report to
 
discuss either safety or operational impacts of the environment on the plant and do not point to
 
any specific portions of the Environmental Report that they dispute, and therefore this portion of
 
the contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv), and (vi). Also, the operational
 
concerns regarding derating are not within the scope of this proceeding, and therefore this
 
portion of the contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii).
 
Under NEPA, the environmental review is limited to the plants impact on the
 
environment, not of the environments impact on the plant. 335 NRC regulations for environmental
 
assessments similarly focus on [t]he environmental impacts of the proposed action, not
 
impacts on the proposed action.336 Consistent with this, in the LR GEIS, the NRC stated,
 
The implications of long-term climate change on plant operations and adjustments or
 
preparations by licensees to a new or changi ng environment are outside the scope of the NRCs
 
license renewal environmental review, which documents the potential environmental impacts of
 
continued reactor operations.337 Also, in an adjudicatory context, the Commission has rejected


333 Petition at,, and. See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶,. ([S]o back pressure on the turbine increases, and electric power output is reduced.)
Also, to the extent that the Petition is challenging Holtecs press release on the CCW heat exchangers, the staff notes that §.(f)()(vi) requires contentions to challenge the application and to identify the specific portions of the application that are being challenged. A challenge to the press release, without more, does not challenge the application and therefore does not support contention admissibility.
In sum, proposed Contention identifies two omissions on issues material to the findings the NRC must make to support the action that is involved in this proceeding and satisfies the admissibility criteria in C.F.R. §.(f)()(i)-(vi) as a contention of omission. However, the Petitioners arguments regarding the CCW heat exchangers and specific environmental impacts do not support contention admissibility. Therefore, proposed Contention should be admitted based on the omission, in general, of a discussion of ) greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
The Remainder of Proposed Contention, Which Raises Safety and Operational Issues, Is Not Admissible as it Fails to Meet the Admissibility Criteria of C.F.R. §.(iii), (iv), and (vi).
Proposed Contention, an environmental contention,331 asserts that the Environmental Report contain[s] no meaningful identification nor discussion of the effects of anthropocene climate change on the functioning and componentry of the plant.332 Petitioners raise operational and safety concerns due to climate change, such as speculation that the plant may 331 Petitioners have framed this contention as a challenge to the Environmental Report based on NEPA, CEQ regulations, and C.F.R. Part.
332 Petition at. See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶,,.  


face operational constraints that could cause the plant to derate333 or may increase the intensity of an external hazard.334 Petitioners do not provide any legal authority requiring the Environmental Report to discuss either safety or operational impacts of the environment on the plant and do not point to any specific portions of the Environmental Report that they dispute, and therefore this portion of the contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), and (vi). Also, the operational concerns regarding derating are not within the scope of this proceeding, and therefore this portion of the contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii).
Under NEPA, the environmental review is limited to the plants impact on the environment, not of the environments impact on the plant.335 NRC regulations for environmental assessments similarly focus on [t]he environmental impacts of the proposed action, not impacts on the proposed action.336 Consistent with this, in the LR GEIS, the NRC stated, The implications of long-term climate change on plant operations and adjustments or preparations by licensees to a new or changing environment are outside the scope of the NRCs license renewal environmental review, which documents the potential environmental impacts of continued reactor operations.337 Also, in an adjudicatory context, the Commission has rejected 333 Petition at,, and. See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶,. ([S]o back pressure on the turbine increases, and electric power output is reduced.)
334 Gundersen Declaration at ¶ (For example, ultimate heat sink temperatures, wind forces, snow loads, and rain accumulation are some climate related changes that could adversely affect the safe operation of Holtec Palisades.) (emphasis added).
334 Gundersen Declaration at ¶ (For example, ultimate heat sink temperatures, wind forces, snow loads, and rain accumulation are some climate related changes that could adversely affect the safe operation of Holtec Palisades.) (emphasis added).
335 U.S.C. § ()(C) (NEPA § ()(C)). See also Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., U.S. () (NEPA has twin aims. First, it places upon an agency the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental impact of a proposed action. Second, it ensures that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed considered environmental concerns in its decisionmaking process The role of the courts is simply to ensure that the agency has adequately considered and disclosed the environmental impacts of its actions and that its decision is not arbitrary or capricious.) (emphasis added) (internal quotes and citations omitted).
336 C.F.R. §.(a)()(iii).
337 LR GEIS, Vol, App. A, at A- (MLA) (emphasis added).


335 U.S.C. § ( )(C) (NEPA § ( )(C)). See also Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., U.S. ( ) (NEPA has twin aims. First, it places upon an agency the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental impact of a proposed action. Second, it ensures that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed considered environmental concerns in its decisionmaking process The role of the courts is simply to ensure that the agency has adequately considered and disclosed the environmental impacts of its actions and that its decision is not arbitrary or capricious.) (emphasis added) (internal quotes and citations omitted).
an attempt to bring safety issues within the scope of the environmental review.338 Therefore, the Petitioners efforts to raise safety and operational concerns regarding the effects of climate change on the facility are not material to the NRCs environmental findings and do not satisfy  
 
§.(f)()(iv), and (vi).
336 C.F.R. §. (a)()(iii).
Petitioners cite to CEQ regulations and NRC NEPA implementing regulations in C.F.R. §. as binding authority for proposed Contention,339 but neither of these regulations require this environmental report to include any discussion of the effects of climate change on the plant. As an independent regulatory agency, the NRC is not bound by those portions of the CEQs NEPA regulations that have a substantive impact on the way in which the Commission performs its regulatory functions.340 Based on the NRCs status as an independent regulatory agency, Petitioners citations to non-binding CEQ regulations do not provide any legal authority that supports the admission of this aspect of the contention. As to  
 
§., the content requirements of §. do not apply to the Environment Report, but, regardless, §. requires a discussion of the environmental impacts of the proposed action, not the impact of the environment on the plant.341 Furthermore, Petitioners have not demonstrated that these safety and operational concerns, if realized, would have any effect on the environment such that these issues would be material to the environmental findings the NRC must make to support the action involved in this 338 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units and ), CLI--, NRC  
337 LR GEIS, Vol, App. A, at A- (ML A ) (emphasis added).
, - () (finding that the environmental review may not serve as a back door to litigate the effectiveness of site emergency plans which, much like a plants ability to withstand natural phenomena, are reviewed and updated throughout the life of an operating plant.)
 
an attempt to bring safety issues within the scope of the environmental review. 338 Therefore, the
 
Petitioners efforts to raise safety and operational concerns regarding the effects of climate
 
change on the facility are not material to the NRCs environmental findings and do not satisfy
 
§. (f)()(iv), and (vi).
 
Petitioners cite to CEQ regulations and NRC NEPA implementing regulations in
 
C.F.R. §. as binding authority for proposed Contention,339 but neither of these
 
regulations require this environmental report to include any discussion of the effects of climate
 
change on the plant. As an independent regulatory agency, the NRC is not bound by those
 
portions of the CEQs NEPA regulations that have a substantive impact on the way in which
 
the Commission performs its regulatory functions. 340 Based on the NRCs status as an
 
independent regulatory agency, Petitioners citations to non-binding CEQ regulations do not
 
provide any legal authority that supports the admission of this aspect of the contention. As to
 
§., the content requirements of §. do not apply to the Environment Report, but,
 
regardless, §. requires a discussion of the environmental impacts of the proposed action,
 
not the impact of the environment on the plant. 341
 
Furthermore, Petitioners have not demonstrated that these safety and operational
 
concerns, if realized, would have any effect on the environment such that these issues would be
 
material to the environmental findings the NRC must make to support the action involved in this
 
338 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units and ), CLI--, NRC
, - ( ) (finding that the environmental review may not serve as a back door to litigate the effectiveness of site emergency plans which, much like a plants ability to withstand natural phenomena, are reviewed and updated throughout the life of an operating plant.)
 
339 Petition at -.
339 Petition at -.
 
340 Pacific Gas and Electric Co., (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units and ) CLI--, NRC  
340 Pacific Gas and Electric Co., (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units and ) CLI--, NRC
, - () (citing Environmental Protection Regulations for Domestic Licensing and Related Regulatory Functions and Related Conforming Amendments, Fed. Reg., (Mar., )
, - () (citing Environmental Protection Regulations for Domestic Licensing and Related Regulatory Functions and Related Conforming Amendments, Fed. Reg., (Mar., )
(final rule)). See also C.F.R. §.(a).
(final rule)). See also C.F.R. §.(a).
341 See C.F.R. §.(b)().


341 See C.F.R. §. (b)().
proceeding.342 Even more so, these safety concerns are not within the scope of the NEPA environmental review, and Petitioners provide no binding legal authority that would allow the environmental review to operate as a backdoor to litigate safety topics.343 Therefore, the section of proposed Contention that raises safety and operational issues is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv) and (vi).
 
As for the operational concern that the plants output may be reduced, this issue is not within the NRCs statutory authority, which is for radiological health and safety and common defense and security issues.344 As explained by the Commission, Under NEPA, an agency has no obligation to gather or consider environmental information if it has no statutory authority to act on that information.345 As operational impacts related to energy resilience are outside of the NRCs statutory mandate, these effects are not relevant to the NEPA environmental review.
proceeding.342 Even more so, these safety concerns are not within the scope of the NEPA
Therefore, the portion of proposed Contention that raises operational issues is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv) and (vi).
 
Even evaluated as a safety contention, which Petitioners have not pled proposed Contention as, Petitioners have not provided sufficient information to show that a climate 342 While Petitioners advance that climate change external events could adversely affect the safe operations at Palisades, at no point do Petitioners connect the dots that this could result in an environmental impact. See Florida Power and Light Co., (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Units and ),
environmental review, and Petitioners provide no binding legal authority that would allow the
LBP--, NRC, ().
 
environmental review to operate as a backdoor to litigate safety topics. 343 Therefore, the section
 
of proposed Contention that raises safety and operational issues is inadmissible for failing to
 
meet C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv) and (vi).
 
As for the operational concern that the plants output may be reduced, this issue is not
 
within the NRCs statutory authority, which is for radiological health and safety and common
 
defense and security issues. 344 As explained by the Commission, Under NEPA, an agency has
 
no obligation to gather or consider environmental information if it has no statutory authority to
 
act on that information.345 As operational impacts related to energy resilience are outside of the
 
NRCs statutory mandate, these effects are not relevant to the NEPA environmental review.
 
Therefore, the portion of proposed Contention that raises operational issues is inadmissible
 
for failing to meet C.F.R. §. (f)()(iii), (iv) and (vi).
 
Even evaluated as a safety contention, which Petitioners have not pled proposed
 
Contention as, Petitioners have not provided sufficient information to show that a climate
 
342 While Petitioners advance that climate change external events could adversely affect the safe operations at Palisades, at no point do Petitioners connect the dots that this could result in an environmental impact. See Florida Power and Light Co., (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Units and ),
LBP- -, NRC, ( ).
 
343 Indian Point, NRC at.
343 Indian Point, NRC at.
344 See e.g., U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a. See also Letter from Chair Hansen, NRC, to Frank Rusco, GAO, Enclosure (Sept., ) (MLA) (The NRCs review will focus on impacts related to its safety mission and will not address impacts related to energy resilience, such as avoiding more frequent disruptions and other operational issues that are under the control of licensees and outside of the NRCs mandate.) (Enclosure to NRC Response to GAO Report); U.S.C. § o (granting jurisdiction to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to set electric reliability standards for owners and operators of bulk-power systems.).
345 Nextera Energy Point Beach, LLC (Point Beach Nuclear Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC,
().


344 See e.g., U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a. See also Letter from Chair Hansen, NRC, to Frank Rusco, GAO, Enclosure (Sept., ) (ML A ) (The NRCs review will focus on impacts related to its safety mission and will not address impacts related to energy resilience, such as avoiding more frequent disruptions and other operational issues that are under the control of licensees and outside of the NRCs mandate.) (Enclosure to NRC Response to GAO Report); U.S.C. § o (granting jurisdiction to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to set electric reliability standards for owners and operators of bulk-power systems.).
related change to an external hazard will adversely affect the safe operation of Palisades,346 and Petitioners experts incorporation of the GAO report does not provide any support for Petitioners assertions.347 The structures, systems, and components important to safety in nuclear power plants are required to be able to withstand the effects of natural phenomena without loss of capability to perform their safety functions.348 Petitioners do not engage with the design bases of the plant described in UFSAR Revision, which the licensee plans to reinstate if these proposed actions are approved. Even though climate change could theoretically result in a change to these analyses, Petitioners do not even attempt to demonstrate that these analyses may no longer be bounding.349 Therefore, even as a safety contention, Petitioners do not provide sufficient information to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact. In addition to being inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv) as previously discussed, the climate change safety concerns raised in proposed Contention are also inadmissible for failing to satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).
 
Based on the foregoing, the Staff agrees that Proposed Contention, may be admitted, but only as narrowed in the following form:
345 Nextera Energy Point Beach, LLC (Point Beach Nuclear Plant, Units and ), CLI- -, NRC,
( ).
 
related change to an external hazard will adversely affect the safe operation of Palisades, 346 and
 
Petitioners experts incorporation of the GAO report does not provide any support for
 
Petitioners assertions.347 The structures, systems, and com ponents important to safety in
 
nuclear power plants are required to be able to withstand the effects of natural phenomena
 
without loss of capability to perform their safety functions. 348 Petitioners do not engage with the
 
design bases of the plant described in UFSAR Revision, which the licensee plans to
 
reinstate if these proposed actions are approved. Even though climate change could
 
theoretically result in a change to these analyses, Petitioners do not even attempt to
 
demonstrate that these analyses may no longer be bounding. 349 Therefore, even as a safety
 
contention, Petitioners do not provide sufficient information to show that a genuine dispute
 
exists on a material issue of law or fact. In addition to being inadmissible for failing to meet
 
C.F.R. §. (f)()(iv) as previously discussed, the climate change safety concerns raised in
 
proposed Contention are also inadmissible for failing to satisfy C.F.R. §. (f)()(vi).
 
Based on the foregoing, the Staff agrees that Proposed Contention, may be admitted,
 
but only as narrowed in the following form:
 
The Environmental Report submitted by Holtec for the proposed action of restart and resumption of operations at Palisades omits the required discussions of )
The Environmental Report submitted by Holtec for the proposed action of restart and resumption of operations at Palisades omits the required discussions of )
greenhouse gas emissions and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a
greenhouse gas emissions and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a 346 Florida Power and Light Co. (Tukey Point Nuclear Generating Plant, Units and ) CLI--, NRC  
 
, () ([The] Amended Petition offers no evidence that a problem may exist at Turkey Point. The short of the matter is that Contention, even if we were somehow to find it within the scope of our license renewal inquiry (which it is not ), it is so thinly supported and rationalized that it could not possibly justify a full hearing under our contention-pleading rule.)
346 Florida Power and Light Co. (Tukey Point Nuclear Generating Plant, Units and ) CLI--, NRC
347 See Letter from Chair Hansen, NRC, to Frank Rusco, GAO (Sept., ) (MLA and MLA).
, ( ) ([The] Amended Petition offers no evidence that a problem may exist at Turkey Point. The short of the matter is that Contention, even if we were somehow to find it within the scope of our license renewal inquiry (which it is not ), it is so thinly supported and rationalized that it could not possibly justify a full hearing under our contention-pleading rule.)
348 C.F.R. Part, Appendix A, General Design Criterion. While Palisades was licensed prior to the implementation of the General Design Criteria (GDC) and is not bound by the GDC, the licensees most recent UFSAR discusses how the Palisades design basis meets GDC. See Palisades UFSAR, Revision  
 
, §... (MLA).
347 See Letter from Chair Hansen, NRC, to Frank Rusco, GAO (Sept., ) (ML A and ML A ).
349 Virginia Electric and Power Co., (North Anna Power Station, Units and ) LBP--, NRC _, _
 
(July, ) (slip op. at -).  
348 C.F.R. Part, Appendix A, General Design Criterion. While Palisades was licensed prior to the implementation of the General Design Criteria (GDC) and is not bound by the GDC, the licensees most recent UFSAR discusses how the Palisades design basis meets GDC. See Palisades UFSAR, Revision
, §... (MLA ).
 
349 Virginia Electric and Power Co., (North Anna Power Station, Units and ) LBP- -, NRC _, _
(July, ) (slip op. at - ).


discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.
 
IV.
IV. There is No Merit to the Petitioners Request for a Trial Before an Article III Judge
There is No Merit to the Petitioners Request for a Trial Before an Article III Judge In the Petition, Petitioners included a request that this matter not be addressed under the C.F.R. §. procedures by an NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, and requested instead that Petitioners be assigned a federal judge, authorized under Article III of the U.S.
 
Constitution, for pretrial and trial activity.350 On October,, the Secretary of the Commission referred this petition to the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel (ASLBP) for disposition.351 In referring this petition to the ASLBP, the Secretary of the Commission noted that [P]etitioners have presented no authority suggesting that the Commission may assign incoming hearing petitions to federal judges in Article III courts.352 The Secretary of the Commissions referral of the instant Petition for disposition by the ASLBP is consistent with the Atomic Energy Act, the Hobbs Act, and NRC regulations, as discussed below. In addition, the Petitioners arguments under the Seventh Amendment of the U.S. Constitution lack merit.
In the Petition, Petitioners included a request that this matter not be addressed under the
Therefore, this Petition should be heard by this Board in accordance with the Secretarys referral of this Petition to the ASLBP for disposition.
 
Pursuant to the Hobbs Act, the court of appeals has exclusive jurisdiction to enjoin, set aside, suspend (in whole or in part), or to determine the validity of () all final orders of the
C.F.R. §. procedures by an NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, and requested
[Nuclear Regulatory Commission] made reviewable by Section of Title.353 Petitioners submitted the Petition in response to the Amendments Notice that was published pursuant to 350 Petition at -.
 
351 Memorandum from Carrie M. Safford, NRC, to E. Roy Hawkens, NRC, Referral of Petition to Intervene and Request for Hearing from Wallace Taylor on behalf of Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service (Oct., ) (MLA) (Referral Memorandum).
instead that Petitioners be assigned a federal judge, authorized under Article III of the U.S.
 
Constitution, for pretrial and trial activity. 350 On October,, the Secretary of the
 
Commission referred this petition to the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel (ASLBP) for
 
disposition.351 In referring this petition to the ASLBP, the Secretary of the Commission noted
 
that [P]etitioners have presented no authority suggesting that the Commission may assign
 
incoming hearing petitions to federal judges in Article III courts. 352 The Secretary of the
 
Commissions referral of the instant Petition for disposition by the ASLBP is consistent with the
 
Atomic Energy Act, the Hobbs Act, and NRC regulations, as discussed below. In addition, the
 
Petitioners arguments under the Seventh Amendment of the U.S. Constitution lack merit.
 
Therefore, this Petition should be heard by this Board in accordance with the Secretarys
 
referral of this Petition to the ASLBP for disposition.
 
Pursuant to the Hobbs Act, the court of appeals has exclusive jurisdiction to enjoin, set
 
aside, suspend (in whole or in part), or to determine the validity of ( ) all final orders of the
 
[Nuclear Regulatory Commission] made reviewable by Section of Title.353 Petitioners
 
submitted the Petition in response to the Amendments Notice that was published pursuant to  
 
350 Petition at -.
 
351 Memorandum from Carrie M. Safford, NRC, to E. Roy Hawkens, NRC, Referral of Petition to Intervene and Request for Hearing from Wallace Taylor on behalf of Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service (Oct., ) (ML A) (Referral Memorandum).
 
352 Referral Memorandum.
352 Referral Memorandum.
353 U.S.C. § ().


353 U.S.C. § ( ).
U.S.C. § (a) (AEA § a.).354 Pursuant to the AEA, the Commission is authorized to establish one or more atomic safety and licensing boards [and] may appoint a panel of qualified persons from which board members may be selected.355 The decisions and actions of the licensing boards are reviewable by the Commission.356 The Commissions regulations in C.F.R. Part implement the hearing provision of U.S.C. § (a) and the licensing board provisions in U.S.C. §.
 
Petitioners included a demand that this matter must not be addressed under the C.F.R. §. procedure, and that the Petitioners be assigned a U.S. Constitution, Article III judge for all pretrial and trial activity and attention.357 However, because §. and the other regulations in C.F.R. Part apply on their face, the Petitioners are challenging the NRCs regulations in C.F.R. Part. Challenges to NRC regulations in NRC adjudications are prohibited by C.F.R. §.(a), except that participants in adjudicatory proceedings may request a waiver of the regulation or exception thereto under §.(b) upon a showing of special circumstances as documented in the petition and accompanying affidavit. But Petitioners did not include a request for a waiver to challenge the rules and regulations of the Commission, as required by C.F.R. §., to request that this matter not be addressed pursuant to C.F.R. Part. Therefore, the Petitioners challenge is procedurally barred by  
U.S.C. § (a) (AEA § a.).354 Pursuant to the AEA, the Commission is authorized to
 
establish one or more atomic safety and licensing boards [and] may appoint a panel of
 
qualified persons from which board members may be selected. 355 The decisions and actions of
 
the licensing boards are reviewable by the Commission. 356 The Commissions regulations in
 
C.F.R. Part implement the hearing provision of U.S.C. § (a) and the licensing board
 
provisions in U.S.C. §.
 
Petitioners included a demand that this matter must not be addressed under the
 
C.F.R. §. procedure, and that the Petitioners be assigned a U.S. Constitution, Article III
 
judge for all pretrial and trial activity and attention. 357 However, because §. and the other
 
regulations in C.F.R. Part apply on their face, the Petitioners are challenging the NRCs
 
regulations in C.F.R. Part. Challenges to NRC regulations in NRC adjudications are
 
prohibited by C.F.R. §. (a), except that participants in adjudicatory proceedings may
 
request a waiver of the regulation or exception thereto under §. (b) upon a showing of
 
special circumstances as documented in the petition and accompanying affidavit. But
 
Petitioners did not include a request for a waiver to challenge the rules and regulations of the
 
Commission, as required by C.F.R. §., to request that this matter not be addressed
 
pursuant to C.F.R. Part. Therefore, the Petitioners challenge is procedurally barred by
 
§. and may be denied on that ground alone.
§. and may be denied on that ground alone.
 
The Petitioners cite Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy as support for their arguments, but this case is not relevant to this proceeding and does not call the structure and 354 See also Petition at - (recognizing that this proceeding is under U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a).
The Petitioners cite Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy as support for their
 
arguments, but this case is not relevant to this proceeding and does not call the structure and
 
354 See also Petition at - (recognizing that this proceeding is under U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a).
 
355 U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a.
355 U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a.
356 See C.F.R. §§.,..
356 See C.F.R. §§.,..
357 Petition at.


357 Petition at.
procedure of the AEA or C.F.R. Part into question.358 The Courts holding in Jarkesy concerned the governments ability to enforce common law claims through in-house administrative proceedings for common law claims subject to the Seventh Amendments guarantee of the right to a jury trial.359 Petitioners advance an out of context quote, in the concurring opinion of Justice Gorsuch, to support a challenge to Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) and Administrative Judges across the whole U.S. government.360 Such a challenge misses the mark.
 
The actions being challenged in this proceeding are licensing actions and an exemption requested by Holtec to authorize restart of operation at Palisades. This administrative proceeding does not involve an administrative enforcement of a common law claim against an individual that could conceivably implicate the Seventh Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.361 The quote advanced by Petitioners is similarly limited in scope to enforcement matters, not 358 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, U.S. __ ().
procedure of the AEA or C.F.R. Part into question.358 The Courts holding in Jarkesy
 
concerned the governments ability to enforce common law claims through in-house
 
administrative proceedings for common law claims subject to the Seventh Amendments
 
guarantee of the right to a jury trial. 359 Petitioners advance an out of context quote, in the
 
concurring opinion of Justice Gorsuch, to support a challenge to Administrative Law Judges
 
(ALJs) and Administrative Judges across the whole U.S. government. 360 Such a challenge
 
misses the mark.
 
The actions being challenged in this proceeding are licensing actions and an exemption
 
requested by Holtec to authorize restart of operation at Palisades. This administrative
 
proceeding does not involve an administrative enforcement of a common law claim against an
 
individual that could conceivably implicate the Seventh Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. 361
 
The quote advanced by Petitioners is similarly limited in scope to enforcement matters, not
 
358 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, U.S. __ ( ).
 
359 Id. at __ (slip op. at ).
359 Id. at __ (slip op. at ).
 
360 Id. at __ (slip op. at -) (Gorsuch and Thomas, JJ., concurring). Justice Gorsuch stated:
360 Id. at __ (slip op. at - ) (Gorsuch and Thomas, JJ., concurring). Justice Gorsuch stated:
 
In, however, all that changed. With the passage of the Dodd Frank Act, Congress gave the SEC an alternative to court proceedings. Now, the agency could funnel cases like Mr. Jarkesys through its own adjudicatory system. See Stat., -.
In, however, all that changed. With the passage of the Dodd Frank Act, Congress gave the SEC an alternative to court proceedings. Now, the agency could funnel cases like Mr. Jarkesys through its own adjudicatory system. See Stat., -.
That is the route the SEC chose when it filed charges against Mr. Jarkesy.
That is the route the SEC chose when it filed charges against Mr. Jarkesy.
 
There is little mystery why. The new law gave the SECs Commissionersthe same officials who authorized the suit against Mr. Jarkesythe power to preside over his case themselves and issue judgment. To be sure, the Commissioners opted, as they often do, to send Mr. Jarkesys case in the first instance to an administrative law judge (ALJ). See CFR §. (). But the title judge in this context is not quite what it might seem. Yes, ALJs enjoy some measure of independence as a matter of regulation and statute from the lawyers who pursue charges on behalf of the agency. But they remain servants of the same masterthe very agency tasked with prosecuting individuals like Mr. Jarkesy. This close relationship, as others have long recognized, can make it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for th[e ALJ] to convey the image of being an im-partial fact finder. B. Segal, The Administrative Law Judge, A. B. A. J.,
There is little mystery why. The new law gave the SECs Commissionersthe same officials who authorized the suit against Mr. Jarkesythe power to preside over his case themselves and issue judgment. To be sure, the Commissioners opted, as they often do, to send Mr. Jarkesys case in the first instance to an administrative law judge (ALJ). See CFR §. ( ). But the title judge in this context is not quite what it might seem. Yes, ALJs enjoy some measure of independence as a matter of regulation and statute from the lawyers who pursue charges on behalf of the agency. But they remain servants of the same masterthe very agency tasked with prosecuting individuals like Mr. Jarkesy. This close relationship, as others have long recognized, can make it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for th[e ALJ] to convey the image of being an im-partial fact finder. B. Segal, The Administrative Law Judge, A. B. A. J.,
().
( ).
 
Id.
Id.
361 Id. at __ (slip op. at -).


361 Id. at __ (slip op. at - ).
licensing actions.362 Furthermore, both additional cases cited by Petitioners, In re Murchison and Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., respectively concern documented cases of judicial bias from state court judges in a criminal proceeding363 and in a common law contract claim.364 In these cases, the individuals Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to not be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law were violated.365 Here, there is no threat to Petitioners right to constitutional due process, because Petitioners are not subject to an enforcement action that may deprive them of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. Petitioners voluntarily submitted a petition to intervene and requested a hearing on amendment requests seeking the authorization to restart and resume operations at Palisades.
 
Nevertheless, Petitioners advance a broad challenge to the independence of all Administrative Judges who are part of the ASLBP, based on personal experience and anecdotal evidence from often failing to meet the Commissions contention admissibility criteria, which the Petitioners themselves acknowledge are strict by design.366 Petitioners may file a petition for rulemaking if they believe that the contention admissibility requirements in C.F.R. §.
licensing actions.362 Furthermore, both additional cases cited by Petitioners, In re Murchison and
should be revisited.367 To ensure the independence of ASLBP Administrative Judges, the policy of the Commission is to voluntarily follow the Office of Personal and Managements requirements for 362 Petition at (quoting Jarkesy, U.S. at ___ () (slip op. at -) (Gorsuch, J., concurring)
 
Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., respectively concern documented cases of judicial bias from
 
state court judges in a criminal proceeding 363 and in a common law contract claim.364 In these
 
cases, the individuals Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to not be deprived of life, liberty,
 
or property without due process of law were violated. 365 Here, there is no threat to Petitioners
 
right to constitutional due process, because Petitioners are not subject to an enforcement action
 
that may deprive them of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. Petitioners
 
voluntarily submitted a petition to inte rvene and requested a hearing on amendment requests
 
seeking the authorization to restart and resume operations at Palisades.
 
Nevertheless, Petitioners advance a broad challenge to the independence of all
 
Administrative Judges who are part of the ASLBP, based on personal experience and anecdotal
 
evidence from often failing to meet the Commissions contention admissibility criteria, which the
 
Petitioners themselves acknowledge are strict by design. 366 Petitioners may file a petition for
 
rulemaking if they believe that the contention admissibility requirements in C.F.R. §.
 
should be revisited.367
 
To ensure the independence of ASLBP Administrative Judges, the policy of the
 
Commission is to voluntarily follow the Office of Personal and Managements requirements for
 
362 Petition at (quoting Jarkesy, U.S. at ___ ( ) (slip op. at - ) (Gorsuch, J., concurring)
(ALJs enjoy some measure of independence as a matter of regulation and statute from the lawyers who pursue charges on behalf of the agency the very agency tasked with prosecuting individuals like Mr.
(ALJs enjoy some measure of independence as a matter of regulation and statute from the lawyers who pursue charges on behalf of the agency the very agency tasked with prosecuting individuals like Mr.
Jarkesy.) (emphasis added)).
Jarkesy.) (emphasis added)).
 
363 In re Murchison, U.S., - ().
363 In re Murchison, U.S., - ( ).
364 Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., U.S., ().
 
365 U.S. at -; U.S. at -.
364 Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., U.S., ( ).
 
365 U.S. at - ; U.S. at -.
 
366 Petition at,.
366 Petition at,.
367 C.F.R. §..


367 C.F.R. §..
ALJs in C.F.R. §., which prohibit an Agency from rating an ALJs job performance.368 Petitioners speculation that ASLBP members are biased is without basis.
 
For the reasons given above, there is no merit to Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge.
ALJs in C.F.R. §., which prohibit an Agency from rating an ALJs job performance. 368
CONCLUSION As explained above, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention are admissible. However, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing. Also, the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible because they raise immaterial, out of scope, and inadequately supported arguments that do not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee and in many cases challenge NRC regulations and processes. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.
 
Respectfully submitted,  
Petitioners speculation that ASLBP members are biased is without basis.
/Signed (electronically) by/
 
For the reasons given above, there is no merit to Petitioners request for a trial before an
 
Article III judge.
 
CONCLUSION
 
As explained above, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the
 
Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, establish standing,
 
and portions of proposed Contention are admissible. However, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste
 
Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing. Also, the remainder of
 
the proposed contentions are inadmissible because they raise immaterial, out of scope, and
 
inadequately supported arguments that do not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee and
 
in many cases challenge NRC regulations and proc esses. Therefore, the Petition should only be
 
granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without
 
merit.
 
Respectfully submitted,
 
/Signed (electronically) by/
Michael A. Spencer Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Michael A. Spencer Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Telephone: () -
Telephone: () -
Email: Michael.Spencer@nrc.gov
Email: Michael.Spencer@nrc.gov  
 
/Executed in Accord with CFR.(d)/
/Executed in Accord with CFR. (d)/
Anita Ghosh Naber Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Anita Ghosh Naber Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Telephone: () -
Telephone: () -
Email: anita.ghoshnaber@nrc.gov
Email: anita.ghoshnaber@nrc.gov 368 Management Directive., Directive Handbook, Section I.D.. (July, ) (ML).  
 
368 Management Directive., Directive Handbook, Section I.D.. (July, ) (ML ).


/Executed in Accord with CFR. (d)/
/Executed in Accord with CFR.(d)/
Peter L. Lom Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Peter L. Lom Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Telephone: () -
Telephone: () -
Email: Peter.Lom@nrc.gov
Email: Peter.Lom@nrc.gov  
 
/Executed in Accord with CFR.(d)/
/Executed in Accord with CFR. (d)/
Kevin D. Bernstein Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Kevin D. Bernstein Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Telephone: () -
Telephone: () -
Email: Kevin.Bernstein@nrc.gov
Email: Kevin.Bernstein@nrc.gov Dated November, 2024  
 
Dated November, 2024 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
 
BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD
 
In the Matter of
 
HOLTEC DECOMMISSIONING Docket No. - -LA-INTERNATIONAL, LLC, AND HOLTEC PALISADES, LLC
 
(Palisades Nuclear Plant)
 
Certificate of Service
 
Pursuant to C.F.R. §., I hereby certify that the NRC Staff Answer to Intervention
 
Petition from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile
 
Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service in Palisades Restart Amendments
 
Proceeding, has been filed through the NRCs E-Filing System this th day of November.


/Signed (electronically) by/
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of HOLTEC DECOMMISSIONING INTERNATIONAL, LLC, AND HOLTEC PALISADES, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant)
Docket No. --LA-Certificate of Service Pursuant to C.F.R. §., I hereby certify that the NRC Staff Answer to Intervention Petition from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service in Palisades Restart Amendments Proceeding, has been filed through the NRCs E-Filing System this th day of November.
/Signed (electronically) by/
Michael A. Spencer Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Michael A. Spencer Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -
Telephone: () -
Telephone: () -
Email: Michael.Spencer@nrc.gov Dated November,}}
Email: Michael.Spencer@nrc.gov Dated November,}}

Revision as of 09:44, 24 November 2024

NRC Staff Answer to Intervention Petition from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service in Palisades Restart Amendments Proceeding
ML24309A277
Person / Time
Site:  Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 11/04/2024
From: Bernstein K, Lom P, Naber A, Mary Spencer
NRC/OGC
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
SECY RAS
References
RAS 57180, 50-255-LA-3, ASLBP 24-986-01-LA-BD01
Download: ML24309A277 (0)


Text

November 4, 2024 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of HOLTEC DECOMMISSIONING INTERNATIONAL, LLC, AND HOLTEC PALISADES, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant)

Docket No. --LA-NRC STAFF ANSWER TO INTERVENTION PETITION FROM BEYOND NUCLEAR, DONT WASTE MICHIGAN, MICHIGAN SAFE ENERGY FUTURE, THREE MILE ISLAND ALERT, AND NUCLEAR ENERGY INFORMATION SERVICE IN PALISADES RESTART AMENDMENTS PROCEEDING INTRODUCTION Pursuant to C.F.R. §.(i)() and the licensing boards (Boards) order dated October,, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff (Staff) herein answers an intervention petition (Petition) from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service (collectively, Petitioners) filed on October,, challenging license amendment requests associated with the potential restart of Palisades Nuclear Plant (Palisades).1 As explained below, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear 1 The Petition was originally filed on October,, on the hearing docket for the license transfer request associated with the potential restart of Palisades. On October,, the Office of the Secretary informed the participants that it had determined that the filing related to a proceeding separate from the license transfer request and that the submitter had been requested to refile the Petition in that separate proceeding. The Petition was filed on the hearing docket for this proceeding on October,.

Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention meet the requirements for contention admissibility as a contention of omission.

However, as also explained below, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing, and the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible. In particular, the remainder of the proposed contentions do not provide material, adequately supported challenges that raise a genuine dispute with the license amendment requests. Also, many of the Petitioners arguments are outside the scope of the proceeding and challenge NRC regulations and processes. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.

BACKGROUND I.

Palisades Licensing History Just Prior to Restart Efforts Palisades was licensed for reactor operation until March,, under its renewed facility operating license,2 but by letter dated June,, the licensee at the time, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Entergy), submitted certifications under C.F.R. §.(a)() that operation had permanently ceased and that fuel had been permanently removed from the reactor.3 In accordance with C.F.R. §.(a)(), the docketing of these certifications means that the CFR part license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel into the reactor vessel. Also, the NRC issued amendments changing the operating license, which includes technical specifications (TS), to reflect the authorities and 2 Letter from Juan Ayala, NRC, to Paul A. Harden, Nuclear Management Company, LLC, Issuance of Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-for Palisades Nuclear Plant (Jan., ) (ADAMS Accession No. ML).

3 Letter from Darrell W. Corbin, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Certifications of Permanent Cessation of Power Operations and Permanent Removal of Fuel from the Reactor Vessel (June,

) (MLA) (Palisades.(a)() Certifications).

requirements for a reactor in decommissioning.4 Among other things, the amendments removed language from the license regarding the authority to operate the reactor and removed the TS for an operating reactor that are not relevant to decommissioning.5 However, even after these amendments became effective during the decommissioning period, the license is still referred to as a renewed facility operating license in the license itself, and it continues to be a Part operating license.6 About months before submitting the Palisades.(a)() Certifications, Entergy submitted a license transfer request on behalf of itself, Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC, Holtec International, and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC (HDI), to (among other things) make Holtec Palisades, LLC (Holtec Palisades) the licensed owner of Palisades and to transfer licensed operational authority for Palisades from Entergy to HDI.7 Four hearing requests were filed challenging this transfer request.8 While these hearing requests were pending, the Staff issued an order ( Transfer Order) approving the requested transfer (Entergy-Holtec 4 See, e.g., Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President for Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant -Issuance of Amendment Regarding Administrative Controls for Permanently Defueled Condition (June, ) (MLA) (Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment); Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President for Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Issuance of Amendment No.

Re: Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications (May, ) (MLA) (Defueled TS Amendment).

5 See, e.g., Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure at,,,,, - (discussion of changes to License Conditions.B.() and.C.() in Sections.. and.. of the Staff safety evaluation and discussion of changes to the TS in Section. of the Staff safety evaluation); Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment, Enclosure (discussion of TS changes in Section of the Staff safety evaluation).

6 See, e.g., Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure (license change pages repeatedly use the term Renewed Facility Operating License or similar terms such as renewed operating license, Facility Operating License, or Operating License).

7 Letter from A. Christopher Bakken III, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Application for Order Consenting to Transfers of Control of Licenses and Approving Conforming License Amendments, at (Dec., ) (MLA).

8 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant & Big Rock Point Site), CLI--, NRC

().

Transfer).9 But the proposed transaction was subject to Palisades entering decommissioning.10 Therefore, the transfer transaction did not close until June, after Entergy submitted both §.(a)() certificationson which date the Staff issued a conforming administrative amendment to the license (Entergy-Holtec Transfer Conforming Amendment).11 As a result of the Entergy-Holtec Transfer, the license holders for Palisades are HDI and Holtec Palisades. As stated in the Transfer Order, the Entergy-Holtec Transfer made Holtec Palisades the licensed owner and HDI the licensed operator of Palisades and Big Rock Point.12 HDI became the licensed operator because the NRC approve[d] the transfer of operating authority from the currently licensed operator, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.

(ENOI), to [HDI].13 This operating authority was the authority to conduct licensed activities at Big Rock Point and Palisades.14 After the transfer, HDI assume[d] responsibility for compliance with NRC regulations and the current licensing bases, including regulatory commitments that 9 In the Matter of Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC, Holtec International and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, Big Rock Point Plant and Palisades Nuclear Plant; Transfer of Licenses; Order, Fed. Reg., (Dec., ) ( Transfer Order). See also Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to A. Christopher Bakken, III, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant and Big Rock Point Plant - Order Approving Transfer of Licenses and Draft Conforming Administrative License Amendments (EPID L--LLM-) (Dec., ) (MLA (package)).

10 Safety Evaluation by the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation Related to the Request for Transfer of Control of Facility Operating License No. DPR-, Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-, and the General Licenses for the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installations from Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC to Holtec International and Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC Big Rock Point Plant and Palisades Nuclear Plant, at (MLA) (stating, [T]he proposed transfer transaction is subject to Palisades also having permanently ceased operations.

Accordingly, HDI (the proposed licensed operator for decommissioning) would not be authorized under the Palisades license to operate or load fuel in the Palisade[s] reactor pursuant to CFR.(a)().)

11 Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Pierre Paul Oneid, Holtec International, and Kelly D. Trice, HDI, Palisades Nuclear Plant and Big Rock Point Plant - Issuance of Amendment Nos. and Re: Order Approving Transfer of Licenses and Conforming Administrative License Amendments (EPIDS L--

LLM-AND L--LLM-) (June, ) (MLA (package)) (Entergy-Holtec Transfer Conforming Amendment).

12 Transfer Order, Fed. Reg. at,. Control of the Big Rock Point licenses is not affected by the transfer request related to potential restart of Palisades.

13 Id. at,.

14 Id. at,.

exist at the consummation of the proposed transfer transaction, and would implement any changes under applicable regulatory requirements and practices.15 Because the Entergy-Holtec Transfer was subject to hearing requests, the Transfer Order included a condition stating that approval of the transfer is subject to the Commissions authority to rescind, modify, or condition the approved transfer based on the outcome of any post-effectiveness hearing on the license transfer application.16 On July,, the Commission denied three hearing requests on the transfer application but granted a hearing request from the Michigan Attorney General and admit[ted] limited issues pertaining to the Attorney General's challenge to the proposed transferees' financial qualifications.17 The Commission directed the appointment of a Presiding Officer to take all necessary actions to compile, complete, and certify the hearing record, including presiding over any oral hearing.18 The Presiding Officer held an oral hearing on February and,, closed the evidentiary hearing record on February,, and certified the hearing record to the Commission on March,.19 The Commission has not yet issued a decision on those hearing issues.

II.

Licensing and Regulatory Requests Related to Potential Restart of Palisades In, HDI engaged with the Staff regarding the potential restart of reactor operation at Palisades. From September to May, the NRC received the following licensing and regulatory requests related to potential restart of Palisades:

A September,, request for an exemption (Exemption Request) from the CFR.(a)() restriction that prohibits reactor power operations and retention 15 Id.

16 Transfer Order, Fed. Reg. at,.

17 Palisades, CLI--, NRC at.

18 Id. at.

19 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant & Big Rock Point Site), LBP--,

NRC ().

of fuel in the reactor vessel by allowing for a one-time rescission of the docketed CFR.(a)() certifications.20 The December,, Restart Transfer Request, which seeks NRC consent to, and a conforming amendment for, a transfer of operating authority from HDI to Palisades Energy, LLC (OPCO) under Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-for Palisades and the general license for the Palisades Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI).21 A December,, license amendment request (Primary Amendment Request) in support of resuming power operations that largely seeks to undo the changes made by the previously issued Defueled TS Amendment with some proposed differences from the previous operating reactor TS.22 A February,, license amendment request (Administrative Controls Amendment Request) in support of resuming power operations that largely seeks to undo the changes made by the previously issued Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment with some proposed differences from the previous operating reactor TS.23 A May,, license amendment request (Emergency Plan Amendment Request) to revise the Palisades site emergency plan to support resuming power operations.24 A May,, license amendment request (MSLB Amendment Request) to revise the Palisades main steam line break analysis to support the Palisades restart project.25 20 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Request for Exemption from Certain Termination of License Requirements of CFR., at (Sept., )

(MLA) (Exemption Request).

21 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International and HDI, to NRC Document Control Desk, Application for Order Consenting to Transfer of Control of License and Approving Conforming License Amendments, at (Dec., ) (MLA) (Restart Transfer Request).

22 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise Renewed Facility Operating License and Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications to Support Resumption of Power Operations (Dec., ) (MLA) (Primary Amendment Request).

23 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise Selected Permanently Defueled Technical Specifications Administrative Controls to Support Resumption of Power Operations (Feb., ) (MLA) (Administrative Controls Amendment Request).

24 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Revise the Palisades Nuclear Plant Site Emergency Plan to Support Resumption of Power Operations (May, ) (MLC) (Emergency Plan Amendment Request).

25 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, License Amendment Request to Approve the Biasi Critical Heat Flux (CHF) Correlation for Use with the Palisades

The Staff has accepted all of these requests for review. The review is underway, and no decisions have been made on any of the requests.

The four restart-related amendment requests are parts of the licensing and regulatory requests that would be necessary to restart reactor operation at Palisades. All of the requests listed in the previous paragraph would need to be approved for restart to be authorized. Also, the Emergency Plan Amendment Request includes the following proposal:

As discussed in Reference, HDI is proposing to submit to the NRC, approximately four weeks in advance of the date that [Palisades] plans to transition to a power operations plant (transition date), a readiness letter that will state the planned transition date and HDIs satisfaction that the implementation conditions for license transfer, CFR.(a)() exemption, and license amendments are met. Additionally, on the designated transition date, HDI will submit a notification letter to docket that [Palisades] has transitioned from a facility in decommissioning to a power operations plant.26 Like the restart-related requests as a whole, this proposal is subject to a detailed Staff technical review.

III.

Petitioners Hearing Request on Amendments Related to Restart of Palisades On August,, the NRC published a Federal Register notice of opportunity to request a hearing regarding the Transfer Request (Transfer Notice)27 and a Federal Register notice of opportunity to request a hearing regarding the four license amendment requests (Amendments Notice).28 The Transfer Notice established an August,, deadline for Main Steam Line Break (MSLB) Analysis, at (May, ) (MLA) (MSLB Amendment Request).

26 Emergency Plan Amendment Request at.

27 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, Holtec Palisades, LLC, and Palisades Energy, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant and the Palisades Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation; Consideration of Approval of Transfer of Licenses and Conforming Amendment, Fed. Reg., (Aug., )

(Transfer Notice).

28 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, and Holtec Palisades, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant; Applications for Amendments to Renewed Facility Operating License Involving Proposed No Significant Hazards Considerations and Order Imposing Procedures for Access to Sensitive Unclassified Non-Safeguards Information and Safeguards Information, Fed. Reg., (Aug., ) (Amendments Notice).

hearing requests, while the Amendments Notice established an October,, deadline for hearing requests.29 Three of the Petitioners (Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future) filed a hearing request in response to the Transfer Notice on August,

. The Petitioners filed the instant Petition in response to the Amendments Notice on October,.30 By order dated October,, the Board established a November,

, deadline for answers to the Petition.31 DISCUSSION As discussed below, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention meet the requirements for contention admissibility as a contention of omission. However, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing because their standing arguments focus on the Exemption Request, not the restart-related amendment requests that are the subject of this proceeding. Also, the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible because they offer immaterial, out of scope, and inadequately supported challenges that do not raise a genuine dispute with the licensee. Moreover, many of the proposed contentions arguments challenge NRC regulations and processes, which is prohibited in this adjudicatory proceeding absent a sufficient petition for waiver or exception under C.F.R. §. that the Petitioners have not submitted. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.

29 Transfer Notice, Fed. Reg. at,; Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at,.

30 Petition to Intervene and Request for Adjudicatory Hearing by Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service (Oct.,

) (Petition). As explained above, the Petition was originally filed by the October,, deadline but on the wrong hearing docket. Also, the Staff notes that co-counsel for the Petitioners have not yet filed notices of appearance required by C.F.R. §.(b).

31 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant), LBP Memorandum and Order (Amending Initial Prehearing Order) (Oct. 17, 2024) (unpublished) (ML24291A105).

I.

Three of the Petitioners Have Not Demonstrated Standing While Two of the Petitioners Have Demonstrated Standing A.

Standing Requirements Section a. of the Atomic Energy Act, as amended (AEA), requires the Commission to grant a hearing upon the request of any person whose interest may be affected by the proceeding, and shall admit any such person as a party to such proceeding.32 A request for a hearing or petition for leave to intervene in a proceeding must demonstrate standing in accordance with the NRCs requirements at C.F.R. §.(d). Pursuant to

§.(d)(), the request for a hearing or petition for leave to intervene must state:

(i) The name, address and telephone number of the petitioner; (ii) The nature of the petitioners right under the AEA to be made a party to the proceeding; (iii) The nature and extent of the petitioners property, financial or other interest in the proceeding; and (iv) The possible effect of any decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding on the petitioners interest.33 The burden of demonstrating standing is on the petitioner.34 In addition, for the purposes of determining standing the petition will be construed in the petitioners favor35 and its material allegations will be accepted as true.36 32 U.S.C. § (a)()(A).

33 C.F.R. §.(d)().

34 Commonwealth Edison Co. (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units and ), CLI--, NRC,

().

35 Florida Power & Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC

, ().

36 Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech Research Reactor, Atlanta, Georgia), LBP--, NRC

, () (citing Warth v. Seldin, U.S., (), and Kelley v. Selin, F.d, -

(th Cir. )), vacated in part and remanded on other grounds, CLI--, NRC, and aff'd in part, CLI--, NRC (); see also U.S. Army Installation Command (Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii, and Pohakuloa Training Area, Island of Hawaii, Hawaii), CLI--, NRC, n. ()

(citing Kelley, F.d at -).

The Commission uses contemporaneous judicial concepts of standing when evaluating whether a petitioner has established standing.37 Accordingly, a petitioner must allege an injury in fact that is fairly traceable to the challenged NRC action and that is likely to be redressed by a decision favorable to the petitioner.38 In addition, the alleged injury must arguably fall within the zone of interests protected by the AEA.39 While the Commission generally requires the elements of standing be pled with specificity, it has also found standing in certain cases under a proximity presumption. In proceedings for construction permits, operating licenses, or significant amendments thereto such as the expansion of the capacity of a spent fuel pool,40 the Commission permits a petitioner who lives within, or otherwise has frequent contacts with, the zone of possible harm from the nuclear reactor to establish standing without needing to make an individualized showing of injury, causation, and redressability.41 The determination of how proximate a petitioner must be to a source of radioactivity depends on the danger posed by the source at issue.42 In practice, the Commission has applied the proximity presumption in construction permit, operating license, and license renewal proceedings for power reactors to find standing where a petitioner resides within approximately miles of the facility.43 The Commission has also found standing under the proximity presumption where the petitioner has a property interest 37 See Turkey Point, CLI--, NRC at ; see also Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Project, LLC (Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit ), CLI--, NRC, ().

38 Turkey Point, CLI--, NRC at.

39 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc., and Entergy Nuclear Palisades, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant),

CLI--, NRC, ().

40 Florida Power & Light Co. (St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC,

().

41 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at.

42 Florida Power and Light Co. (Turkey Point, Units and ), LBP--, NRC, ().

43 See Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at n..

near the facility.44 In license amendment proceedings, however, the proximity presumption applies where the license amendment presents an obvious potential of offsite radiological consequences.45 A determination of an obvious potential for offsite radiological consequences takes into account the nature of the proposed action and the significance of the radioactive source.46 An organization may establish representational standing by demonstrating, typically via affidavit, that at least one of its members may be affected by the proceeding and that these members have authorized the organization to represent them and to request a hearing on their behalf.47 Further, the member seeking representation must qualify for standing in [their] own right; the interests that the representative organization seeks to protect must be germane to its purpose; and neither the asserted claim nor the requested relief must require an individual member to participate in the organizations legal action.48 B.

The Petitions Standing Arguments Do Not Demonstrate Standing with Respect to Three of the Petitioners and Do Demonstrate Standing with Respect to Two of the Petitioners The Petition states that three organizations - Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future - are each petitioning on behalf of two of their members, all of whom herewith have submitted declarations.49 Two other Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, also assert representational standing elsewhere in the 44 See USEC, Inc. (American Centrifuge Plant), CLI--, NRC, - () (granting standing based on petitioner holding title to home near uranium enrichment facility notwithstanding that petitioner did not reside at the home).

45 Zion, CLI--, NRC at () (quoting St. Lucie, CLI--, NRC at ); see also Turkey Point, LBP--, NRC at.

46 Exelon Generation Co, LLC & PSEG Nuclear, LLC (Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station, Units & ),

CLI--, NRC, - ().

47 FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Co. and FirstEnergy Nuclear Generation, LLC (Beaver Valley Power Station, Units and ), CLI--, NRC, - ().

48 Beaver Valley, CLI--, NRC at.

49 Petition at -.

Petition.50 As discussed below, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future have not demonstrated standing because their members standing arguments relate to the Exemption Request and not to HDIs four license amendment requests, which are the subject of this proceeding. Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, whose members standing arguments are tied to HDIs license amendment requests in addition to the Exemption Request, have demonstrated standing.

Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future Have Not Satisfied Their Burden of Demonstrating Representational Standing Beyond Nuclear (BN), Dont Waste Michigan (DWM), and Michigan Safe Energy Future (MSEF) each seek to establish representational standing to intervene in this proceeding based on the individual standing of two of their respective members.51 The Petition includes signed and dated declarations from William D. Reed52 and Carolyn Ferry,53 members of BN; Alice Hirt and Joseph C. Kirk, members of DWM; and James Scott and Ann Scott, members of MSEF.54 In their declarations, these individuals each designate the respective organization of which they are a member to represent their interests in this proceeding.55 The NRCs hearing regulations require hearing requests to state the requestors/petitioners interest in the proceeding and [t]he possible effect of any decision 50 See id. at -.

51 See id. at,, -.

52 The Petition itself refers to W. Dillon Reed, Petition at -, but the signed, individual member declaration refers to William D. Reed. The Staff is using William D. Reed for consistency and in deference to the individuals apparent preference.

53 The Petition itself refers to Caroline Ferry, Petition at,, but the signed, individual member declaration refers to Carolyn Ferry. As with references to William D. Reed, the Staff is using Carolyn Ferry for consistency and in deference to the individuals apparent preference.

54 See William D. Reed Declaration; Carolyn Ferry Declaration; Alice Hirt Declaration; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration; James Scott Declaration; Ann Scott Declaration.

55 William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at ; Alice Hirt Declaration at -; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration at -; James Scott Declaration at -; Ann Scott Declaration at -.

or order that may be issued in the proceeding on the requestor's/petitioner's interest.56 As stated in the notice of hearing opportunity, this proceeding is limited to four license amendment requests submitted by HDI.57 The Petitions standing arguments, however, state that the six individuals BN, DWM, and MSEF seek to represent oppose HDIs Exemption Request but does not state any opposition to or otherwise challenge the license amendment requests.58 In fact, the Petition does not reference the license amendment requests at all in discussing these six individuals basis for standing or the standing of the organizations of which they are members.59 Because the Petitions standing arguments for the individuals that BN, DWM, and MSEF seek to represent never articulate their interest in the proceeding on the amendment requests or how approval of them would affect their interests, the Petitions standing arguments do not satisfy C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii)-(iv). Similarly, the standing arguments do not demonstrate a concrete and particularized injury that is fairly traceable to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision60 because any decision in this proceeding would be on the license amendment requests, which these individuals do not challenge.61 Therefore, the Petition does not demonstrate that BN, DWM, and MSEF have representational standing.

The Board need not further consider the standing declarations for BN, DWM, MSEF, and the six individuals they seek to represent because the Petition itself must explain how the 56 C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii)-(iv) (emphasis added).

57 Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at, (The scope of this notice is limited to comments, requests for a hearing, and petitions for leave to intervene related to the four proposed license amendment requests listed in tabular form in Section III of this document.).

58 See, e.g., Petition at,,,,, (stating that William D. Reed, Carolyn Ferry, James Scott, Ann Scott, Alice Hirt, and Joseph C. Kirk, respectively, oppose[] the granting of an exemption by the NRC with no reference to the license amendment requests).

59 See id. at -, -.

60 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).

61 See Petition at (As each of the member declarants explains, they will suffer (or will be under the threat of suffering) concrete and particularized injuries from the restored operations of Palisades if the exemption sought by Holtec is granted.) (emphasis added).

supporting documents included with it provide a basis for standing. For example, the Commission concluded in one proceeding that the petitioner did not establish standing because it does not address standing in its Petition; in its assessment of standing, the Commission did not consider a member declaration submitted with the Petition.62 Here, because the six individuals standing arguments in the Petition do not provide a basis for standing, the Board need not consider their declarations. Consistent with Commission precedent, the Staff will not attempt to infer an argument for standing on behalf of the Petitioner; the Petition should be considered as it was pled.63 As with the Petition, the standing declarations for BN, DWM, MSEF, and the six individuals they seek to represent do not provide a basis for standing. In their declarations, the individuals demonstrate an awareness of the license amendment requests but again challenge only the Exemption Request.64 These six individuals, therefore, have not articulated an interest 62 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 3), CLI-20-6, 91 NRC 225, 228 n.15, 238 (2020) (emphasis added). The members declaration in Vogtle provided the members name and address, affirmed she was a member of the petitioning organization, stated her safety concerns, and authorized the petitioner to represent her and protect her interests in the proceeding. Declaration of Susan Bloomfield (ML20111C451) (Apr. 10, 2020).

63 See Commonwealth Edison Co. (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units 1 and 2), CLI-99-4, 49 NRC 185, 194 (1999) (internal quotation marks omitted) (We do not expect our adjudicatory Boards, unaided by the parties, to sift through the parties pleadings to uncover and resolve arguments not advanced by litigants themselves. The burden of setting forth a clear and coherent argument for standing and intervention is on the petitioner. It should not be necessary to speculate about what a pleading is supposed to mean.)

64 William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at ; Alice Hirt Declaration at ; Joseph C.

Kirk Declaration at ; James Scott Declaration at ; Ann Scott Declaration at (I oppose the granting of the exemption by the NRC.). These declarations reference the license amendment requests only as part of a general description of the requested licensing actions. See, e.g., William D. Reed Declaration at (HDI has submitted several requests for NRC approval to support allowing the resumption of power operations through March,. These requests include four license amendment requests and an exemption request.). While the standing declarations of Alice Hirt, Joseph C. Kirk, James Scott, and Ann Scott describe this proceeding as either a license transfer and/or amendment proceeding[,] Alice Hirt Declaration at ; Joseph C. Kirk Declaration at ; James Scott Declaration at ; or a license transfer and amendment proceeding[,] Ann Scott Declaration at, this reference to the license amendment requests does not constitute a challenge to those requests nor does it articulate their interest in this proceeding on HDIs license amendment requests. See C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii). The declarations of William D. Reed and Carolyn Ferry describe this proceeding as a regulatory exemption proceeding. William D. Reed Declaration at ; Carolyn Ferry Declaration at.

in the license amendment requests or explained how approval of the amendment requests would affect their interests as required by C.F.R. §.(d)()(iii) and (iv). Similarly, their standing arguments do not demonstrate a concrete and particularized injury that is fairly traceable to the challenged action and is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision65 because any decision in this proceeding would be on the license amendment requests, which these individuals do not challenge. Therefore, William D. Reed, Carolyn Ferry, Alice Hirt, Joseph C. Kirk, James Scott, and Ann Scott have not demonstrated standing in this proceeding.

Because BN, DWM, and MSEF must demonstrate that the individuals whom they seek to represent have demonstrated standing in their own right,66 and because these individuals have failed to do so, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing.67 BN, DWM, and MSEF state in the Petition and in their declarations that they, as organizations, oppose HDIs license amendment requests,68 but this is immaterial to determining whether they demonstrate representational standing on behalf of their members, and these organizations have not asserted organizational standing in their own right. Therefore, BN, DWM, and MSEFs own opposition to the license amendment requests does not help to demonstrate that they have representational standing to intervene in this proceeding.

Finally, the Staff notes that, as discussed below, the Petitioners may file contentions challenging the Exemption Request under Commission precedent providing that a petitioner 65 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).

66 Beaver Valley, CLI--, NRC at.

67 Consistent with Commission precedent, the Staff will not attempt to infer an argument for standing on behalf of Petitioners; the Petition should be considered as it was pled. See Zion, CLI--, NRC at 68 Petition at (Five petitioning organizations, Beyond Nuclear, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Dont Waste Michigan, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service demonstrate below that they have standing to pursue contentions against Holtecs request for license amendments. Petitioners contend that the requested license amendments must not be granted.).

may raise arguments related to an exemption request when such arguments are material to a proposed licensing action and directly bear[] on whether the proposed action should be granted.69 However, Commission precedent on the ability to challenge an exemption request that is intertwined with a proposed licensing action has been applied to contention admissibility, not standing.70 Contention admissibility and standing are different concepts governed by different criteria set forth in NRC regulations.71 Contentions are addressed at whether the proposed action should be granted and must, among other things, demonstrate their materiality to the findings the NRC must make in order to issue a licensing action;72 therefore, the materiality of an exemption request to a licensing action is directly relevant to the NRCs contention rule. Standing, however, is focused on the asserted injury that would accrue if the proposed action is granted, i.e., the injury that would accrue from the decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding,73 which in this instance is the decision on the restart-related amendment requests, not the Exemption Request.

As explained above, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not asserted any injuries from the proposed amendments, having challenged only the Exemption Request. In any case, granting the exemption would not cause injury because it would merely remove a prohibition on potential operation of Palisades; it would not authorize restart of the reactor. The amendment requests, however, propose changes to the license to authorize restart.74 Even if HDIs Exemption 69 Palisades, CLI--, NRC at (emphasis added).

70 See, e.g., Palisades, CLI--, NRC at ; Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Station, Units,, and and ISFSI), CLI--, NRC, & n. ().

71 Compare C.F.R. §.(d) (standing requirements), with C.F.R. §.(f) (contention admissibility requirements).

72 C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv).

73 C.F.R. §.(d)()(iv).

74 See Primary Amendment Request, at. Among the changes to the license that the Primary Amendment Request proposes is authorization to operate the facility at steady state reactor core power levels not in excess of. Megawatts thermal ( percent rated power)[.] Id., Enclosure, Attach., at.

Request could in some way be tied to an injury-in-fact from the license amendment requests, Petitioners have not made that connection in the Petition, as it was their burden to do.75 For the reasons stated above, BN, DWM, and MSEF have not satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing and should not be admitted as parties to this proceeding. Nevertheless, the Staff addresses the contentions submitted by BN, DWM, and MSEF in Discussion Section III, below, and concludes that one contention is admissible in part.

Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service Have Satisfied Their Burden of Demonstrating Representational Standing Three Mile Island Alert (TMIA) is a nonprofit organization with approximately members that is opposed to commercial nuclear power for safety and economic reasons.76 Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS) is a nonprofit organization with over members that is committed to ending nuclear power and advocating for energy alternatives.77 TMIA and NEIS each seek to establish representational standing to intervene in this proceeding based on the individual standing of one of their respective members.78 The Petition includes signed and dated declarations from David Staiger, a member of TMIA, and John Brenneman, a member of NEIS.79 In their declarations, these individuals each designate the respective organization of which they are a member to represent their interests in this proceeding.80 TMIA and NEIS state in the Petition that their members oppose[] the granting of the exemption by the NRC and all of the license amendments because of safety, public health, and 75 See Zion, CLI--, NRC at.

76 Petition at.

77 Id. at.

78 See id. at -,.

79 See David Staiger Declaration; John Brenneman Declaration.

80 David Staiger Declaration at -; John Brenneman Declaration at -.

environmental concerns.81 Davis Staiger and John Brennemans declarations also state opposition to the license amendment requests and connect the challenged actions that are the subject of this proceedingthe license amendment requeststo the injuries they claim they will suffer if the NRC issues the amendments.82 They therefore address their interest in the proceeding and [t]he possible effect of any decision or order that may be issued in the proceeding on that interest. TMIA and NEIS make similar statements in the Petition and in their respective declarations opposing the license amendment requests and the Exemption Request.83 While TMIA and NEIS are challenging license amendment requests, the requests, if granted, would support restart of the Palisades reactor and resumption of power operations at the facility.84 Although the license amendment and operating license processes are different, granting the amendment requests along with HDIs other related requests would, like granting an initial operating license, permit the applicant to operate a nuclear reactor at full power where reactor operation was not previously permitted. Taking into account the nature of the challenged action (restarting the Palisades reactor from its current defueled state to full-power operations) and the significance of the radioactive source involved (operation of the reactor itself), the license amendment requests presents an obvious potential of offsite radiological consequences.85 As the Commission has stated,

[T]he common thread in the [NRC] decisions applying the -mile presumption is a recognition of the potential effects at significant distances from the facility of the accidental release of fissionable materials. The NRC's regulations also recognize that an accidental release has potential effects within a -mile radius of a reactor. The Commission has applied its expertise and concluded that 81 Petition at, -.

82 See David Staiger Declaration at -; John Brenneman Declaration at -.

83 See Petition at, ; Eric Epstein Declaration at ; David Kraft Declaration at.

84 Primary Amendment Request, at.

85 Zion, NRC at (quoting St. Lucie, CLI--, NRC at ).

persons living within a -mile radius of a proposed new reactor face a realistic threat of harm if a release of radioactive material were to occur from the facility.86 The same logic applies here. The amendment requests TMIA and NEIS contest propose changing the license to enable a currently shutdown and defueled reactor to resume operation at full power, which would involve generating radioactivity in the reactor core. This, on its face, entails an obvious potential for offsite consequences in the unlikely event of an accident. For these reasons, it is appropriate to apply, for purposes of standing, the -mile proximity presumption used in operating license proceedings.

In their declarations, David Staiger and John Brenneman state that they live within miles of Palisades.87 These declarations demonstrate that at least one member of TMIA and NEIS would have standing to intervene in their own right based on the proximity presumption.88 In keeping with Commission case law, the interests that TMIA and NEIS seek to protect in this proceeding are germane to their purposes, and neither the asserted claims nor the requested relief require an individual member to participate in this proceeding.89 For these reasons, TMIA and NEIS have satisfied their burden of demonstrating representational standing.

II.

Additional Context on the Licensing Process and the Environmental Review Before addressing the proposed contentions individually, the Staff will first address two more general matters that provide important context for the Boards consideration of several of the contentions. These two general matters relate to () the Staffs consideration of licensing 86 Calvert Cliffs, CLI--, NRC at (alterations in original) (quoting Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Project, LLC (Combined License Application for Calvert Cliffs Unit ), LBP--, NRC, - ()).

87 David Staiger Declaration at ; John Brenneman Declaration at.

88 Using the addresses provided on page of their respective declarations, the Staff verified, using the straight-line measurement tool in Google Maps, that Messrs. Staiger and Brenneman live approximately

. miles and miles, respectively, from the Palisades containment building.

89 Beaver Valley, CLI--, NRC at (citing Palisades, CLI--, NRC at -; Private Fuel Storage, L.L.C. (Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation), CLI--, NRC, ()).

and regulatory requests related to the potential restart of Palisades and () the relationship between the environmental review and the hearing request requirements.

A.

Staff Consideration of Licensing and Regulatory Requests Related to the Potential Restart of Palisades Here, the Staff explains explain how it is considering the licensing and regulatory requests related to the potential restart of reactor operation at Palisades within the existing regulatory framework. The Staff is doing so because the proposed contentions appear to rely on certain erroneous assumptions about the licensing and regulatory processes applicable to restart of Palisades. Although this proceeding does not concern all of the restart-related requests, the Staff will here address all of them (license amendments, license transfer, and exemption) so that the role the challenged requests have in the Palisades restart efforts can be considered in their proper context.

To begin, the Staffs consideration of all restart-related requests is governed by Commission-established policy on the reauthorization of reactor operations for plants in decommissioning. In denying a petition for rulemaking ( PRM Denial), the Commission stated that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework.90 Therefore, the Staff has examined whether the license amendment, license transfer, and exemption processes may be used to seek the resumption of reactor operation at Palisades under the existing regulatory framework given the current status of the Palisades license.

Although the Staff has not completed its review of any of the restart-related requests, the Staff has concluded, generally, that a facility licensee in decommissioning may apply to use the license amendment, transfer, and exemption processes, as applicable, to seek approval for the 90 Criteria To Return Retired Nuclear Power Reactors to Operations, Fed. Reg.,,, (May,

) (denying a petition for rulemaking) ( PRM Denial).

actions necessary to authorize the restart of a reactor in decommissioning. As discussed below, the Staff has reached this conclusion for two principal reasons.

First, a facility operating license continues in effect for reactors in decommissioning because entering the decommissioning process involves a change in license authority and not a change to the form of the license itself. Specifically, C.F.R. §.(a)() provides that upon docketing the §.(a)() certifications, the CFR part license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel into the reactor vessel. In other words, the authority to operate is gone but the same Part license remains. The continuation of the Part license is made explicit by C.F.R. §.(b), which states Each license for a facility that has permanently ceased operations, continues in effect beyond the expiration date to authorize ownership and possession of the production or utilization facility, until the Commission notifies the licensee in writing that the license is terminated.91 Thus, the Palisades license remains a renewed Part facility operating license during the decommissioning process.

The following examples from the broader regulatory context and the Palisades license itself also support the Staffs understanding:

Both C.F.R. §. and the Decommissioning Rule refer to termination of an operating license, meaning that the license is still an operating license at the point of termination.92 Commission precedent has applied requirements for operating licenses to plants in decommissioning.93 91 C.F.R. §.(b) (emphasis added).

92 See C.F.R. §.(d)() (referring to the termination of an operating license issued under this part); Decommissioning of Nuclear Power Reactors, Fed. Reg.,,, (July, ) (final rule) (referring to the termination of an operating license) ( Decommissioning Rule).

93 See EnergySolutions, LLC (Zion Nuclear Power Station, Units & ), CLI--, N.R.C., &

n. () (applying the requirements in C.F.R. §.(b)()(i) for construction permits and operating licenses to license transfers for facilities in decommissioning).

Section. applies by its terms to operating licenses and combined licenses and yet includes a provision applicable to a nuclear power reactor facility for which the certifications required under §.(a)() have been submitted.94 Other important requirements for operating licenses, such as the requirement in

§.(a)() to implement a quality assurance program, do and should continue to apply in decommissioning.

The license change pages from the Defueled TS Amendment, which was intended to reflect the modified responsibilities and authorities for Palisades in decommissioning, refer to the Palisades license as a renewed facility operating license.95 As a consequence, the NRCs regulatory requirements for operating licenses continue to apply to Palisades absent an exemption or an exclusion in the NRCs regulations for plants in decommissioning. Regulatory requirements that still apply include those in C.F.R. §. for final safety analysis reports (FSARs) and in C.F.R. §.(a) for quality assurance (QA) plans.

Second, because the license for a reactor in decommissioning remains a facility operating license, licensing and regulatory requests within the existing regulatory framework may be used to restore the licensed authority for reactor operation. The license amendment, license transfer, and exemption processes are all within the existing regulatory framework and may be applied to a reactor in decommissioning as follows:

94 C.F.R. §. (introductory paragraph and paragraph (y))

95 Defueled TS Amendment, Enclosure, Attach. (attached license change pages -, Appendix A title page, and Appendix B title page that refer to the license as a Renewed Facility Operating License or use similar terms, such as renewed operating license, Facility Operating License, or Operating License).

Retaining the term operating license was intentional, as the Staff issued a request for additional information (RAI) in which it explained why the Palisades license would still be a renewed facility operating license during the decommissioning phase. Letter from Scott P. Wall, NRC, to Vice President, Operations, Entergy, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Request for Additional Information Regarding License Amendment Request for Permanently Defueled Amendment Request (EPID L--LLA-),

Enclosure at - (Apr., ) (MLA). Entergy responded by withdrawing its proposal to delete the term operating when it appeared before license. Letter from Phil Couture, Entergy, to NRC Document Control Desk, Response to Request for Additional Information Regarding License Amendment Request to Revise Facility Operating License and Technical Specifications for a Permanently Defueled Condition, Enclosure at - (Apr., ) (MLA). Even if this proposal had not been withdrawn, that would not have changed the status of the license under NRC regulations, as discussed above.

Because license amendments are typically used to change the authorities and requirements for a reactor in decommissioning,96 the amendment process may be used to restore those authorities so long as the amendment standards in C.F.R.

§.(a) are met.

The license transfer process may be used to transfer authorities under the existing license to a transferee that is qualified to hold a license for reactor operation under C.F.R. §.(c)().

Although §.(a)() prohibits reactor operation for a reactor in decommissioning, the exemption process established by C.F.R. §. is available to remove regulatory restrictions, including the one in §.(a)(), if all exemption requirements are met.

For these reasons, the Staff has concluded that a licensee in decommissioning may seek the restart of reactor operation by applying to use relevant processes within the existing regulatory framework, including the license amendment, license transfer, and exemption processes.

B.

Relationship Between the Environmental Review and Hearing Request Requirements The Staff is here addressing as a general matter how certain information provided by HDI to support the environmental review relates to the hearing request requirements. The Staff is doing so because the amendments proceeding involves an unusual situation where the amendment requests invoke a categorical exclusion for the environmental review, but the Staff has instead decided to prepare an environmental assessment (EA). Relatedly, none of the proposed contentions address the applications arguments on the categorical exclusion criteria but instead contest other environmental information submitted by HDI. As discussed below, this other environmental information challenged by the Petitioners falls within the NRC definition of environmental report, and the Petitioners may challenge it in accordance with C.F.R.

§.(f)().

96 See, e.g., Defueled Administrative Controls Amendment; Defueled TS Amendment.

In each of the restart-related license amendment requests, HDI asserts that the categorical exclusion in C.F.R. §.(c)() applies.97 However, the Staff has determined not to invoke any categorical exclusions for the environmental review. Instead, the Staff has decided to prepare an EA that covers the restart-related amendment requests, transfer request, and exemption request, as discussed in a June, Federal Register notice (Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping).98 As described therein, if the Staff is able to determine that there are no significant impacts, the Staff intends to publish for comment a draft EA and a draft finding of no significant impact.99 While the Staff is not relying on the categorical exclusion arguments, three of the four amendment requests reference a separate HDI environmental evaluation in Enclosure of the Exemption Request. For example, after stating that a categorical exclusion applies, the Primary Amendment Request further states:

In support of this conclusion, as described in Reference, an independent environmental review of potentially new and significant information, and environmental issues not addressed in the October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement,

Regarding Palisades Nuclear Plant [License Renewal EIS Supplement] was performed. The review concluded that the proposed licensing actions environmental impacts are consistent with the findings in the [Palisades] RFOL Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (NUREG, Supplement ),

and hence the NRC staff recommendation to the Commission is applicable to this activity.100 97 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at -; MSLB Amendment Request, Enclosure at -.

98 Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, and Holtec Palisades, LLC; Palisades Nuclear Plant; Notice of Intent to Conduct Scoping Process and Prepare an Environmental Assessment, Fed. Reg.

,,, (June, ) (Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping).

99 Id.

100 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at -. The Reference mentioned in the quoted text is the Exemption Request.

The Administrative Controls Amendment Request and the Emergency Plan Amendment Request have the same text.101 The referenced new and significant review found in Enclosure of the Exemption Request was submitted to aid the NRC in its environmental review, which the Staff is conducting under the National Environmental Policy Act of, as amended (NEPA) § (), among other provisions. Therefore, Enclosure meets the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §., and the Staff will hereafter refer to it as the Environmental Report.102 Further, given the content of the Environmental Report and its ultimate conclusions, the Staff understands that it serves to support a determination that there would be no significant impact from restart of reactor operation at Palisades. The Environmental Report does not address conformance with the categorical exclusion criteria in C.F.R. §.(c)() but rather discusses the continued relevance of the environmental impact determinations in the License Renewal EIS Supplement. Specifically, the Environmental Report states that the License Renewal EIS Supplement reports SMALL impacts in all categories for which an impact determination was made and that HDI did not identify any new and significant information that would change these determinations.103 A SMALL impact determination means that [f]or the issue, environmental effects are not detectable or are so minor that they will neither destabilize nor noticeably alter any important attribute of the resource.104 The Environmental Report further states, Holtec considered that any new information regarding environmental issues with 101 Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at -.

102 See C.F.R. §. (stating that Environmental report means a document submitted to the Commission by an applicant for a permit, license, or other form of permission, or an amendment to or renewal of a permit, license or other form of permission, or by a petitioner for rulemaking, in order to aid the Commission in complying with section () of NEPA).

103 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).

104 C.F.R. Part, App. B, Table B-n.. See also Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).

MODERATE or LARGE impacts would be significant.105 Therefore, the Staff understands that the Environmental Report has the purpose of confirming that restart of Palisades would not have a significant environmental impact, consistent with the generic finding of no significant impact that the categorical exclusion cited by HDI represents.106 Moreover, the Environmental Report and the License Renewal EIS Supplement to which it relates are being considered by the Staff in its environmental review, which is assessing whether NRC approval of the restart-related actions would have a significant impact. As the Staff stated in its Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping:

To inform its environmental review, the NRC staff is considering a number of sources, including the previous NRC environmental review for [Palisades] license renewal that is documented in the October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement, Regarding Palisades Nuclear PlantFinal Report (hereafter License Renewal EIS Supplement). The License Renewal EIS Supplement addresses the environmental impacts of continued operation during the license renewal period, which is the same operating period applicable to HDIs requests for reauthorization of power operations. The NRC staff is also considering the environmental information that HDI submitted in Enclosure, Environmental New and Significant Review Proposed Resumption of Power Operations Palisades Nuclear Plant, of the September,, exemption request. As stated in the exemption request, Enclosure documents HDIs environmental review of potentially new and significant information, and environmental issues not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement.107 Therefore, the Environmental Report continues to relate to the environmental review for the restart-related amendment requests. As such, the Petitioners may challenge, and are indeed obligated to challenge, the Environmental Report under C.F.R. §.(f)(), which requires contentions to be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, including (as relevant here) the application, environmental report or other 105 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).

106 See NEPA § (), U.S.C. § e() (providing that a categorical exclusion is a category of actions that a Federal agency has determined normally does not significantly affect the quality of the human environment within the meaning of section ()(C) of NEPA). See also C.F.R. §.(a).

107 Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, Fed. Reg. at,.

supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee. While subject to challenge, the Staff notes that the Environmental Report is being submitted voluntarily because NRC regulations do not require the submission of an Environmental Report for reactor license amendment requests in this context.108 Therefore, the environmental report content requirements of C.F.R. §.

and other Part regulations for the content of environmental reports do not apply to the instant Environmental Report. However, the Staffs environmental review is subject to, and will satisfy, the requirements of NEPA and NRC regulations for environmental assessments and associated determinations and findings, including discussion of the environmental impacts of the proposed actions.

III.

The Petition Proffers a Contention of Omission that Is Admissible in Part A.

Contention Admissibility Requirements The NRCs contention admissibility requirements are set forth in C.F.R. §.(f) of the Commissions Rules of Practice. To be admissible, a newly proffered contention must:

(i) Provide a specific statement of the issue of law or fact to be raised or controverted; (ii) Provide a brief explanation of the basis for the contention; (iii) Demonstrate that the issue raised in the contention is within the scope of the proceeding; (iv) Demonstrate that the issue raised in the contention is material to the findings the NRC must make to support the action that is involved in the proceeding; (v) Provide a concise statement of the alleged facts or expert opinions which support the requestor's/petitioner's position on the issue and on which the petitioner intends to rely at hearing, together with references to the specific sources and documents on which the requestor/petitioner intends to rely to support its position on the issue; and (vi) provide sufficient information to show that a genuine dispute exists with the applicant/licensee on a material issue of law or fact. This information must 108 See C.F.R. §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,

.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). Section.(d) refers to environmental reports for certain types of amendment requests, but these are not associated with restart of reactor operation for a plant in decommissioning.

include references to specific portions of the application (including the applicant's environmental report and safety report) that the petitioner disputes and the supporting reasons for each dispute, or, if the petitioner believes that the application fails to contain information on a relevant matter as required by law, the identification of each failure and the supporting reasons for the petitioner's belief[.]109 Failure to satisfy any of the six pleading requirements renders a contention inadmissible.110 Further, [c]ontentions must be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, such as the application, supporting safety analysis report, environmental report or other supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee, or otherwise available to a petitioner.111 The §.(f)() requirements are intended to focus litigation on concrete issues and result in a clearer and more focused record for decision.112 The Commission has stated that it should not have to expend resources to support the hearing process unless there is an issue that is appropriate for, and susceptible to, resolution in an NRC hearing.113 The NRCs contention admissibility requirements are strict by design and intended to ensure that adjudicatory proceedings are triggered only by substantive safety or environmental issues, rooted in a reasonably specific factual or legal basis and to screen out ill-defined, speculative, or otherwise unsupported claims.114 Further, a proposed contention must be rejected if it raises issues beyond the scope of the proceeding as established by the Commission's hearing 109 C.F.R. §.(f)()(i)-(vi).

110 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point, Unit ) CLI--, NRC, ().

111 C.F.R. §.(f)().

112 Changes to Adjudicatory Process, Fed. Reg., (Jan., ) (final rule).

113 Id.

114 Exelon Generation Co. (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), CLI--, NRC, -

() (internal quotation marks omitted).

notice.115 Moreover, C.F.R. §. forbids challenges to NRC regulations in adjudicatory proceedings, absent a petition for waiver or exception (accompanied by affidavit) that demonstrates prima facie that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation (or a provision of it) would not serve the purposes for which the rule or regulation was adopted.116 Presiding officers are expected to examine cited materials to verify that they do, in fact, support a contention.117 Also, a document cited by a petitioner as the basis for a contention is subject to scrutiny both for what it does and does not show.118 A presiding officer may view a petitioner's supporting information in a light favorable to the petitioner,119 but the presiding officer is not to search through pleadings or other materials to uncover arguments and support never advanced by the petitioners themselves.120 B.

Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

Holtec seeks an exemption from the requirements of C.F.R. §., pursuant to C.F.R. §.. The proposed exemption would remove the C.F.R.

§.(a)() restriction that prohibits reactor power operations and retention of fuel in the reactor vessel when the reactor is in the process of decommissioning.

Holtecs proposed exemption does not comply with the requirements for an 115 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit ), NRC, ()

(citing Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. (Marble Hill Nuclear Generating Station, Units and ),

ALAB-, NRC, - ()).

116 C.F.R. §.(a)-(c). Whether special circumstances are present is assessed under the Millstone factors. Exelon Generation Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,

() (citing Dominion Nuclear Connecticut, Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Units and ),

CLI--, NRC, ()).

117 USEC, CLI--, NRC at.

118 NextEra Energy Seabrook, LLC (Seabrook Station, Unit ), CLI--, NRC, & n. ().

119 AmerGen Energy Co., LLC (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), CLI--, NRC,

().

120 USEC, CLI--, NRC at.

exemption set forth in C.F.R. §.. Therefore, the NRC must not allow Holtec to use this exemption.121 In support of proposed Contention, the Petitioners provide several arguments challenging the Exemption Request and whether it meets the criteria for granting an exemption under C.F.R. §.. First, the Petitioners assert that Holtec has not demonstrated that exigent circumstances are present.122 Next, the Petitioners challenge Holtecs assertions that it meets the exemption criteria in §.(a)() that the exemption is authorized by law and will not present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security.123 Additionally, the Petitioners argue that the Exemption Request does not meet any of the criteria for demonstrating that special circumstances exist under §.(a)()(i)-(vi).124 Staff Response: The Petitioners describe the Exemption Request as the linchpin of Holtecs multifaceted scheme to remove Palisades from decommissioning status and return Palisades to active power operations.125 The Petitioners assert that because Holtec cannot meet the exemption criteria in §., the NRC must not grant Holtecs requested exemption.126 Specifically, the Petitioners argue that the Exemption Request must not be granted because the Exemption Request does not demonstrate that: ) exigent circumstances are present; ) the Exemption Request is authorized by law; ) there is no undue risk to public health and safety; and ) special circumstances exist. While the Staff agrees that the Petitioners may file contentions challenging the Exemption Request, the Staff concludes that proposed Contention is inadmissible because it raises arguments that are outside the scope of this 121 Petition at.

122 Petition at -.

123 Petition at -.

124 Petition at -.

125 Petition at.

126 Petition at.

proceeding, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law.

The Exemption Request is Inextricably Intertwined with the Restart-Related Amendment Requests Although the Petitioners do not address this issue in their Petition, the Staff notes that the Exemption Request is inextricably intertwined to the restart-related amendment requests, and therefore, can be challenged through the filing of contentions in this license amendment proceeding. As the Commission has noted, when a requested exemption raises questions that are material to a proposed licensing action -- directly bears on whether the proposed action should be granted -- a petitioner in an adjudicatory proceeding on the licensing action may raise arguments relating to the exemption request.127 In the Staffs view, the Exemption Request is inextricably intertwined with the restart-related amendment requests because the NRC may not make the findings to issue these amendments without the Exemption Request being granted.128 Accordingly, the Exemption Request is subject to challenge in this license amendment proceeding.129 Although the Exemption Request is subject to challenge in this adjudicatory proceeding, as described below, proposed Contention is inadmissible because it raises arguments that are outside the scope of this proceeding, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the 127 See Palisades, CLI--, NRC at.

128 NRC approval of the restart-related amendment requests would, among other things, amend the license to authorize power operations at Palisades. See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request, at. To grant the restart-related amendments, the NRC must find that the request complies with NRC regulations. See, e.g., C.F.R. §§.;.. However, to make these findings, the prohibition on operation found in C.F.R. §.(a)() must be removed for Palisades through the exemption process.

129 See Order of the Secretary (denying petition to intervene and request a hearing on the Exemption Request), at - (Dec., ) (unpublished) (MLA); Order of the Secretary (providing clarification to the Petitioners question regarding the Exemption Request), at - (Sept., )

(unpublished) (MLA).

Exemption Request, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law in accordance with C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).

The Petitioners Arguments Regarding Exigent Circumstances Are Inadmissible Because They Concern Immaterial Issues and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Exemption Request on a Material Issue of Fact or Law In proposed Contention, the Petitioners appear to assert that the Exemption Request should be denied because it does not demonstrate that exigent circumstances are present.130 However, the Petitioners do not demonstrate the materiality of their concern or that there is a genuine, material dispute with the application because the Petitioners rely on outdated case law and Commission policy that predates the current §. exemption standards promulgated in

( Specific Exemptions Rule)131 that apply to the Exemption Request. For example, the Petitioners quote from a D.C. Circuit case for its argument that exemptions under §.

are only available in the presence of exigent circumstances.132 But the D.C. Circuit case, and the WPPSS case it references, both predate the Specific Exemptions Rule.133 Similarly, the Petitioners point to a Federal Register notice and assert that the Commission has also emphasized that §. exemptions are to be granted sparingly and only in cases of undue hardship,134 but this notice also predates the Specific Exemptions Rule.

130 Petition at -.

131 Specific Exemptions; Clarification of Standards, Fed. Reg., (Dec., ) (final rule) (

Specific Exemptions Rule).

132 Petition at (citing NRDC v. NRC, F.d (D.C. Cir. ) (citing Washington Public Power Supply System (WPPSS Nuclear Project Nos. and ), CLI--, NRC, ())).

133 NRDC, F.d at ; WPPSS at. The Staff also notes that these cases pertain to Commission policy specifically related to exemptions from the requirements from §.(c) for site preparation activities, which is not relevant to HDIs Exemption Request from §.(a)(). Also, §.(b) provides specific criteria for exemptions from §..

134 Petition at (citing Pre-Construction Permit Activities, Fed. Reg.,,, (Apr., )).

The Staff notes that the portion of this Federal Register notice referenced in the Petition explains the Commission's policy of granting exemptions from §.(c) sparingly and only in cases of undue hardship.

Further, the Petitioners point to the Commissions decision in Shoreham, which held that exemptions under §. must demonstrate the presence of exigent or exceptional circumstances that consider the equities of the situation.135 Although Shoreham served as a primary basis for the changes incorporated into the Specific Exemptions Rule,136 the final version of the rule did not wholly adopt the equities considerations discussed in Shoreham.

Indeed, the Specific Exemptions Rule revised the standards for granting an exemption under C.F.R. §., and added a provision in §.(a)() that the Commission will not consider granting an exemption unless special circumstances are present.137 The Specific Exemptions Rule does not use the terminology that exigent circumstances or exceptional circumstances must be present nor does it include all the equities considerations discussed in Shoreham.138 Thus, the legal standard applicable to the Exemption Request is the version of

§. promulgated in the Specific Exemptions Rule, not the case law cited in the Petition.

Accordingly, to the extent the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request must demonstrate exigent or exceptional circumstances, these arguments are inadmissible because they do not reflect the current version of the requirements applicable to the Exemption Request, and therefore, are not material to the NRCs findings to issue the Exemption Request under

§.(f)()(iv) and do not demonstrate a genuine dispute with the application on a material issue of fact or law under §.(f)()(vi).

135 Petition at (citing Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit ), CLI--,

NRC, n. (); Long Island Lighting Co. (Shoreham Nuclear Power Station, Unit ),

LBP--, NRC, - ()).

136 Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,.

137 Id. at,-.

138 Compare Shoreham, CLI--, NRC at n. with §.(a)()(i)-(vi) (describing the special circumstances criteria).

The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Is Not Authorized by Law Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not satisfy the criterion in §.(a)() that granting the exemption must be authorized by law.

Specifically, the Petitioners argue that Holtec does not cite any law that authorizes the exemption, but merely says that the Atomic Energy Act does not prohibit it.139 The Petitioners, however, do not accurately characterize HDIs justification in the Exemption Request. In its Exemption Request, HDI states that the requested exemption does not result in a violation of the Atomic Energy Act of, as amended, or the Commissions regulations, not simply that the AEA does not prohibit the exemption.140 Moreover, the Petitioners provide no legal basis for their assertions that HDIs justification in the Exemption Request is deficient or that affirmative legal authorization must be demonstrated.141 Indeed, HDIs justification is consistent with the preamble to the Specific Exemptions Rule which states, As in the existing rule, an exemption must be authorized by law. Apart from the very fact of granting the exemption relief itself, the granting of the exemption cannot be in violation of other applicable laws, such as the Atomic Energy Act or the National Environmental Policy Act.142 Thus, by demonstrating that the exemption is not in violation of the AEA or other applicable laws, a licensee effectively meets the §.(a) criterion that the exemption is authorized by law.

The Petitioners also seem to take issue with HDIs reference to the PRM Denial and assert that in this denial, the Commission mentioned in passing that the existing regulations might be available, through an exemption, to accomplish the purpose, but §.

139 Petition at.

140 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.

141 Petition at.

142 Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,.

was not mentioned.143 However, in the PRM Denial, the Commission stated that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework.144 As discussed in Discussion Section II.A, the §. exemption process is part of the existing regulatory framework and, therefore, may be used by a licensee to seek approval to authorize restart of a reactor in decommissioning. Thus, to the extent that the Petitioners are challenging the existing regulatory framework or the exemption process in §., such challenges are disallowed by C.F.R. §. and are otherwise immaterial and outside the scope of this proceeding. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments that HDI has not demonstrated that the Exemption Request is authorized by law is inadmissible because it raises issues that are out of scope, immaterial, and do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv), and (vi).

The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Does Not Meet the No Undue Risk Standard Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application In proposed Contention, the Petitioners also argue that the Exemption Request does not satisfy the criteria in §.(a)() that granting the exemption will not present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security.145 The Petitioners challenge the Exemption Request by asserting that Holtec simply states that Palisades will be returned to the condition it was in prior to decommissioning146 which they claim is problematic because there were significant safety problems with the plant and risks to the public health and safety prompted Palisades to be shut down earlier than anticipated.147 As support, the Petitioners 143 Petition at -.

144 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at,.

145 Petition at.

146 Petition at.

147 Petition at.

point to the declaration of their expert, Arnold Gundersen (Gundersen Declaration).148 Specifically, the Petitioners reference Mr. Gundersens assertions that [t]he overall design of the Palisades reactor is not licensable to st century standards, that Palisades is one of the worlds most decrepit and flawed nuclear reactors, and that when Entergy sold Palisades to Holtec, the reactor was operating with poorly maintained parts, woefully inadequate safety equipment and outmoded components.149 However, neither the Petition nor the Gundersen Declaration contain any factual basis to support these conclusory assertions. Conclusory assertions, even by an expert, do not support the admissibility of a contention.150 Moreover, the Petitioners, through their Petition and Gundersen Declaration, do not specifically challenge or dispute any portion of the Exemption Request or the restart-related amendments that are the subject of this proceeding.

Additionally, the Petitioners mischaracterize the arguments in the Exemption Request as simply stating that the plant will be returned to the condition it was in prior to decommissioning.

HDIs primary argument that the Exemption Request will not present an undue risk to public health and safety is based on its proposal to restore the Palisades licensing basis through NRC review and approval of the restart-related amendment requests and Restart Transfer Request, which will ensure compliance with NRC safety regulations.151 HDI further states in its Exemption Request that NRC inspection activities during development and implementation of the return to service plans provide added assurance that SSCs will function as required by the reinstated licensing basis.152 The Petitioners do not provide any information in the Petition or the 148 See Petition, Exhibit A (Gundersen Declaration).

149 Petition at - (citing Gundersen Declaration, at, ).

150 See USEC, CLI--, NRC at.

151 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.

152 Id.

Gundersen Declaration to address or challenge any of the justifications HDI presented in the Exemption Request.

Each of the restart-related licensing requests - the license amendment and transfer requests - address changes to the Palisades license, UFSAR, emergency preparedness plans, licensed operating authority, etc., for a reactor in operation, and each of these changes are subject to specific NRC safety regulations. Licensees must comply with NRC safety regulations, and compliance with NRC safety regulations is presumptively protective of public health and safety.153 With respect to licensing actions, the NRC adheres to the no undue risk standard, which the Commission has stated is equivalent to the adequate protection standard set out in AEA § a. ( U.S.C. § (a)), governing approval of licensing actions.154 Thus, any challenge to whether the plant will safely operate should address the safety regulations pertinent to these requests. While the Petitioners and their expert make many conclusory assertions regarding plant safety at Palisades, they do not assert that any specific safety regulations are unmet. Also, the restart-related amendment and transfer requests provide opportunities to raise concerns that the proposed restart does not satisfy the NRCs safety regulations. Therefore, the Petitioners challenge to the Exemption Request is effectively a back-door challenge to the NRCs existing safety regulations using the general no undue risk standard in §.(a)() and is barred under §..

Further, contrary to the Petitioners assertions, the Staff notes that the submission of the

§.(a)() certifications was a voluntary action on the part of Entergy, not the result of any NRC finding or action that a safety problem existed.155 The no undue risk standard in 153 See, e.g., AmerCen Energy Co., LLC (Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station), LBP--, NRC

, () (citing Maine Yankee Atomic Power Company (Maine Yankee Atomic Power Station),

ALAB-, AEC, ()).

154 Revision of Backfitting Process for Power Reactors, Fed. Reg.,,, (June, ) (Final Rule).

155 See generally Palisades.(a)() Certifications.

§.(a)() is particularly pertinent where a licensee proposes meeting the underlying purpose of the specific safety requirements in NRC regulations in an alternate manner. In that case, the licensee must ordinarily show that the proposed alternate approach is another way to meet the general safety objective of the regulation. But §.(a)() does not impose specific safety requirements. It simply demarcates the point at which a licensee is no longer authorized to operate a reactor. Accordingly, there is no reason (and the Petitioners do not provide any reason) why meeting the NRCs safety regulations for operation would somehow fail to meet the no undue risk standard. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments challenging whether the Exemption Request has met the no undue risk standard are inadmissible because they are unsupported and do not present a genuine dispute with the application on a material issue of law or fact under C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).

The Petitioners also rely on Mr. Gundersens assertions challenging Holtecs void of corporate nuclear power plant construction and operating experience,156 and arguments that the project underestimates the extreme costs and duration for making repairs.157 However, these assertions regarding Holtecs purported lack of operating experience and extreme project costs appear to challenge Holtecs technical and financial qualifications to operate Palisades, which are issues relevant to the Restart Transfer Request and not any of the restart-related license amendment requests that are the subject of this proceeding or the Exemption Request that is intertwined with the amendment requests.158 Accordingly, these arguments, which the Petitioners could have properly raised within the scope of the license transfer proceeding, are 156 Petition at - (citing Gundersen Declaration, at ).

157 Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration, at ).

158 See C.F.R. §.(b)()(i) (stating that a license transfer application for an operating license shall include, as much of the information described in §§. and. of this part with respect to the identity and technical and financial qualifications of the proposed transferee as would be required by those sections if the application were for an initial license). As noted above, three of the Petitioners filed a hearing request in the transfer proceeding; however, that request did not raise any challenges to Holtecs financial or technical qualifications.

inadmissible here because they fall outside the scope of this license amendment proceeding and are immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the restart-related license amendments and Exemption Request.

For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners have not demonstrated that granting the Exemption Request will present an undue risk to the public health and safety and common defense and security. Their contention is therefore inadmissible because it raises concerns that are out of scope, immaterial, unsupported, and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the application under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).

The Petitioners Arguments That the Exemption Request Does Not Meet Any of the Special Circumstances Criteria in §.(a)() Are Inadmissible Because They Raise Issues That Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, Unsupported, and Do Not Raise a Genuine Dispute with the Application In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet any of the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)().159 The regulations in

§.(a)() only require the presence of one of the special circumstances listed in

§.(a)()(i)-(vi). Thus, in order to prevail in their assertion that the Exemption Request should be denied, the Petitioners must demonstrate that no special circumstances exist that warrant approval of the exemption. As explained below, the Petitioners present several flawed arguments that ultimately fail to demonstrate that the Exemption Request provides no special circumstances under §.(a)(). Accordingly, the Petitioners Contention is inadmissible because it raises issues that are out of scope, immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request, unsupported, and does not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).

159 Petition at -.

a. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in

§.(a)()(ii) Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)()(ii) that application of the regulation in the particular circumstances would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule.160 Specifically, the Petitioners assert that the purpose of §. is to ensure that the reactor is certified to be in decommissioning status in order to facilitate decommissioning, and that [i]t is absurd to think that §. is not serving its purpose in this case considering that Palisades has been in the process of decommissioning since June.161 But the Petitioners seem to misunderstand the standard in §.(a)()(ii). To determine whether the special circumstances criteria in §.(a)()(ii) are met, the particular circumstances of the case must be considered.162 The particular circumstances of the case, as described in the Exemption Request, are that HDI, a licensee in decommissioning for which the

§.(a) certifications have been docketed, is seeking to restart the reactor and exit the decommissioning process.163 Considering that HDI is seeking to restart the reactor and exit the decommissioning process, HDI must demonstrate that the §.(a)() prohibition on operation would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule under these particular circumstances. The Petitioners do not explain, nor does the Staff perceive, why the purpose of §.(a)()-(), or the regulation itself, should be interpreted to prohibit a licensee from requesting an exemption to restart operation of a plant in decommissioning if the licensee seeks to operate the reactor again. Ultimately, if restart is approved, the facility would still need to be decommissioned, 160 Petition at -.

161 Petition at.

162 C.F.R. §.(a)()(ii) (Application of the regulation in the particular circumstances would not serve the underlying purpose of the rule or is not necessary to achieve the underlying purpose of the rule).

163 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.

following submission and docketing of the §.(a) certifications after any subsequent period of operation.

The Petitioners also challenge the statement in the Exemption Request that §.(a) serves to notify the NRC of the licensees intent to place the plant into a decommissioning status and argue that if the intent of the rule was to provide notification, then Holtec could rescind the certification.164 While it is clear on the face of the regulations that the §.(a) certifications serve the purpose of notifying the NRC of the licensees decommissioning plans,165 the Petitioners provide no legal basis for why an exemption from the §.(a)() restriction prohibiting power operation would be unnecessary to restart operations. Moreover, the Exemption Request provides another purpose for the §.(a)() rulethat the certifications also identify the point in time when a reactor formally enters the decommissioning process.166 The Staff notes that the statement that the certifications also identify the point in time when a reactor formally enters the decommissioning process167 is an accurate summary of the plain language of §.(a)()-() and the Petitioners do not dispute this purpose. For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments are inadmissible because they do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).

b. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in

§.(a)()(iii) Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)()(iii) that compliance would 164 Petition at.

165 See e.g., C.F.R. §.(a)()(i) (When a licensee has determined to permanently cease operations the licensee shall, within days, submit a written certification to the NRC....); §.(a)()(ii) (Once fuel has been permanently removed from the reactor vessel, the licensee shall submit a written certification to the NRC.... ).

166 Exemption Request, Enclosure at.

167 Id.

result in undue hardship or other costs that are significantly in excess of those contemplated when the regulation was adopted.168 The Exemption Request states that without the exemption, HDI would not be able to obtain authorization to operate Palisades which would result in an undue hardship, by preventing the return to the Michigan electrical grid of megawatts of safe and reliable carbon-free electricity, and a dependable baseload generation vital to Michigan residents and businesses, thus unfairly hindering economic development in the state.169 The Petitioners challenge this argument and assert that [e]ven if, as Holtec contends, reopening Palisades would benefit the people of Michigan (a concept with which Petitioners vehemently disagree), that does not show an undue hardship on Holtec.170 The Petitioners appear to be arguing that the Exemption Request does not show an undue hardship to Holtec itself.

However, the Petitioners provide no legal basis for the assertion that undue hardship must be experienced by the licensee or applicant itself. Therefore, the Petitioners do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request.

The Petitioners also point to NRDC v. NRC, and argue that Holtec has not demonstrated an exigent circumstance or undue hardship.171 However, as previously stated, NRDC v. NRC predates the Specific Exemptions rule that promulgated the version of §.(a)()

currently applicable to the Exemption Request, and is, therefore, inapplicable here. Regardless, the Petitioners do not explain how the case supports their position that HDI has not demonstrated undue hardship. Finally, to the extent the Petitioners are arguing that the Exemption Request should have considered the economic interest of others,172 these 168 Petition at -.

169 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.

170 Petition at.

171 Petition at (citing NRDC, F.d at ).

172 Petition at (Regional grid planners, other utilities, business forecasters and their clients all have had to adjust to the decision. The class of those whose economic interests must be taken into consideration along with those of Holtec is quite extensive.).

arguments appear to contradict the Petitioners prior argument that Holtec needs to show undue hardship on itself. For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners arguments are inadmissible because they do not raise a genuine dispute with the Exemption Request on a material issue of fact or law under C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).

c. The Petitioners Arguments Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in

§.(a)()(vi) Are Out of Scope, Immaterial, Unsupported and Do Not Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request In proposed Contention, the Petitioners assert that the Exemption Request does not meet the special circumstances criteria in C.F.R. §.(a)()(vi) that there is present any other material circumstance not considered when the regulation was adopted for which it would be in the public interest to grant an exemption.173 In doing so, the Petitioners provide several arguments that assert that Holtec has not demonstrated that the Exemption Request is in the public interest.174 The Petitioners arguments, however, rely on outdated legal authorities and standards that are inapplicable to HDIs Exemption Request from §.(a)(). Specifically, the Petitioners rely on CLI-- and CLI-- and characterize the public interest standard as stringent and note that exemptions of this sort are to be granted sparingly and only in extraordinary circumstances.175 But both of these cases predate the Specific Exemptions rule which promulgated the version of §. applicable to the Exemption Request and focus on exemptions under a different standard - §.(b), which applies only to exemption requests from the requirements in §. related to site preparation activities.176 173 Petition at -.

174 Petition at -.

175 Petition at (citing United States Department of Energy (Clinch River Breeder Reactor Plant), CLI-

-, NRC, () (citing WPPSS, CLI--, NRC ())).

176 See Clinch River Breeder Reactor, CLI--, NRC at, - (applying the exemption standards in §.(b)); WPPSS, CLI--, NRC at (referencing the exemption standards in

§.(b)). See also C.F.R. §.(b).

In the Exemption Request, HDI relies on the NRC regulatory basis document developed in support of the proposed decommissioning rule and states that the NRC designed the current CFR Part regulations for reactor decommissioning for plants that were expected to be permanently shut down at the end of their operating license term.177 The Exemption Request also states that the current regulation in §. was not written to address the unique

[Palisades] circumstance of returning to power operations after the §. certifications have been docketed by the NRC.178 HDI also points to the support from the Michigan Governor demonstrating the states urgency and necessity for the reauthorization of power operations and Palisades.179 The Petitioners appear to challenge HDIs arguments and attempt to assert that the NRC may have considered the possibility of restarting a reactor when it promulgated the decommissioning rules,180 but they provide no support for this position, nor do they acknowledge or challenge HDIs reference to the NRC regulatory basis document as support for HDIs position. Similarly, the Petitioners speculate, without any support, that if the NRC had considered the possibility of restarting a decommissioning reactor, it would have provided for that possibility in the rules. Moreover, the Petitioners assert that Holtec must establish that restarting Palisades is in the public interest,181 but they do not challenge the public interest justification in the Exemption Request related to the State of Michigans urgency and necessity for reauthorization of power operations at Palisades as a material circumstance not considered 177 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at (citing Regulatory Improvements for Power Reactors Transitioning to Decommissioning, Regulatory Basis Document (Nov., ) (MLA)).

178 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at -.

179 Id. at.

180 Petition at.

181 Petition at.

when §. was approved.182 For these reasons, the Petitioners arguments are unsupported and do not demonstrate that a genuine dispute exists with the application on a material issue of fact or law.

Next, the Petitioners appear to challenge Holtecs approach to seeking reauthorization to restart power operations at Palisades. The Petitioners state that Holtec insists that its scheme to restart is just a simple matter of getting the requested exemption and then a few license amendments.183 The Petitioners then quote a portion of an interview with Commissioner Crowell and assert that Commissioner Crowell acknowledges that a Palisades restart would be a difficult and complicated process.184 The Petitioners arguments here, however, are not clear and they do not explain how the Commissioners statements support their position that the criteria in §.(a)()(vi) have not been met. To the extent that the Petitioners are challenging Holtecs use of the existing regulatory framework, such arguments are precluded by C.F.R. §. and are otherwise immaterial and outside the scope of this proceeding.

The Petitioners also argue that Holtec relies on the fact of having monetary support appropriated by the Michigan legislature to support its argument that restarting Palisades is in the public interest.185 However, this assertion lacks any factual basis. The Exemption Request does not appear to rely on monetary support in the justification of the §.(a)()(vi) criteria, and the Petitioners provide no specific references or page numbers to any such discussion.

Accordingly, these arguments are unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the application.

182 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at.

183 Petition at.

184 Petition at -.

185 Petition at.

The Petitioners argue that political support of Holtec does not equate to a scientific or technical basis for the restart scheme.186 As support, the Petitioners attempt to rely on their expert, Mark Z. Jacobson, who purportedly makes it clear that nuclear power is not the energy source of the future, and consequently restarting Palisades is not in the public interest.187 However, the Petitioners claims appear to lack sufficient expert support as the discussion referenced in the Petition does not actually appear in Mr. Jacobsons Declaration that is attached as Exhibit C to the Petition.188 Moreover, to the extent that the Petitioners arguments here seek to challenge the State of Michigans decision-making with respect to its energy and economic policies related to nuclear power, the Staff notes that those matters fall outside the NRCs regulatory authority.189 Accordingly, the Petitioners assertions are unsupported and immaterial to the findings the Staff must make to issue the Exemption Request.

The Petitioners also rely on statements from Kevin Kamps and Arnold Gundersen regarding Holtecs fixed-price power purchase agreement to assert that public monetary support from the State of Michigan and Federal Government does not mean Holtecs scheme is in the public interest.190 However, these assertions also appear to lack expert support as neither Kevin Kamps nor Arnold Gundersen purport to be experts regarding the financial arguments raised by the Petitioners in proposed Contention.191 Moreover, as noted above, the Petitioners 186 Petition at -. The Staff notes that the Petitioners statements regarding political support appear to be based on monetary support as discussed in the Petitioners preceding sentence. Id.

187 Petition at.

188 Compare Petition at with Petition, Exhibit C (Declaration of Mark Z. Jacobson). The Petitioners cite to page of Exhibit C, but the th page appears to be an unrelated portion of Mr. Jacobsons Curriculum Vitae (CV).

189 See Environmental Review for Renewal of Nuclear Power Plant Operating Licenses, Fed. Reg.

,,, (June, ) (The NRC acknowledges the primacy of State regulators and utility officials in defining energy requirements and determining the energy mix within their jurisdictions.).

190 Petition at -.

191 The Declaration of Kevin Kamps describes Mr. Kamps as a radioactive waste specialist, and does not include a resume or CV. See Petition, Exhibit B (Kamps Declaration). Similarly, based on a review of

do not challenge the specific public interest justifications in the Exemption Request. Additionally, to the extent the Petitioners challenge Holtecs scientific or technical basis for restart, they do not assert that any specific safety regulations are unmet or specify some sort of deficiency with the restart-related amendments subject to this proceeding. Therefore, the Petitioners do not demonstrate that there is a genuine, material dispute with the application.

For the reasons discussed above, the Petitioners assertions are inadmissible because they are out of scope, immaterial, unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request under §.(f)()(iii)-(vi).

d. The Petitioners Do Not Challenge or Do Not Otherwise Raise a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Exemption Request Regarding the Special Circumstances Criteria in §.(a)()(i), (iv), and (v)

The Petitioners also mention the special circumstances criteria under §.(a)() that HDI does not rely upon in its Exemption Request, including §.(a)()(i), (iv), and (v). The Petitioners do not appear to raise any challenges with respect to the criteria in §.(a)()(i) and (v), and acknowledge that Holtec does not rely on these criteria in the Exemption Request.192 Regarding the criteria in §.(a)()(iv) that special circumstances are present where [t]he exemption would result in benefit to public health and safety that compensates for any decrease in safety that may result from the grant of the exemption, the Petitioners assert that restart of Palisades would result in harm to public health and safety.193 Specifically, the Petitioners rely on statements from Kevin Kamps regarding Palisades embrittled reactor.194 his Declaration and CV, the Staff notes that Mr. Gundersen, who has a Masters degree in Nuclear Engineering and extensive background in nuclear engineering, does not appear to have formal education or training relevant to the financial topics discussed in proposed Contention. See Petition, Exhibit A.

192 Petition at,.

193 Petition at.

194 Petition at (citing Petition, Exhibit B, at ).

However, Mr. Kamps provides no factual basis for his conclusory assertions,195 nor does he establish his expertise on the subject of embrittlement.196 Nevertheless, as the Petitioners acknowledge, Holtec does not actually rely §.(a)()(iv) to support their justification in the Exemption request. Accordingly, the Petitioners assertions are inadmissible because they are unsupported and do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the Exemption Request under

§.(f)()(v)-(vi).

For the reasons discussed above, proposed Contention is not admissible under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv), (v), and (vi).

C.

Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Claims that Are Immaterial and Lack Factual Support Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

An Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), not an Environmental Assessment (EA), must be compiled for the proposed restart of the Palisades reactor. An EIS is required because of the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec.197 In proposed Contention, Petitioners argue that Holtec is seeking the issuance or renewal of a reactor operating license and that, consequently, the Staff must prepare an EIS in accordance with C.F.R. §.(b).198 Petitioners also assert that there is no regulatory pathway to restart reactor operations at Palisades other than by applying for a new operating license under C.F.R. Part,199 and that even if the existing regulatory framework could be used, an EIS would still be required under C.F.R. §.(b)().200 Petitioners additionally claim that Holtec has failed to submit an environmental report and that the environmental 195 See USEC, CLI--, NRC at.

196 As explained previously, the Kamps Declaration describes Mr. Kamps as a radioactive waste specialist, and does not include a resume or CV. See Kamps Declaration.

197 Petition at.

198 Id. at.

199 Id. at.

200 Id. at.

document Holtec did submit fails to comply with NRC requirements for environmental reports.201 Finally, Petitioners assert that the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades is a major federal action under NEPA,202 and that an EIS is required due to the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec.203 Staff Response: Proposed Contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), (v),

and (vi) and therefore is inadmissible because it () addresses matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, () lacks adequate factual support, and () does not demonstrate a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact.

First, Petitioners assert that Holtec seeks the issuance or renewal of a full power or design capacity license to operate Palisades, i.e., an operating license.204 This is incorrect. As part of the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades, HDI has submitted four license amendment requestswhich are the subject of this proceedingamong other related requests.

HDI has not submitted an application for a new or renewed operating license under C.F.R.

Part.

Second, Petitioners claim that with the end of operations at Palisades, Holtec now has an operating license with conditions that permanently shut down the reactor.205 As a result, Petitioners assert, [t]here is no regulatory pathway by which Holtec may restart the reactor other than through submission of a new operating license application under C.F.R. Part,206 201 Id. at.

202 Id. at -.

203 Id. at.

204 Id. at.

205 Id.

206 Id. at.

and that, as a consequence, the Staff must prepare an EIS.207 But as discussed in Discussion Section II.A above, the Staffs consideration of all restart-related requests is governed by the existing regulations and Commission-established policy that the NRC may consider requests from licensees to resume operations under the existing regulatory framework.208 In carrying out this Commission policy, the Staff has concluded, generally, that a facility licensee in decommissioning may apply to use the license amendment, transfer, and exemption processes, as applicable, to seek approval for the actions necessary to authorize the restart of a reactor in decommissioning.

As explained in Discussion Section II.A above, the Staff reached this conclusion in part because the C.F.R. Part operating license for a reactor in decommissioning continues in effect during the decommissioning process until it is terminated, such that entering the decommissioning process effectuates a change in license authority but does not change the form of the license itself.209 In other words, the Palisades license remains a renewed facility operating license until terminated at the conclusion of the decommissioning process.210 This conclusion is also supported by other regulatory provisions, including C.F.R. §§. and

. and the Decommissioning Rule, as well as by Commission precedent and by the Palisades license itself.211 As a result, the NRCs regulatory requirements for operating licenses continue to apply to Palisades, and licensing and regulatory requests within the existing regulatory framework, 207 Id. (citing C.F.R. §.(b)() (requiring preparation of an EIS for a new or renewed license to operate a nuclear power reactor under C.F.R. Part )).

208 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at, (denying a petition for rulemaking).

209 See supra Discussion Section II.A; C.F.R. §.(b) (Each license for a facility that has permanently ceased operations, continues in effect beyond the expiration date to authorize ownership and possession of the production or utilization facility, until the Commission notifies the licensee in writing that the license is terminated.) (emphasis added).

210 See supra Discussion Section II.A.

211 See id.

including license amendment, transfer, and exemption requests, may be used to restore the licensed authority for reactor operation.212 In accordance with this Commission policy and acting within the existing regulatory framework, HDI submitted four license amendment requests, among other related requests, to support the potential restart of reactor operations at Palisades.

The Staff accepted these requests for docketing and is in the process of conducting its detailed technical review to determine their sufficiency; no approvals have been granted. Therefore, the Petitioners argument is incorrect.

Petitioners also assert that an EIS must still be prepared even if it is assumed, arguendo, that the existing regulatory framework could be used to enable restart of a reactor in decommissioning, because C.F.R. §.(b)() requires preparation of an EIS.213 But this provision applies to applications for new or renewed operating licenses and is irrelevant to this proceeding on HDIs license amendment requests.214 Petitioners arguments related to the purported need for an EIS are therefore inadmissible under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), (v), and (vi) because they address matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, lack adequate factual support, and fail to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact.

Third, Petitioners argue that Holtec has not submitted an environmental report and that the Staff is incorrectly treating Enclosure of the Exemption Request as an environmental report.215 But as discussed in Discussion Section II.B above, the new and significant environmental review found in Enclosure of the Exemption Request was submitted to aid the NRC in its environmental review, which the Staff is conducting under NEPA § (), among 212 See id.

213 Petition at.

214 C.F.R. §.(b)() (requiring an EIS for the [i]ssuance or renewal of a full power or design capacity license to operate a nuclear power reactor under C.F.R. Part ).

215 Petition at.

other provisions. Enclosure therefore meets the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §..216 Petitioners also claim that the requirements in C.F.R. §§. and. apply to HDIs Environmental Report and that the Environmental Report fails to comply with those requirements.217 This is incorrect because HDI is not an applicant for a new or renewed operating license or otherwise requesting a licensing action of the type to which those sections apply.218 But even assuming either §§. or. were applicable here, Petitioners do not explain how the Environmental Report fails to comply with the requirements in those provisions or point to specific portions of the Environmental Report that are deficient. Nor do Petitioners explain how their assertion of deficiencies in the Environmental Report is relevant to proposed Contention, which relates to whether the NRC must prepare an EIS in the first instance instead of an EA. Petitioners arguments related to the Environmental Report address matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, lack factual support, and fail to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact, and therefore are inadmissible under C.F.R..(f)()(iv), (v), and (vi).

Lastly, Petitioners argue that restarting reactor operations at Palisades is a major federal action under NEPA,219 and the caption for proposed Contention asserts that the NRC 216 C.F.R. §. (defining Environmental Report as a document submitted to the Commission by an applicant for a permit, license, or other form of permission, or an amendment to or renewal of a permit, license or other form of permission, or by a petitioner for rulemaking, in order to aid the Commission in complying with section () of NEPA) (emphasis added).

217 Petition at.

218 See C.F.R. §.(b)-(c) (specifying environmental-report requirements applicable to new and renewed operating license applicants); §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by

§§.,.,.,.,.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). Section.(d) refers to environmental reports for certain types of amendment requests, but these are not associated with restart of reactor operation for a plant in decommissioning.

219 Petition at -.

must prepare an EIS because of the major regulatory decision sought by Holtec.220 But whether an EIS must be prepared does not turn on whether a proposed NRC action is a major federal action under NEPA. Pursuant to NEPA § ()(C), a detailed statement (i.e., an EIS) must be prepared for major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.221 As the Staff stated in its Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, the Staff does not yet know the significance of potential impacts from the proposed actions and is preparing an EA to evaluate the proposed actions environmental impacts.222 If the Staff determines in its EA that the proposed license amendments would significantly affect the quality of the human environment, the Staff would be required to prepare an EIS. The mere fact that a proposed action is a major federal action under NEPA, however, does not on its own necessitate preparation of an EIS. Indeed, the statutory text of NEPA itself indicates that the term major federal action may be associated with an EA as well as an EIS.223 Proposed Contention is thus inadmissible under C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), (v), and (vi) because it addresses matters that are immaterial to the NRC findings necessary to grant the license amendment requests, lacks factual support, and fails to show that there is a genuine dispute on a material issue of law or fact.

For all of the reasons stated above, proposed Contention is inadmissible and should be rejected.

220 Id. at.

221 NEPA § ()(C), U.S.C. ()(C) (emphasis added); see also C.F.R. §.(a) (requiring preparation of an EIS where the proposed NRC action is a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment).

222 Notice of Intent to Prepare EA and Conduct Scoping, Fed. Reg. at,.

223 See NEPA § (h)()(B)(iii), U.S.C. § a(h)()(b)(iii) (providing that for certain congressional reports, agencies are to provide the date on which they issued a notice of intent to prepare the environmental assessment or environmental impact statement for the major Federal action).

D.

Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Immaterial and Unsupported Claims Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

Presently, pursuant to C.F.R. §.(a)(), the current Palisades operating license no longer authorizes operation of the reactor or emplacement or retention of fuel in the reactor vessel. What Holtec obtained from Entergy when Holtec purchased Palisades, and what Holtec now has, is an operating license conditioned by the certification that nuclear fuel has permanently been removed from the core, and consequently no new fuel may be introduced into the Palisades reactor, nor may it be operated to produce electricity. In order to resume power operations at Palisades, Holtec must obtain a new operating license.224 The proposed contentions Basis argues that [b]oth Holtec and the NRC have admitted that there is no provision in the AEA or NRC regulations for reversing a permanent shutdown and restarting a nuclear reactor that has been placed in decommissioning status.225 The Petitioners further assert that the Palisades license is subject to a condition prohibiting fuel loading and operation, and that [w]ithout an unconditioned operating license, Holtec cannot simply amend what it does not have.226 Finally, Petitioners state that Holtec has not cited to any law or regulation that would allow the proposed amendment of a terminated license and that [t]here is no procedure in the NRC rules for reinstating the operating license.227 Staff Response: Proposed Contention does not meet the contention admissibility criteria in §.(f)()(iv), (v), or (vi) because it raises immaterial and unsupported claims that are based on an inaccurate understanding of the current Palisades license and the NRCs regulatory processes. As discussed above in Discussion Section II.A, existing regulatory 224 Petition at.

225 Id.

226 Id. at -.

227 Id. at. The Basis also repeats the claim from proposed Contention that an EIS is required for restart and references exemption arguments from proposed Contention. Id. at -. Those claims are fully addressed above and will not be further considered here except as necessary to address the arguments of this proposed contention.

processes, including the license amendment process, may be used to restore the authority to operate the reactor because HDI still holds an operating license. The Palisades license is still a renewed facility operating license, even during decommissioning, because the license continues in effect after permanent cessation of operation until the license is terminated.228 While the docketing of the §.(a)() certifications means that reactor operation is no longer authorized, that is a change in license authority, not a change to the form of the license.

Moreover, several other NRC regulations and the license itself all indicate that the Palisades license is a renewed facility operating license.229 Thus, Petitioners claim that NRC rules lack a procedure for reinstating the operating license is inapposite.

As explained previously, the Palisades license no longer authorizes reactor operation because () §.(a)() currently prohibits reactor operation and () previously approved amendments removed the authorities and requirements for reactor operation from the license.

However, the exemption process in C.F.R. §. may be used to remove regulatory restrictions, including the one in §.(a)(), provided that special circumstances, as required by C.F.R. §.(a)() are present, and the license amendment process may be used to restore the authorities and requirements for reactor operation that were removed by previous amendments. The Petitioners neither explain why changes that were made by license amendment may not be undone by the same process nor explain how doing so would violate NRC requirements for license amendments.

The Petitioners argue that Holtec and the NRC have admitted that there is no provision in the AEA or NRC regulations for restart,230 but Petitioners cite no support for this assertion.

The Staff acknowledges that the AEA and NRC regulations do not specifically address restart of 228 C.F.R. §.(b).

229 See Discussion Section II.A 230 Petition at.

reactors in decommissioning, but the general regulatory provisions for amendment of licenses, exemptions, and transfers adequately cover the approvals needed for reactor restart, as explained above in Discussion Section II.A. And no provision of the AEA or NRC regulations specifically prohibit restart. The Petitioners do not address the license amendment provisions, much less explain why they could not apply, by their terms, and together with the exemption request, to exit decommissioning and restart a reactor, generally, or to restart Palisades, specifically. The Staffs detailed technical review is underway and no decisions to approve restart have been made, but the Staff has identified no legal barrier to HDI requesting to exit decommissioning and restart operation of Palisades.

The Petitioners claim that Holtec has not cited to any law or regulation that would allow the proposed amendment of a terminated license is unsupported and incorrect on two counts.

First, the amendment requests cite to the regulations for license amendments.231 Second, the Palisades license has not been terminated and is still in effect. In accordance with C.F.R.

§.(a)(), termination of the license would not occur until the completion of dismantlement in accordance with an approved license termination plan and a final radiation survey showing that the site and facility meet the decommissioning criteria in C.F.R. Part, Subpart E.

These events have not occurred and would not occur until well into the future even if HDI was not seeking to restart operation of Palisades.

Finally, Petitioners contend that §.(a)() conditions the license to prevent fuel load and operation and that [w]ithout an unconditioned operating license, Holtec cannot simply amend what it does not have.232 However, the exemption process in C.F.R. §. applies to all the regulations in C.F.R. Part and may, therefore, form the basis for a request to remove the restriction regarding loading fuel and operation in §.(a)(), as discussed 231 See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request at, (citing C.F.R. §§.,.,.).

232 Petition at.

above, and Petitioners proposed Contention that contests the Exemption Request is inadmissible. To the extent Petitioners may be presenting a general argument that only an unconditioned operating license may be amended, that argument is incorrect. All NRC-issued operating licenses have conditions, and NRC regulations provide for the amendment of licenses.233 By its very nature, the amendment of a license includes adding, removing, or otherwise modifying conditions of the license. Therefore, this argument also does not support contention admissibility.

For the reasons discussed above, proposed Contention raises immaterial issues, lacks adequate support, and does not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the application.

Therefore, proposed Contention does not satisfy §.(f)()(iv), (v), or (vi).

E.

Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Raises Immaterial, Unsupported, and Out of Scope Arguments that Impermissibly Challenge NRC Regulations Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

Holtec and the NRC admit that there is no provision in law or regulation for the NRC to authorize the restart of Palisades as a closed reactor. They are cobbling together a pathway to restart, using a creative procedure based on existing regulations that they believe allows Holtec to bypass the requirement of compiling a new Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR) in favor of returning the UFSAR Revision, which was in place when the Palisades reactor was closed. Since there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.234 The Petitioners offer four distinct arguments in support of Contention that the Staff will address as Bases A, B, C, and D.235 Under Basis A, the Petitioners claim that authorizing the restart of a reactor in decommissioning is a major question lacking clear Congressional 233 See C.F.R. §§.,.,..

234 Petition at.

235 These four bases correspond to Subsections A through D under the header Facts Upon Which Petitioners Intend to Rely In Support of This Contention. Id. at -.

authority.236 The Petitioners further assert the NRC lacks regulatory authority to grant the requested amendments because there is no set procedure in the NRC regulations for restarting a closed reactor.237 In Basis B, the Petitioners argue that HDI cannot use the C.F.R. §.

process to reinstate UFSAR Revision because §. allows only narrow and minimal changes.238 The Petitioners specifically contend that HDI will need to make changes as a result of climate change that will exceed the minimum change thresholds of C.F.R.

§.(c)().239 For Basis C, the Petitioners criticize HDIs practices in maintaining the steam generators during decommissioning and argue that HDIs strategy to repair the steam generators tubes is a major engineered change and may cause additional unforeseen troubles.240 Under Basis D, the Petitioners claim that there was a [m]ass destruction of quality assurance (QA) records that will make restoration of operations very difficult or impossible.241 Staff Response: Proposed Contention, which claims that the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec,242 is inadmissible because it rests on immaterial, unsupported, and out-of-scope arguments that do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with HDI. In addition, the fundamental argument of the proposed contention, that the NRC lacks authority to approve the amendments, impermissibly challenges NRC regulations. Moreover, three of the four Bases are not related to the proposed contention; regardless, the assertions therein are immaterial, unsupported, and out of scope. For this 236 Id. at.

237 Id.

238 Id. at.

239 Id. at.

240 Id. at -.

241 Id. at.

242 Petition at.

reason, proposed Contention does not satisfy §.(f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), and raises challenges barred by §..

. The Petitioners Basis A Major Questions Doctrine Arguments Are Inadmissible The Petitioners arguments under Basis A are inadmissible because they are immaterial and inadequately supported; do not raise a genuine, material dispute with the licensee; and challenge NRC regulations.243 To begin, the situation here comes nowhere close to implicating the major questions doctrine. In West Virginia v. EPA, the Court held that the doctrine applied where the Federal agency claimed to discover unheralded power representing a transformative expansion in its regulatory authority in the vague language of an ancillary provision of a long-extant and rarely used statutory provision that had been designed as a gap filler.244 Other major questions decisions discussed by the Court similarly involved a major asserted expansion of agency authority based on cryptic or otherwise unclear text.245 As the Court stated, Extraordinary grants of regulatory authority are rarely accomplished through modest words, vague terms, or subtle device[s].246 Here, however, the Staff is not asserting a major expansion of hitherto unclaimed statutory authority. Rather, the Staff is evaluating amendment and exemption requests from an existing licensee under NRC regulations for a plant already licensed and regulated by the NRC to determine whether it is safe to operate again under a proposed licensing basis similar to what the plant was operated under before.

In addition, the Staff is considering these requests under clear and long-standing license amendment and exemption authorities. For example, the Staff is applying its long-standing license amendment regulations, and long-standing AEA provisions establish the NRCs 243 See C.F.R. §§.(f)()(iv), (v), (vi);..

244 West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S., - () (cleaned up).

245 Id. at -.

246 Id. at (quoting Whitman v. American Trucking Assns., Inc., U.S., ()) (alteration in original)

authority to issue license amendments.247 Similarly, the Staff is applying the criteria in its exemption regulation, §., which attained its current form in a final rule that affirmed the NRCs statutory authority to issue exemptions.248 Neither the Staff nor HDI is proposing novel or unusual interpretations of the NRCs existing statutory authority or employing vague, ancillary statutory provisions to justify expansions of that statutory authority. Indeed, as explained above, the restart-related amendment requests largely aim to undo previously-issued license amendments that removed, at the licensees request, the authority to operate. And the Exemption Request seeks relief from a regulatory (not statutory) prohibition on operation of a plant in decommissioning that applies to Palisades only because of a voluntary choice by Entergy, not due to safety concerns.

The Petitioners contend that the major questions doctrine applies in cases addressing issues of economic and political significance,249 but the doctrine is not as expansive as that.

True, the Court referenced economic and political significance, but only in combination with consideration of the history and the breadth of the authority that [the agency] has asserted,250 which is illustrated by the discussion above on cases where the agency argued for a major expansion of statutory authority on thin bases. The Petitioners also cite the decision by the U.S.

Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in Texas v. NRC,251 but that case was wrongly decided because, like the Petitioners, the court of appeals applied the major questions doctrine based solely on the economic and political significance of the issue, and not the other relevant factors 247 See C.F.R. §§.,.,.; AEA §§ b.,, U.S.C. §§ (b),.

248 See Specific Exemptions Rule, Fed. Reg. at,-.

249 Petition at.

250 West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at (internal quotation marks omitted, alteration in original).

251 Petition at (citing Texas v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, F.th (th Cir. ), cert.

granted sub nom. NRC v. Texas, No. -, WL (U.S. Oct., ), and cert. granted sub nom. Interim Storage Partners, LLC v. Texas, No. -, WL (U.S. Oct., )).

cited in West Virginia v. EPA.252 The court of appeals analysis of the issue, amounting to two paragraphs, does not constitute a persuasive application of West Virginia v. EPA.

Regarding economic and political significance, the Petitioners argue that restart of Palisades is unprecedented and has national implications for the potential restart of two other plants.253 However, the requested restart of Palisades involves the use of long-standing licensing and regulatory processes as discussed above. Also, the economic decision of Palisades owners to seek restart is not connected to the economic decisions of other owners of other plants in decommissioning. Further, the Staff fails to see how the requests challenged hereinvolving potentially reauthorizing operation of an already-built reactor at an existing site under an existing license with a proposed licensing basis similar to what the plant previously operated underhas substantially more economic and political significance than licensing construction and operation of a new power reactor, which may also involve a new site and a new licensing basis. Petitioners also contend that restart of Palisades is more significant than the reinstatement of the terminated construction permit for Bellefonte.254 Similarly, the Staff does not understand how the requests challenged here have substantially more economic and political significance than reinstating a terminated construction permit that authorizes continued construction of a power reactor (with the ultimate purpose of licensed operation). Thus, if the challenged restart requests involve an issue of such economic and political significance that the major questions doctrine applies, then the doctrine would appear to apply to all new reactor licensing, a result that would undermine the Courts characterization of the doctrine as one reserved for extraordinary cases.255 252 Compare Texas v. EPA, F.th at with West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at -, -.

253 Petition at.

254 Petition at.

255 West Virginia v. EPA, U.S. at.

Further, even if the major questions doctrine applied, it would serve only as a guide for interpreting statutory language.256 The Petitioners neglect to even cite the statutory language they believe is implicated by the restart-related amendment and exemption requests, much less explain how the NRC is improperly interpreting this language or why it could not be applied to the licensee requests being challenged here. As explained above, the proposed use of the amendment and exemption processes are well within the NRCs statutory authority. Therefore, as explained above, Basis A does not satisfy the contention admissibility criteria in

§.(f)()(iv), (vi).

Moreover, the Petitioners do not argue in Basis A that the standards for license amendments and exemptions are not satisfied. Instead, the Petitioners appear to be challenging the license amendment and exemption processes, themselves, arguing that these processes may not be applied to restart of Palisades.257 This represents a challenge to the NRCs regulations, which §. forbids absent a petition for waiver or exception (accompanied by affidavit) that demonstrates prima facie that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation (or a provision of it) would not serve the purposes for which the rule or regulation was adopted.258 The Petitioners have not cited §., much less submitted a petition for waiver or exception (with affidavit) that meets the requirements of §..

Finally, the Petitioners other Basis A arguments are similarly unavailing. For example, the Petitioners claim that the NRC has no regulatory authority to grant the license amendments requested by Holtec because there is no set procedure in the NRC regulations for restarting a 256 Id. at -.

257 Petition at -.

258 C.F.R. §.(a)-(c). Whether special circumstances are present is assessed under the Millstone factors. Exelon Generation Co. (Limerick Generating Station, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,

() (citing Dominion Nuclear Connecticut, Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Units and ),

CLI--, NRC, ()).

closed reactor.259 The Petitioners also contend that the decommissioning process set forth in C.F.R. §. does not indicat[e] or hint that the decommissioning process leading to license termination can be reversed.260 While the Petitioners are correct that there is no specific NRC regulation that addresses exiting decommissioning and restarting a reactor, the Petitioners arguments do not relate to or support the Basis A assertion that the NRC lacks statutory authority to grant the amendment and exemption requests. The Petitioners also overlook the Commissions policy that requests to exit decommissioning and restart a reactor could be considered under the existing regulatory framework.261 Also, the Petitioners assertions here largely mirror arguments in their inadmissible proposed Contention, and the Petitioners do not explain which criteria in the license amendment or exemption regulations are unsatisfied, much less provide a supported argument therefor that is sufficient to demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI. For example, that §.(a) does not hint that a plant in decommissioning may restart operation does not establish that an exemption seeking authority to exit decommissioning and restart operation of the reactor is inappropriate because the exemption process exists to address matters not contemplated during rulemakings.262 Therefore, this aspect of Basis A does not satisfy §.(f)()(iv)-(vi).

The Petitioners also assert that the overall design of the Palisades reactor is not licensable to st century standards,263 but this claim does not relate to, much less support, the statutory authorization concerns made in Basis A or the claim made in the proposed contention 259 Petition at.

260 Id. at.

261 PRM Denial, Fed. Reg. at,.

262 See Specific Exemptions Rule, Reg. at, (stating, The Commission believes that it is not possible for its regulations to predict and accommodate every conceivable circumstance).

263 Petition at.

that the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.264 Even considered independently, the assertion regarding st century standards is not admissible because the Petitioners do not (a) identify specific portions of the application that are deficient, (b) show that the issues raised are material to the NRC findings necessary to issue the amendments, (c) or provide sufficient information to demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI on a material issue of law or fact, as required by §.(f)()(iv), (vi). Also, the Petitioners and their expert offer only conclusory assertions and vague, speculative hypothetical scenarios in support of the argument,265 which do not support contention admissibility.266 For the reasons given above, the Petitioners Basis A arguments do not meet

§.(f)()(iv)-(vi) and represent an impermissible attack on NRC regulations contrary to

§..

. The Petitioners Basis B Section. Process Arguments Are Inadmissible The Petitioners Basis B arguments regarding Holtecs use of the §. process are inadmissible under §.(f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), (v), and (vi) because they do not constitute a basis for the contention, are immaterial and outside the scope of the proceeding, rely on unsupported speculation, and do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with HDI. As discussed below, Basis B is inadmissible because it does not provide support for the proposed contention and otherwise challenges the use of processes outside the scope of this proceeding rather than the specific UFSAR content that the restart-related amendment requests rely on. Also, the Petitioners arguments reflect a misunderstanding of how changes to the UFSAR may be 264 Id. at.

265 Petition at ; Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.

266 Entergy Nuclear Generation Co. (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI--, NRC, ()

(stating, Bare assertions and speculation, even by an expert, are insufficient to trigger a full adjudicatory proceeding) (internal quotation marks omitted); Power Authority of the State of New York (James A.

Fitzpatrick Nuclear Power Plant & Indian Point Nuclear Generating Unit No. ), CLI--, NRC,

() (stating, Unsupported hypothetical theories or projections, even in the form of an affidavit, will not support invocation of the hearing process).

approved via license amendment, and how current regulations ensure that the UFSAR will be updated to reflect the outcome of approved license amendments. Further, Basis B relies on unsupported speculation regarding changes that Petitioners believe HDI will need to make in response to climate change. Finally, to the extent that Basis B challenges NRC regulations on license amendment and change control processes, those challenges are not cognizable in this proceeding.

To begin, the Petitioners claims regarding the §. process do not appear to relate to, much less support, the only affirmative claim presented in proposed Contention : Since there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.267 Therefore, the Basis B arguments do not support the contention as required by §.(f)()(ii). To the extent the Petitioners may be challenging the NRCs authority to approve updated FSAR content via license amendment or challenge §. itself, those challenges are inconsistent with NRC regulations (e.g., §§.,., and.) and are therefore prohibited by C.F.R. §..

Regardless, the Petitioners focus on HDIs reference to using the C.F.R. §.

process to update the FSAR is misplaced because it concerns the implementation of processes outside the scope of the proceeding. The fundamental objective of §. is to determine whether certain changes to matters described in the FSAR (or tests or experiments not described in the FSAR) require NRC approval in the form of a license amendment.268 In other words, §. is procedural in nature and implemented to determine whether to submit a license amendment request. Any amendment request would come later, and the process for evaluating amendment requests is separate from the §. process. Moreover, the Primary 267 Petition at.

268 See C.F.R. §.(c). See also Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Palisades Nuclear Plant),

LBP--, NRC, () (citing C.F.R. §.(c)()).

Amendment Request describes HDIs plan to implement[] the §. process coincident with the associated license amendments.269 Thus, HDIs planned use of the §. process would occur upon implementation of the amendments if they are approved and, therefore, is not part of this proceeding on whether the amendments should be approved in the first place. And while use of the §. process may lead to future license amendment requests, the Commission has stated, the prospect of a future license amendment does not create a present hearing opportunity.270 Consequently, the Petitioners challenge to the use of the §. process does not satisfy §.(f)()(iii), (iv), and (vi) because it is outside the scope of the proceeding and immaterial to the findings the NRC must make to issue the restart-related amendment requests.

The instant proceeding provides members of the public the opportunity to challenge the proposed content of the UFSAR for restart, but the Petitioners have not specifically done so. In accordance with C.F.R. §.(a), the NRCs determination on the amendment requests will be guided by the considerations which govern the issuance of initial licenses to the extent applicable and appropriate. Those considerations include the FSAR content requirements of C.F.R. §.(b) for matters within the scope of the proposed amendments.

In proposed Contention, the Petitioners acknowledge that HDI proposes to update the UFSAR to reflect Revision, the version in effect prior to the plant entering decommissioning.271 The Primary Amendment Request has numerous references to UFSAR Revision throughout, both as a general matter and as support for specific license changes.272 The Primary Amendment Request also includes the ADAMS accession number for this revision of the 269 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at.

270 Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units & ), CLI--, NRC,

- ().

271 Petition at,.

272 See, e.g., Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at,.

Updated FSAR.273 The other restart-related amendment requests also reference UFSAR Revision.274 The Petitioners could have specifically explained any purported deficiencies in the content of UFSAR Revision for restart or in how HDI is using Revision in support of specific changes to the license, but the Petitioners neglected to do so. In addition, the Petitioners note that numerous technical specification changes are necessary to restart a plant in decommissioning.275 But the restart-related amendments requests address these changes to the technical specifications, and the Petitioners have not specifically challenged them. As such, the Petitioners have not identified the specific portions of the application they dispute and have not demonstrated a genuine, material dispute with the application as required by C.F.R.

§.(f)()(vi).

Moreover, even though implementation of §. is outside the scope of the proceeding, the Staff will, in the interests of eliminating confusion, explain how C.F.R.

§§.(c)() and.(e) address updates to the FSAR for information in approved license amendment requests. Taking the latter regulation first, licensees are required by §.(e) to periodically update the FSAR to reflect (among other things) all safety analyses and evaluations performed by the applicant or licensee in support of approved license amendments. Additionally, §.(c)() addresses updates to the FSAR to reflect changes made between the periodic updates under §.(e): In implementing this paragraph, the FSAR (as updated) is considered to include FSAR changes resulting from evaluations performed pursuant to this section and analyses performed pursuant to §. since submittal of the last update of the final safety analysis report pursuant to §. of this part. The analyses performed pursuant to §. are those included or referenced in license 273 Primary Amendment Request, Enclosure at.

274 Administrative Controls Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; Emergency Plan Amendment Request, Enclosure at ; MSLB Amendment Request, Enclosure at,.

275 Petition at.

amendment requests.276 Therefore, if the restart-related amendments are approved, existing regulations would require the updated FSAR to reflect those licensee analyses and evaluations submitted in the amendment requests, including the proposed FSAR content described or referenced therein.277 Further, §.(c) would require the licensee to assess subsequent changes to the facility and procedures in support of authorized restart against that updated FSAR to determine whether NRC approval is required. The criteria of §.(c) would require a license amendment for significant changes,278 and any amendment request would be subject to a hearing opportunity.

The Petitioners also cite a Holtec press release regarding replacement of the component cooling water (CCW) heat exchangers and speculate that the licensee will be required to make numerous plant changes due to climate change that will require license amendments under

§..279 However, as explained above, the licensees implementation of the §. process is outside the scope of the proceeding and immaterial to the required NRC findings to issue the amendments. Also, the Petitioners never identify a purported deficiency in the application regarding the CCW heat exchangers. Rather, the Petitioners state that the heat exchanger is 276 See C.F.R. §. (application requirements for license amendments); C.F.R. §. (allowing applicants to incorporate by reference information contained in previous applications, statements or reports filed with the Commission).

277 Although existing regulations address updates to the UFSAR pursuant to approved license amendments as a general matter, the issued amendment may also specify that information within the scope of the NRCs approval that is to be included in the UFSAR. See, e.g., Letter from Robert F. Kuntz, NRC, to David P. Rhoades, Constellation Energy Generation, LLC, LaSalle County Station, Units and

- Issuance of Amendment Nos. and Re: Revised Design Bases of Lower Downcomer Braces (EPID L--LLA-), Enclosure at (Feb., ) (MLA) (stating that [i]mplementation of the amendment shall also include revision of the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report as described in the licensees letter dated January, ).

278 See C.F.R. §.(c)() (requiring a license amendment for changes that would meet any one of eight criteria, including those that result in more than a minimal increase in the likelihood or consequences of accidents or of malfunctions of SSCs important to safety).

279 Petition at -.

not a safety system or component that must be addressed within a Safety Analysis Report280 the Staff notes that the CCW heat exchangers are in fact discussed in UFSAR Revision,281 but the Petitioners statement shows they are not attempting to challenge the application content regarding the CCW heat exchangers. Further, the Petitioners claims regarding potential changes to the rest of the plant are vague and conclusory in nature and founded in speculationneither they nor their expert provide a factually supported prediction of how climate change will specifically affect the area around Palisades and how such changes would affect how specific components meet the specific design basis parameters and characteristics in the referenced UFSAR Revision such that a change under §. would need to be considered. Vague, unsupported speculation, even by an expert, does not support contention admissibility.282 Finally, even if Petitioners speculation is correcti.e., that the licensee makes changes in the future that cross the thresholds in §.(c)()the licensee would be required to seek a license amendment from the NRC at that time, and the Petitioners would have an opportunity to challenge that amendment request. Thus, the Petitioners have not demonstrated a dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact as required by §.(f)()(vi).

For the reasons given above, the Petitioners Basis B arguments regarding Holtecs use of the §. process are inadmissible under §.(f)()(iii), (iv), (v), and (vi).

. The Petitioners Basis C Steam Generator Arguments Are Inadmissible In Basis C, the Petitioners criticize the licensees maintenance of the steam generators during decommissioning and claim that HDIs strategy to repair the steam generators tubes (as described in a news article) is a major engineered change and may cause additional 280 Petition at.

281 See e.g., UFSAR Revision, at §§... and... (MLA).

282 USEC, CLI--, NRC at ; Pilgrim, CLI--, NRC at ; Fitzpatrick, CLI--, NRC at

unforeseen troubles.283 The Petition also suggests that the steam generators ought to be replaced rather than repaired.284 However, as discussed below, Basis C does not support the contention, raises immaterial issues that are outside the scope of the proceeding, does not contest the information in the application on steam generators, and does not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. Therefore, Basis C does not satisfy §.(f)()(ii),

(iii), (iv), or (vi) and is, thus, inadmissible.

First, the Petitioners steam generator claims do not relate to or support proposed Contention, which claims that [s]ince there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.285 Therefore, the Basis C arguments do not support the contention as required by

§.(f)()(ii).

Second, Basis C does not reference or dispute the applications specific content on steam generators. The Primary Amendment Request has literally hundreds of references to steam generator or its abbreviation SG.286 These include discussion of TSs..,.., and

.. on steam generator tube integrity, the steam generator program, and reports of licensee inspections.287 Further, the UFSAR Revision referenced in the application addresses steam generator tube plugging in the Chapter accident analysis, which the Petition never 283 Id. at - (italicization removed). See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.

284 Petition at.

285 Petition at.

286 See, generally, Primary Amendment Request.

287 Id., Enclosure at,, ; Enclosure, Attach. at..-,..-,.- to.-,.-,.-.

TS.. addresses the integrity of the steam generator tubes (including plugging) as this relates to the primary containment pressure boundary function of the steam generators; TS.. addresses the steam generator program (including provisions for tube integrity criteria, repair criteria, monitoring, and inspection); and TS.. addresses the submission of reports of licensee inspections conducted under TS... Id.

discusses.288 Therefore, contrary to C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi), Basis C does not specifically identify the portions of the application information on steam generators that Petitioners dispute and the reasons for each dispute, or demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the application.

Third, Basis C never establishes the materiality of the concerns raised therein to this proceeding. The Petitioners never reference NRC regulatory requirements, much less explain how applicable regulations remain unsatisfied. They suggest that the steam generators be replaced but point to no NRC requirement that they must be replaced. They raise concerns with HDIs repair strategy, but in doing so they take issue with the content of a news article, not the application.289 They also never explain why NRC regulations would make the licensees specific repair strategy part of this amendment proceeding. The content of the TSs and UFSAR is part of this proceeding, but the Petitioners do not contest this content. The licensees activities to comply with the operating reactor TSs and comport with an operating reactor UFSAR are subject to NRC inspection and oversight outside of the proceeding. Similarly, HDIs past maintenance of the steam generators is outside this proceeding. Therefore, Basis C does not demonstrate that it raises material arguments as required by §.(f)()(iv), (vi), and to the extent it challenges licensee activities outside the amendment process, Basis C also does not satisfy §.(f)()(iii).

Ultimately, if the restart-related requests are approved, restart would be subject to NRC requirements in the TSs and the regulations (including the requirements in §. that control changes to the UFSAR). The licensees compliance with these requirements (including those related to steam generator tube integrity) would be subject to NRC inspection and oversight.

288 See, e.g., UFSAR Revision, §§.,.,. (MLA).

289 See Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration at ¶ ); Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ - (citing the repair strategy as described in a Reuters news article).

Reactor operation would only be permitted to the extent that the licensee meets the requirements for operation. And the Staff can, and will, take action (including the issuance of orders, if necessary) to ensure that any restart of operation at Palisades is safe. Finally, if HDIs repair strategy requires NRC approval in the form of the license amendment, the Petitioners and their contact would have an opportunity to challenge a new amendment request or a supplement to an existing amendment request on the matter.290 As explained above, the Basis C arguments regarding steam generator issues at Palisades do not support admissibility of proposed Contention because they do not satisfy

§.(f)()(ii), (iii), (iv), and (vi).

. The Petitioners Basis D QA Records Arguments Are Inadmissible Under Basis D, the Petitioners claim that there was a [m]ass destruction of quality assurance (QA) records that will make restoration of operations very difficult or impossible.291 However, Basis D does not support the proposed contention and is itself unsupported, immaterial, and outside the scope of the proceeding, contrary to §.(f)()(ii)-(vi).

First, the Petitioners QA records claims do not relate to or support proposed Contention

, which asserts that [s]ince there is no dedicated regulatory procedure for restarting a closed reactor, the NRC has no authority to approve the license amendments requested by Holtec.292 Therefore, Basis D does not satisfy §.(f)()(ii).

Second, Basis D raises arguments within the scope of the transfer proceeding, not this proceeding on the amendment requests. As stated in the Amendments Notice, this proceeding is limited to the four restart-related amendment requests listed therein, while the Restart 290 HDI indicated at an October,, meeting of the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards (ACRS) that it intended to submit a license amendment request on the steam generators, but the NRC has not yet received a submission from the licensee. The transcript for this ACRS meeting has not yet been released.

291 Id. at.

292 Petition at.

Transfer Request was the subject of a separate notice.293 The QA matters raised in Basis D are addressed in the Restart Transfer Request, not the amendment requests. Regarding QA records, the Restart Transfer Request states:

(d) Quality Assurance Program

[Palisades] is currently operating under its Fleet Decommissioning Quality Assurance Program. Coincident with the transfer of operational authority, HDI will reinstate a power operations [Quality Assurance Program Manual (QAPM)]

pursuant to CFR.(a). Upon transfer, OPCO will retain authority and responsibility for the functions necessary to fulfill the quality assurance requirements required by the POTS [i.e., power operations technical specifications] and as specified in the power operations QAPM.

HDI has maintained IT infrastructure and records required to comply with NRC recordkeeping requirements that will apply upon reinstatement of the POLB [i.e.,

power operations licensing basis]. OPCO will have full access to all such assets and records following transfer of operational authority.294 Subsequently, HDI supplemented the transfer application to include a proposed QA program manual for NRC review (QA Program Manual Supplement).295 [A] proposed contention must be rejected if it raises issues beyond the scope of the proceeding as established by the Commission's hearing notice.296 Thus, if the Petitioners wished to raise QA matters regarding proposed restart of Palisades, they were required to do so in the transfer proceeding, but they did not file any such claims. Therefore, Basis D is outside the scope of this proceeding and is not material to the required NRC findings to issue the amendments, and Basis D consequently does not satisfy §.(f)()(iii), (iv), or (vi).

293 Amendments Notice, Fed. Reg. at,.

294 Restart Transfer Request, Enclosure at - (emphasis added).

295 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Supplement to Application for Order Consenting to Transfer of Control of License and Approving Conforming License Amendments, Proposed Power Operations Quality Assurance Program Manual, Revision (May,

) (MLA) (QA Program Manual Supplement).

296 Southern Nuclear Operating Co. (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit ), LBP--, NRC,

() (citing Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc. (Marble Hill Nuclear Generating Station, Units and ),

ALAB-, NRC, - ()).

Third, even if Basis D were somehow within the scope of this proceeding, the arguments therein are unsupported, do not contest the application, and do not demonstrate a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. Based on the Gundersen Declaration, the Petitioners claim a

[m]ass destruction of QA records occurred in,297 but the Gundersen Declaration does not support the assertion that QA records were, in fact, destroyed. The Gundersen Declaration cites a partial exemption from the QA record retention requirements,298 and Petitioners assume that QA records were actually destroyed on a massive scale. But this is a factually unsupported leap in logic. And as stated in the Restart Transfer Request, HDI has maintained IT infrastructure and records required to comply with NRC recordkeeping requirements that will apply upon reinstatement of the POLB.299 The Petitioners do not address, much less provide a sufficiently supported dispute contesting, this statement.300 Therefore, Basis D does not satisfy

§.(f)()(v), (vi).

For the reasons given above, proposed Contention should not be admitted because it does not satisfy the contention admissibility requirements of §.(f)()(ii)-(vi).

F.

Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Is Moot Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

There is no purpose and need statement appearing in the document the NRC considers to suffice for Holtecs Environmental Report. Pursuant to C.F.R.

§., an Environmental Report must contain a statement of the purpose for the project.301 297 Petition at (citing Gundersen Declaration).

298 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -.

299 Restart Transfer Request, Enclosure at -.

300 By noting that this HDI statement is uncontroverted does not mean that the Staff is claiming that there has been no destruction of any QA records. As noted in an NRC inspection report, some records associated with simulator scenario based testing were lost, but the licensee addressed the issue by reperforming the affected testing, and simulator fidelity was determined to not be impacted. Letter to Mike Mlynarek, HDI, from April M. Nguyen, NRC, Palisades Nuclear Plant - Plant Reference Simulator Inspection Report /, Enclosure at (Mar., ) (MLA).

301 Petition at - (internal footnote omitted).

The Basis for proposed Contention includes the Petitioners arguments for why a purpose and need statement is required.302 Staff Response: Proposed Contention is inadmissible because HDI submitted a response to a request for additional information (RAI) that moots the contention. Proposed Contention is framed as a contention of omission, and such contentions become moot when the applicant supplies the omitted information.303 On October,, HDI supplied a purpose and need statement in an RAI response, which serves to supplement the amendment request and cure the omission.304 Since the asserted omission has been cured, proposed Contention does not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact as required by §.(f)()(vi). Therefore, proposed Contention is inadmissible.305 G.

Proposed Contention Is Inadmissible Because It Does Not Demonstrate a Genuine, Material Dispute with the Licensee Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

There is no presentation of alternatives, nor discussion of the no-action alternative, found in the document the NRC and Holtec claim to suffice as an Environmental Report.306 302 Id. at -.

303 Florida Power & Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Units & ), LBP--, NRC,

().

304 Letter from Jean A. Fleming, Holtec International, to NRC Document Control Desk, Response to Requests for Additional Information Regarding the Proposed Reauthorization of Power Operations of Palisades Nuclear Plant under Renewed Facility Operating License Number DPR-, Enclosure (Oct.

, ) (MLA) (This RAI response became publicly available in ADAMS on October, )

(Environmental RAI Response).

305 The Staff notes that there are other arguments made in the proposed contention with which the Staff disagrees. For example, the Petitioners state without support that the Environmental Report submitted by Holtec is not an environmental report. However, as explained previously, the Environmental Report submitted with the Exemption Request and referenced in three of the four amendment requests falls within the definition of Environmental Report in C.F.R. §.. Also, the Petitioners claim that the Environmental Report is subject to the requirements of §., but as discussed above, this regulation does not apply to the restart-related amendment requests. See §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context).

306 Petition at.

In the Basis for proposed Contention, the Petitioners argue that the Environmental Report is required to include a discussion of alternatives, particularly the no-action alternative.307 Staff Response: Proposed Contention, formulated as a contention of omission, does not satisfy the contention admissibility requirements in §.(f)()(vi) because it does not identify a failure of the application to contain information on a relevant matter as required by law or establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact. The Petitioners assert that the Environmental Report does not present alternatives or discuss the no-action alternative, but both of these claims are untrue. The Environmental Report discusses the no-action alternative in Section. of the report and references a separate HDI document for the environmental effects associated with this alternative.308 Thus, the Environmental Report presents alternatives by discussing the no-action alternative. Consequently, proposed Contention has no factual basis, does not identify an omission of information required by law, and does not establish a genuine, material dispute with the licensee. The proposed contention also does not specify any other alternative that the Environmental Report must address. For the Petitioners to have satisfied the contention admissibility requirements for some other alternative, the Petitioners would have had to specifically identify the missing alternative and supplied sufficient factual and legal support to establish that this particular alternative must be described in the Environmental Report. The Petitioners did not do this. Regardless, the Environmental RAI Response does discuss energy and system alternatives.309 Therefore, as discussed above, proposed Contention is inadmissible because it does not satisfy §.(f)()(vi).

H.

Proposed Contention Is Admissible, in Part Proposed Contention is stated as follows:

307 Id. at -.

308 Exemption Request, Enclosure at (Environmental Report).

309 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure.

The proposed license amendments and supporting documents, including the document that the NRC and Holtec claim to suffice as an Environmental Report, contain no meaningful identification nor discussion of the effects of anthropocene climate change on the functioning and componentry of the plant, nor is there any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health.310 The proposed contentions Basis argues that Holtecs Environmental Report omits the relevant discussions of climate change, which Petitioner asserts are required by Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations and the NRCs NEPA implementing regulations in C.F.R. Part.311 Petitioners also argue that the Environmental Report must contain a discussion of ) climate change impacts on the functioning and componentry of the plant (i.e.,

safe operation of the plant and routine operational challenges), ) an analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, (i.e., greenhouse gas emissions) and ) an analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on the physical environment and public health (i.e., proposed action impacts considered with climate change).312 Staff Response: Proposed Contention is admissible, in part. Proposed Contention states that the Environmental Report does not contain any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on Anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health. As discussed below, the NRC considers the impacts of the proposed action as they relate to climate change by considering and analyzing the )

greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment. As the Environmental Report does not contain these 310 Petition at (internal footnote omitted).

311 Petition at -.

312 See Petition at.

climate change discussions, the Staff agrees that proposed Contention is admissible to the extent that it identifies that the Environmental Report omits these climate change discussions.

However, the portion of the contention that raises operational issues is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv) and (vi). Finally, the portion of the contention that raises safety concerns is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv) and (vi).

The Commission has stated, We expect the Staff to include consideration of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions in its environmental reviews for major licensing actions.313 Based on this decision, the Staff considers climate change to be within the scope of the NEPA environmental review for major licensing actions, a term that the Staff concludes would apply to the restart and resumption of operations at Palisades.

Although the licensees requests for approval of the licensing actions and exemption required for restart do not constitute an application for a new construction permit or license, the Staffs guidance for conducting environmental reviews for other major licensing actions is instructive here. In the Staffs guidance for implementing CLI-- in new reactor environmental reviews, the Staff determined that the environmental reviews for these major licensing actions will include ) greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.314 The NRC 313 Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC (William States Lee III Nuclear Station, Units and ), CLI--, NRC

, - ().

314 See Regulatory Guide., Revision Preparation of Environmental Reports for Nuclear Power Stations Section., at (Sept. ) (MLA). See also Interim staff guidance; issuance; Environmental Issues Associated with New Reactors, Fed. Reg., (Sept., ).

determined in the and LR GEISs that these same climate change issues are to be evaluated during license renewal environmental reviews.315 The Environmental Report HDI submitted in connection with the proposed restart and resumption of operation of Palisades does not contain these discussions of climate change, as discussed below.316 While HDI was not required to submit an Environmental Report for the restart-related amendment requests,317 HDI voluntarily developed the Environmental Report, which describes its scope in broad terms:

Holtec Decommissioning International LLC (Holtec) has prepared an environmental review of the proposed resumption of power operations at Palisades Nuclear Plant (PNP) specifically to () provide updated status of the plants permits, licenses, and authorizations, () provide updated information on the Palisades Nuclear Plants (PNP) site and environs, () provide a review of potentially new and significant information since the Nuclear Regulatory Commissions (NRC) findings in its October Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement, Regarding Palisades Nuclear Plant [herein called SEIS] to determine if the SEIS findings remain bounding, and () provide an assessment of Category and environmental issues not addressed in Supplement. (NMC ; NRC

).318 As stated in Discussion Section II.B, above, Holtec referenced the Environmental Report in three of the four amendment requests. Also, C.F.R. §.(f)() and Commission precedent establish that petitioners are obligated to address environmental information in the application 315 See Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, NUREG-,

Rev., Vol., Section.. (June ) (MLA) ( LR GEIS); Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, NUREG-, Rev., Vol., Section. (Aug. )

(MLA) ( LR GEIS).

316 The Environmental Report assessed the Category and environmental issues from the LR GEIS that were not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement. The License Renewal EIS Supplement does not contain the relevant discussions of climate change.

317 See C.F.R. §.(a) (referring to environmental reports required by §§.,.,.,.,

.,.,., or., where none of the cited regulations apply to reactor license amendments in this context). There is no other provision of C.F.R. Part that requires an environmental report in this context.

318 Exemption Request, Enclosure, at (Environmental Report).

even if the applicant was not required to submit it.319 Given the stated breadth of the Environmental Report and Commission requirements regarding the filing of contentions thereon, the Staff concludes that proposed Contention is admissible to the extent it identifies the omissions of ) a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment for the proposed action might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how impacts of the proposed action would either increase, decrease or remain the same in this new baseline environment.

As explained below, the remainder of proposed Contention is inadmissible as it raises safety and operational issues that are outside the scope of the NEPA environmental review, are not material to the findings the NRC must make, and do not demonstrate a genuine dispute with HDI on an issue of material fact or law. Therefore, proposed Contention should be admitted in a narrowed form, as discussed below.

The Portions of Proposed Contention that Identify the Omissions of ) a Discussion of Greenhouse Gas Emissions of the Proposed Action and ) a Description of How the Baseline Environment in the Environmental Review Might Change as a Result of Climate Change and a Discussion of How Proposed Action Impacts Would Either Increase, Decrease, or Remain the Same in this New Baseline Environment.

Proposed Contention identifies omissions in the Environmental Report that are within the scope of the environmental review. The Petitioners assert that the Environmental Report does not contain any identification or analysis of the effects that restored plant operations would have on anthropocene climate change, the physical environment and public health. The Staff agrees, with some exceptions.

319 See C.F.R. §.(f)() (stating that contentions must be based on documents or other information available at the time the petition is to be filed, including (as relevant here) the application, environmental report or other supporting document filed by an applicant or licensee); Palisades, CLI--

, NRC at (explaining that petitioners were obligated to file contentions challenging the statements in the license transfer application regarding the applicability of the proposed categorical exclusion);

C.F.R. Part (which does not require an applicant to address the applicability of categorical exclusions).

As to the first omission, the Environmental Report does not discuss the greenhouse gas emissions that would be caused by the restart and resumption of operations at Palisades. In table.- of the Environmental Report, Holtec provided an assessment of Category and environmental issues from the LR GEIS that were not addressed in the License Renewal EIS Supplement, but did not include a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions enumerated in section... of the LR GEIS, which implemented the Commissions direction in CLI--

.320 Holtec, in response to the Staffs RAI, RAI-MET-, provided the emissions Inventory Report for Palisades.321 However, this emission data does not represent operational conditions, as the fuel was permanently removed from the Palisades reactor vessel in.322 Therefore, the Petitioners have identified that this Environmental Report omits the required discussion of greenhouse gas emissions from the proposed restart and resumed operation of Palisades.

As to the second omission, the Environmental Report does not contain a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment. In table.- of the Environmental Report, Holtec did not include a discussion of climate change impacts enumerated in Sections...

and.. of the LR GEIS, which implemented the Commissions direction in CLI--.

An omission in an applicants environmental report of the impact on water availability and aquatic resources in light of reasonably foreseeable climate changes considered together with 320 While this action is not a license renewal, the Environmental Report uses the categories of the LR GEIS to identify any information that may be new and significant. The LR GEIS identified greenhouse gas emissions and climate change as an issue to be analyzed to implement the Commissions direction for major licensing actions in CLI--.

321 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure.

322 Palisades.(a)() Certifications, at.

the proposed action has previously been admitted by a Board for a hearing.323 Therefore, the Petitioners have identified that this Environmental Report omits the required description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how impacts discussed in the environmental review would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.

The NRC staff notes that this portion of proposed Contention is admissible only as a contention of omission based on the absence of a discussion of greenhouse gas emissions and the climate change impacts to the environmental resources that are incrementally affected by the proposed action, generally. The NRC Staff would like to provide clarification regarding HDIs replacement of the Component Cooling Water (CCW) heat exchangers. Petitioners expert, Mr.

Gundersen, uses a press release issued by Holtec about the replacement of the heat exchangers to form his factual basis for specific environmental impacts from the proposed action that climate change will intensify.324 However, the CCW heat exchangers are a part of the auxiliary support systems that provide cooling to reactor components, not a part of the primary steam cycle as understood by Mr. Gundersen.325 These CCW heat exchangers cool the CCW loop using service water that is drawn from Lake Michigan and is returned either to the Makeup 323 Exelon Nuclear Texas Holdings, LLC, (Victoria County Station Site), LBP--, NRC, -

().

324 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶ -, -. (The basis for the claim by Holtec Palisades that a new

[heat exchanger] was needed is undoubtedly questionable. Simply put, the water from Lake Michigan does not cool Holtec Palisades; instead it is cooled by water circulating through two banks of cooling towers. Water from the cooling towers cools the condenser, NOT water from Lake Michigan. However, Holtec Palisades assertion that the increasing lake temperature is the cause for installing a new condenser is false because atmospheric heat transfer from the cooling towers is what cools the condenser.).

325 Environmental RAI Response at Enclosure. See also UFSAR Revision, at §§. and

... (MLA). See also NRC Technical Training Center, Reactor Concepts Manual, Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) Systems, at - (Sept., ) (MLA) (showing a simplified figure of a typical PWR CCW system for illustrative purposes only).

Basin or discharged to Lake Michigan via the Mixing Basin.326 While Holtec has acknowledged that climate change, in part, was a motivating reason for the installation of the new CCW heat exchangers to provide operational capacity for the heat exchangers,327 Holtec has also explained that the replacement of these CCW heat exchangers provides operational flexibility unrelated to climate change.328 Therefore, Mr. Gundersens declaration is premised on a misunderstanding. Based on this misunderstanding, Mr. Gundersen discusses six purported environmental impacts, but the CCW heat exchanger replacement is unrelated to these impacts.329 And Mr. Gundersens discussion of these six purported impacts consists of unsupported speculation. As a result, Mr. Gundersen offers only speculative assertions without any factual support. Bare assertions and speculation, even by an expert, are insufficient to demonstrate an inadequacy in an Environmental Report.330 Therefore, while proposed Contention identifies an omission in the Environmental Report as a general matter, the Petitioners arguments regarding the CCW heat exchangers and specific environmental impacts are unsupported and do not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee on a material issue of law or fact, as required by §.(f)()(v), and (vi).

326 Environmental RAI Response, Enclosure. (The [Service Water] System is the open loop system that serves as the ultimate heat sink for [Palisades] and draws water from Lake Michigan and returns water to the Circulating Water System at the Makeup Basin (the source of water to the cooling towers (when in service) or discharge to Lake Michigan via the Mixing Basin (the interface with the surface water environment).)

327 Petition at. (To meet the project rising lake water temperature).

328 Environmental RAI Response at Enclosure (The proposed replacement CCWHXs will be two percent capacity shell and tube horizontal single-pass heat exchangers. The installation of percent capacity heat exchangers will allow the operational flexibility to remove one of them from service by isolating both the CCW (Shell side) and SW (tube side) and allowing maintenance on one heat exchanger at a time.)

329 Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶.-.

330 Entergy Nuclear Generation Company (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), CLI--, NRC,

().

Also, to the extent that the Petition is challenging Holtecs press release on the CCW heat exchangers, the staff notes that §.(f)()(vi) requires contentions to challenge the application and to identify the specific portions of the application that are being challenged. A challenge to the press release, without more, does not challenge the application and therefore does not support contention admissibility.

In sum, proposed Contention identifies two omissions on issues material to the findings the NRC must make to support the action that is involved in this proceeding and satisfies the admissibility criteria in C.F.R. §.(f)()(i)-(vi) as a contention of omission. However, the Petitioners arguments regarding the CCW heat exchangers and specific environmental impacts do not support contention admissibility. Therefore, proposed Contention should be admitted based on the omission, in general, of a discussion of ) greenhouse gas emissions of the proposed action and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.

The Remainder of Proposed Contention, Which Raises Safety and Operational Issues, Is Not Admissible as it Fails to Meet the Admissibility Criteria of C.F.R. §.(iii), (iv), and (vi).

Proposed Contention, an environmental contention,331 asserts that the Environmental Report contain[s] no meaningful identification nor discussion of the effects of anthropocene climate change on the functioning and componentry of the plant.332 Petitioners raise operational and safety concerns due to climate change, such as speculation that the plant may 331 Petitioners have framed this contention as a challenge to the Environmental Report based on NEPA, CEQ regulations, and C.F.R. Part.

332 Petition at. See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶,,.

face operational constraints that could cause the plant to derate333 or may increase the intensity of an external hazard.334 Petitioners do not provide any legal authority requiring the Environmental Report to discuss either safety or operational impacts of the environment on the plant and do not point to any specific portions of the Environmental Report that they dispute, and therefore this portion of the contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv), and (vi). Also, the operational concerns regarding derating are not within the scope of this proceeding, and therefore this portion of the contention does not satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii).

Under NEPA, the environmental review is limited to the plants impact on the environment, not of the environments impact on the plant.335 NRC regulations for environmental assessments similarly focus on [t]he environmental impacts of the proposed action, not impacts on the proposed action.336 Consistent with this, in the LR GEIS, the NRC stated, The implications of long-term climate change on plant operations and adjustments or preparations by licensees to a new or changing environment are outside the scope of the NRCs license renewal environmental review, which documents the potential environmental impacts of continued reactor operations.337 Also, in an adjudicatory context, the Commission has rejected 333 Petition at,, and. See also Gundersen Declaration at ¶¶,. ([S]o back pressure on the turbine increases, and electric power output is reduced.)

334 Gundersen Declaration at ¶ (For example, ultimate heat sink temperatures, wind forces, snow loads, and rain accumulation are some climate related changes that could adversely affect the safe operation of Holtec Palisades.) (emphasis added).

335 U.S.C. § ()(C) (NEPA § ()(C)). See also Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., U.S. () (NEPA has twin aims. First, it places upon an agency the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental impact of a proposed action. Second, it ensures that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed considered environmental concerns in its decisionmaking process The role of the courts is simply to ensure that the agency has adequately considered and disclosed the environmental impacts of its actions and that its decision is not arbitrary or capricious.) (emphasis added) (internal quotes and citations omitted).

336 C.F.R. §.(a)()(iii).

337 LR GEIS, Vol, App. A, at A- (MLA) (emphasis added).

an attempt to bring safety issues within the scope of the environmental review.338 Therefore, the Petitioners efforts to raise safety and operational concerns regarding the effects of climate change on the facility are not material to the NRCs environmental findings and do not satisfy

§.(f)()(iv), and (vi).

Petitioners cite to CEQ regulations and NRC NEPA implementing regulations in C.F.R. §. as binding authority for proposed Contention,339 but neither of these regulations require this environmental report to include any discussion of the effects of climate change on the plant. As an independent regulatory agency, the NRC is not bound by those portions of the CEQs NEPA regulations that have a substantive impact on the way in which the Commission performs its regulatory functions.340 Based on the NRCs status as an independent regulatory agency, Petitioners citations to non-binding CEQ regulations do not provide any legal authority that supports the admission of this aspect of the contention. As to

§., the content requirements of §. do not apply to the Environment Report, but, regardless, §. requires a discussion of the environmental impacts of the proposed action, not the impact of the environment on the plant.341 Furthermore, Petitioners have not demonstrated that these safety and operational concerns, if realized, would have any effect on the environment such that these issues would be material to the environmental findings the NRC must make to support the action involved in this 338 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units and ), CLI--, NRC

, - () (finding that the environmental review may not serve as a back door to litigate the effectiveness of site emergency plans which, much like a plants ability to withstand natural phenomena, are reviewed and updated throughout the life of an operating plant.)

339 Petition at -.

340 Pacific Gas and Electric Co., (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units and ) CLI--, NRC

, - () (citing Environmental Protection Regulations for Domestic Licensing and Related Regulatory Functions and Related Conforming Amendments, Fed. Reg., (Mar., )

(final rule)). See also C.F.R. §.(a).

341 See C.F.R. §.(b)().

proceeding.342 Even more so, these safety concerns are not within the scope of the NEPA environmental review, and Petitioners provide no binding legal authority that would allow the environmental review to operate as a backdoor to litigate safety topics.343 Therefore, the section of proposed Contention that raises safety and operational issues is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv) and (vi).

As for the operational concern that the plants output may be reduced, this issue is not within the NRCs statutory authority, which is for radiological health and safety and common defense and security issues.344 As explained by the Commission, Under NEPA, an agency has no obligation to gather or consider environmental information if it has no statutory authority to act on that information.345 As operational impacts related to energy resilience are outside of the NRCs statutory mandate, these effects are not relevant to the NEPA environmental review.

Therefore, the portion of proposed Contention that raises operational issues is inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iii), (iv) and (vi).

Even evaluated as a safety contention, which Petitioners have not pled proposed Contention as, Petitioners have not provided sufficient information to show that a climate 342 While Petitioners advance that climate change external events could adversely affect the safe operations at Palisades, at no point do Petitioners connect the dots that this could result in an environmental impact. See Florida Power and Light Co., (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Units and ),

LBP--, NRC, ().

343 Indian Point, NRC at.

344 See e.g., U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a. See also Letter from Chair Hansen, NRC, to Frank Rusco, GAO, Enclosure (Sept., ) (MLA) (The NRCs review will focus on impacts related to its safety mission and will not address impacts related to energy resilience, such as avoiding more frequent disruptions and other operational issues that are under the control of licensees and outside of the NRCs mandate.) (Enclosure to NRC Response to GAO Report); U.S.C. § o (granting jurisdiction to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to set electric reliability standards for owners and operators of bulk-power systems.).

345 Nextera Energy Point Beach, LLC (Point Beach Nuclear Plant, Units and ), CLI--, NRC,

().

related change to an external hazard will adversely affect the safe operation of Palisades,346 and Petitioners experts incorporation of the GAO report does not provide any support for Petitioners assertions.347 The structures, systems, and components important to safety in nuclear power plants are required to be able to withstand the effects of natural phenomena without loss of capability to perform their safety functions.348 Petitioners do not engage with the design bases of the plant described in UFSAR Revision, which the licensee plans to reinstate if these proposed actions are approved. Even though climate change could theoretically result in a change to these analyses, Petitioners do not even attempt to demonstrate that these analyses may no longer be bounding.349 Therefore, even as a safety contention, Petitioners do not provide sufficient information to show that a genuine dispute exists on a material issue of law or fact. In addition to being inadmissible for failing to meet C.F.R. §.(f)()(iv) as previously discussed, the climate change safety concerns raised in proposed Contention are also inadmissible for failing to satisfy C.F.R. §.(f)()(vi).

Based on the foregoing, the Staff agrees that Proposed Contention, may be admitted, but only as narrowed in the following form:

The Environmental Report submitted by Holtec for the proposed action of restart and resumption of operations at Palisades omits the required discussions of )

greenhouse gas emissions and ) a description of how the baseline environment in the environmental review might change as a result of climate change and a 346 Florida Power and Light Co. (Tukey Point Nuclear Generating Plant, Units and ) CLI--, NRC

, () ([The] Amended Petition offers no evidence that a problem may exist at Turkey Point. The short of the matter is that Contention, even if we were somehow to find it within the scope of our license renewal inquiry (which it is not ), it is so thinly supported and rationalized that it could not possibly justify a full hearing under our contention-pleading rule.)

347 See Letter from Chair Hansen, NRC, to Frank Rusco, GAO (Sept., ) (MLA and MLA).

348 C.F.R. Part, Appendix A, General Design Criterion. While Palisades was licensed prior to the implementation of the General Design Criteria (GDC) and is not bound by the GDC, the licensees most recent UFSAR discusses how the Palisades design basis meets GDC. See Palisades UFSAR, Revision

, §... (MLA).

349 Virginia Electric and Power Co., (North Anna Power Station, Units and ) LBP--, NRC _, _

(July, ) (slip op. at -).

discussion of how proposed action impacts would either increase, decrease, or remain the same in this new baseline environment.

IV.

There is No Merit to the Petitioners Request for a Trial Before an Article III Judge In the Petition, Petitioners included a request that this matter not be addressed under the C.F.R. §. procedures by an NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, and requested instead that Petitioners be assigned a federal judge, authorized under Article III of the U.S.

Constitution, for pretrial and trial activity.350 On October,, the Secretary of the Commission referred this petition to the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel (ASLBP) for disposition.351 In referring this petition to the ASLBP, the Secretary of the Commission noted that [P]etitioners have presented no authority suggesting that the Commission may assign incoming hearing petitions to federal judges in Article III courts.352 The Secretary of the Commissions referral of the instant Petition for disposition by the ASLBP is consistent with the Atomic Energy Act, the Hobbs Act, and NRC regulations, as discussed below. In addition, the Petitioners arguments under the Seventh Amendment of the U.S. Constitution lack merit.

Therefore, this Petition should be heard by this Board in accordance with the Secretarys referral of this Petition to the ASLBP for disposition.

Pursuant to the Hobbs Act, the court of appeals has exclusive jurisdiction to enjoin, set aside, suspend (in whole or in part), or to determine the validity of () all final orders of the

[Nuclear Regulatory Commission] made reviewable by Section of Title.353 Petitioners submitted the Petition in response to the Amendments Notice that was published pursuant to 350 Petition at -.

351 Memorandum from Carrie M. Safford, NRC, to E. Roy Hawkens, NRC, Referral of Petition to Intervene and Request for Hearing from Wallace Taylor on behalf of Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service (Oct., ) (MLA) (Referral Memorandum).

352 Referral Memorandum.

353 U.S.C. § ().

U.S.C. § (a) (AEA § a.).354 Pursuant to the AEA, the Commission is authorized to establish one or more atomic safety and licensing boards [and] may appoint a panel of qualified persons from which board members may be selected.355 The decisions and actions of the licensing boards are reviewable by the Commission.356 The Commissions regulations in C.F.R. Part implement the hearing provision of U.S.C. § (a) and the licensing board provisions in U.S.C. §.

Petitioners included a demand that this matter must not be addressed under the C.F.R. §. procedure, and that the Petitioners be assigned a U.S. Constitution, Article III judge for all pretrial and trial activity and attention.357 However, because §. and the other regulations in C.F.R. Part apply on their face, the Petitioners are challenging the NRCs regulations in C.F.R. Part. Challenges to NRC regulations in NRC adjudications are prohibited by C.F.R. §.(a), except that participants in adjudicatory proceedings may request a waiver of the regulation or exception thereto under §.(b) upon a showing of special circumstances as documented in the petition and accompanying affidavit. But Petitioners did not include a request for a waiver to challenge the rules and regulations of the Commission, as required by C.F.R. §., to request that this matter not be addressed pursuant to C.F.R. Part. Therefore, the Petitioners challenge is procedurally barred by

§. and may be denied on that ground alone.

The Petitioners cite Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy as support for their arguments, but this case is not relevant to this proceeding and does not call the structure and 354 See also Petition at - (recognizing that this proceeding is under U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a).

355 U.S.C. § (a), AEA § a.

356 See C.F.R. §§.,..

357 Petition at.

procedure of the AEA or C.F.R. Part into question.358 The Courts holding in Jarkesy concerned the governments ability to enforce common law claims through in-house administrative proceedings for common law claims subject to the Seventh Amendments guarantee of the right to a jury trial.359 Petitioners advance an out of context quote, in the concurring opinion of Justice Gorsuch, to support a challenge to Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) and Administrative Judges across the whole U.S. government.360 Such a challenge misses the mark.

The actions being challenged in this proceeding are licensing actions and an exemption requested by Holtec to authorize restart of operation at Palisades. This administrative proceeding does not involve an administrative enforcement of a common law claim against an individual that could conceivably implicate the Seventh Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.361 The quote advanced by Petitioners is similarly limited in scope to enforcement matters, not 358 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, U.S. __ ().

359 Id. at __ (slip op. at ).

360 Id. at __ (slip op. at -) (Gorsuch and Thomas, JJ., concurring). Justice Gorsuch stated:

In, however, all that changed. With the passage of the Dodd Frank Act, Congress gave the SEC an alternative to court proceedings. Now, the agency could funnel cases like Mr. Jarkesys through its own adjudicatory system. See Stat., -.

That is the route the SEC chose when it filed charges against Mr. Jarkesy.

There is little mystery why. The new law gave the SECs Commissionersthe same officials who authorized the suit against Mr. Jarkesythe power to preside over his case themselves and issue judgment. To be sure, the Commissioners opted, as they often do, to send Mr. Jarkesys case in the first instance to an administrative law judge (ALJ). See CFR §. (). But the title judge in this context is not quite what it might seem. Yes, ALJs enjoy some measure of independence as a matter of regulation and statute from the lawyers who pursue charges on behalf of the agency. But they remain servants of the same masterthe very agency tasked with prosecuting individuals like Mr. Jarkesy. This close relationship, as others have long recognized, can make it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for th[e ALJ] to convey the image of being an im-partial fact finder. B. Segal, The Administrative Law Judge, A. B. A. J.,

().

Id.

361 Id. at __ (slip op. at -).

licensing actions.362 Furthermore, both additional cases cited by Petitioners, In re Murchison and Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., respectively concern documented cases of judicial bias from state court judges in a criminal proceeding363 and in a common law contract claim.364 In these cases, the individuals Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to not be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law were violated.365 Here, there is no threat to Petitioners right to constitutional due process, because Petitioners are not subject to an enforcement action that may deprive them of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. Petitioners voluntarily submitted a petition to intervene and requested a hearing on amendment requests seeking the authorization to restart and resume operations at Palisades.

Nevertheless, Petitioners advance a broad challenge to the independence of all Administrative Judges who are part of the ASLBP, based on personal experience and anecdotal evidence from often failing to meet the Commissions contention admissibility criteria, which the Petitioners themselves acknowledge are strict by design.366 Petitioners may file a petition for rulemaking if they believe that the contention admissibility requirements in C.F.R. §.

should be revisited.367 To ensure the independence of ASLBP Administrative Judges, the policy of the Commission is to voluntarily follow the Office of Personal and Managements requirements for 362 Petition at (quoting Jarkesy, U.S. at ___ () (slip op. at -) (Gorsuch, J., concurring)

(ALJs enjoy some measure of independence as a matter of regulation and statute from the lawyers who pursue charges on behalf of the agency the very agency tasked with prosecuting individuals like Mr.

Jarkesy.) (emphasis added)).

363 In re Murchison, U.S., - ().

364 Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., U.S., ().

365 U.S. at -; U.S. at -.

366 Petition at,.

367 C.F.R. §..

ALJs in C.F.R. §., which prohibit an Agency from rating an ALJs job performance.368 Petitioners speculation that ASLBP members are biased is without basis.

For the reasons given above, there is no merit to Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge.

CONCLUSION As explained above, the Petition should be granted, in part, because two of the Petitioners, Three Mile Island Alert and Nuclear Energy Information Service, establish standing, and portions of proposed Contention are admissible. However, Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, and Michigan Safe Energy Future do not establish standing. Also, the remainder of the proposed contentions are inadmissible because they raise immaterial, out of scope, and inadequately supported arguments that do not establish a genuine dispute with the licensee and in many cases challenge NRC regulations and processes. Therefore, the Petition should only be granted in part. Finally, the Petitioners request for a trial before an Article III judge is without merit.

Respectfully submitted,

/Signed (electronically) by/

Michael A. Spencer Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -

Telephone: () -

Email: Michael.Spencer@nrc.gov

/Executed in Accord with CFR.(d)/

Anita Ghosh Naber Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -

Telephone: () -

Email: anita.ghoshnaber@nrc.gov 368 Management Directive., Directive Handbook,Section I.D.. (July, ) (ML).

/Executed in Accord with CFR.(d)/

Peter L. Lom Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -

Telephone: () -

Email: Peter.Lom@nrc.gov

/Executed in Accord with CFR.(d)/

Kevin D. Bernstein Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -

Telephone: () -

Email: Kevin.Bernstein@nrc.gov Dated November, 2024

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of HOLTEC DECOMMISSIONING INTERNATIONAL, LLC, AND HOLTEC PALISADES, LLC (Palisades Nuclear Plant)

Docket No. --LA-Certificate of Service Pursuant to C.F.R. §., I hereby certify that the NRC Staff Answer to Intervention Petition from Beyond Nuclear, Dont Waste Michigan, Michigan Safe Energy Future, Three Mile Island Alert, and Nuclear Energy Information Service in Palisades Restart Amendments Proceeding, has been filed through the NRCs E-Filing System this th day of November.

/Signed (electronically) by/

Michael A. Spencer Counsel for NRC Staff Mail Stop: O-A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC -

Telephone: () -

Email: Michael.Spencer@nrc.gov Dated November,