ML111250597

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Emergency Petition to Suspend All Pending Reactor Licensing Decisions and Related Rulemaking Decisions Pending Investigation of Lessons Learned from Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station Accident
ML111250597
Person / Time
Site: Indian Point, 05000147
Issue date: 04/19/2011
From: Greene M J
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater
To:
NRC/SECY
SECYRAS
References
Indian Point 2 & 3, RAS E-519
Download: ML111250597 (41)


Text

April 19, 2011 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE COMMISSION

In the Matter of )

AmerenUE ) Docket No. 52-037-COL (Callaway Plant Unit 2) )

In the Matter of )

AP1000 Design Certification Amendment ) NRC-2010-0131 10 CFR Part 52 ) RIN 3150-A18

In the Matter of )

Calvert Cliffs 3 Nuclear Project, L.L.C. ) Docket No. 52-016-COL (Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3) )

In the Matter of )

Detroit Edison Co. ) Docket No. 52-033-COL (Fermi Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3) )

In the Matter of )

Duke Energy Carolinas, L.L.C. ) Docket Nos.52-018 (William States Lee III Nuclear Station, ) and 52-019 Units 1 and 2) )

In the Matter of )

Energy Northwest ) Docket No. 50-397-LR (Columbia Generating Station) )

In the Matter of )

Entergy Nuclear Generation Co. ) Docket No. 50-293-LR And Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. )

(Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station) )

In the Matter of )

Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. ) Docket Nos. 50-247-LR (Indian Point Nuclear Generating ) and 50-286-LR Station, Units 2 and 3) )

In the Matter of )

ESBWR Design Certification Amendment ) NRC-2010-0135 10 CFR Part 52 ) RIN-3150-AI85

iiIn the Matter of )

FirstEnergy Nuclear Operating Co. ) Docket No. 50-346-LR (Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station, )

Unit 1) )

In the Matter of )

Florida Power & Light Co. ) Docket Nos. 52-040-COL (Turkey Point Units 6 and 7) ) and 52-041-COL

In the Matter of )

Luminant Generation, Co., L.L.C. ) Docket Nos. 52-034-COL (Comanche Peak Nuclear Power Plant, ) and 52-035-COL Units 3 and 4) )

In the Matter of )

Nextera Energy Seabrook, L.L.C. ) Docket No. 50-443-LR (Seabrook Station, Unit 1) )

In the Matter of )

Pacific Gas and Electric Co. ) Docket Nos. 50-275-LR (Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, ) and 50-323-LR Units 1 and 2) )

In the Matter of )

PPL Bell Bend, L.L.C. ) Docket No. 52-039-COL (Bell Bend Nuclear Power Plant) )

In the Matter of )

Progress Energy Carolinas, Inc. ) Docket Nos. 52-022-COL (Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant, ) and 52-023-COL Units 2 and 3) )

In the Matter of )

Progress Energy Florida, Inc. ) Docket Nos. 52-029-COL (Levy County Nuclear Power Plant, ) and 52-030-COL Units 1 and 2) )

In the Matter of )

South Carolina Electric and Gas Co. ) Docket Nos. 52-027-COL And South Carolina Public Service Authority ) and 52-028-COL (Also Referred to as Santee Cooper) )

(Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Station, Units 1 and 2) )

iii In the Matter of )

Southern Nuclear Operating Co. ) Docket Nos. 52-025-COL (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, ) and 52-026-COL Units 3 and 4) )

In the Matter of )

South Texas Project Nuclear Operating Co. ) Docket Nos. 52-012-COL (South Texas Project, ) and 52-013-COL Units 3 and 4) )

In the Matter of )

Tennessee Valley Authority ) Docket Nos. 52-014-COL (Bellefonte Nuclear Power Plant, ) and 52-015-COL Units 3 and 4) )

In the Matter of )

Tennessee Valley Authority ) Docket No. 50-0391-OL (Watts Bar Unit 2) )

In the Matter of )

Virginia Electric and Power Co. )

d/b/a/ Dominion Virginia Power and ) Docket No. 52-017-COL Old Dominion Electric Cooperative )

(North Anna Unit 3) )

1 EMERGENCY PETITION TO SUSPEND ALL PENDING REACTOR LICENSING DECISIONS AND RELATED RULEMAKING DECISIONS PENDING INVESTIGATION OF LESSONS LEARNED FROM FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI NUCLEAR POWER STATION ACCIDENT I. INTRODUCTION Pursuant to the Atomic Energy Act ("AEA") and the National Environmental Policy Act

("NEPA"), Petitioners hereby request the U.

S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ("NRC" or "Commission") to exercise its supervisory jurisdiction over all pending proceedings for the consideration of applications for construction permits, new reactor licenses, combined construction permit and operating licenses ("COLs"), early site permits ("ESPs"), license renewals ("LRs"), and standardized design certification rulemakings for nuclear reactors (hereinafter collectively "licensing and related rulemaking proceedings"), to ensure the consideration in those proceedings of new and significant information regarding the safety and environmental implications of the ongoing catas trophic radiological accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, Units 1-6 ("Fukushima"), in Okumu, Japan. This Petition is filed by Petitioners in each of the above-captioned licensing and rulemaking proceedings now pending before the Commission. The Petition will be filed in each of the above-captioned proceedings between April 14 and April 18, 2011.

1 Petitioners request the Commission to take the following immediate actions: Suspend all decisions regarding the issuance of construction permits, new reactor licenses, COLs, ESPs, license renewals, or standardized design certification pending completion by the NRC's Task Force to Conduc t a Near-Term Evaluatio n of the Need for

1 This Petition is complementary to the Petition to Suspend AP1000 Design Certification Rulemaking Pending Evaluation of Fukushima Accident Implications on Design and Operational Procedures and Request for Expedited Consideration that was filed by the Bellefonte Efficiency and Sustainability Team and other organizations on April 6, 2011.

2 Agency Actions Following the Events in Japan ("Task Force") of its investigation of the near-term and long-term lessons of the Fukushima accident and the issuance of any proposed regulatory decisions and/or environmental analyses of those issues; Suspend all proceedings with respect to hearings or opportunities for public comment, on any reactor-related or spent fuel pool-relate d issues that have been identified for investigation in the Task Force's Ch arter of April 1, 2011 (NRC Accession No.

ML11089A045). These issues include external event issues (i.e., seismic, flooding, fires, severe weather); station blackout; severe accident measures (e.g., combustible gas control, emergency operating procedures, severe accident management guidelines); implementation of 10 C.F.R. § 50.54(hh)(2) regard ing response to expl osions or fire; and emergency preparedness.

Id. The Commission should also suspend all licensing and related rulemaking proceedings with regard to any other issues that the Task Force subsequently may identify as significant in the course of its investigation. The proceedings should be suspended pending completion of the Task Force's investigation into those issues and the issuance of any proposed regulator y decisions and/or environmental analyses of those issues; Conduct an analysis, as required by NE PA, of whether the March 11, 2011 Tohoku-Chihou-Taiheiyo-Oki earthquake and ensui ng radiological accident poses new and significant information that must be considered in environmental impact statements to support the licensing decisions for all new reactors and renewed licenses; Conduct a safety analysis of the regulatory implications of the March 11, 2011 Tohoku-Chihou-Taiheiyo-Oki earthquake and ensui ng radiological acciden t and publish the results of that analysis for public comment; 3 Establish procedures and a timetable for ra ising new issues relevant to the Fukushima accident in pending licensing proceedings. The Commission should allow all current intervenors in NRC licensing proceedings, all petitioners who seek to re-open closed licensing or re-licensing proceedings, and all parties who seek to comment on design certification proposed rules, a period of at least 60 days following the publication of proposed regulatory measures or environmenta l decisions, in which to raise new issues relating to the Fukushima accident. Suspend all decisions and proceedings regarding all licensing and related rulemaking proceedings, as discussed above, pending the outcome of any independent investigation of the Fukushima accident that may be ordered by Congress or the President or instigated by the Commission to complement or supersede the work of the Task Force. Request that the President establish an i ndependent investigation of the Fukushima accident and its implications for the safety and environmental impacts of U.S. reactors and spent fuel pools similar to the Presiden t's Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island, chaired by John G. Kemeny. Petitioners respectfully submit that granting of the relief requested above is required by the AEA and NEPA, which forbid the NRC from issuing licenses for which it lacks reasonable assurance of safe operation or for which it has failed to consider all information significantly bearing on the environmental impacts of reactor operation. See discussion in Section V.B.

below. By establishing the Task Force and ordering the investiga tion of the regulatory implications of the Fukushima accident for U.S. reactors, the Commission has identified the new information coming out of the Fukushima accident as new and potentially significant; and therefore it is legally obligated to consider the environmental impli cations of that new 4 information in all prospe ctive licensing decisions.

Marsh v. Oregon Natural Resources Council, 490 U.S. 360, 370-71 (1989). Suspension of licensing decisions pending invest igations of lessons learned also would be consistent with the course followed by the Commission following the Three Mile Island accident, when the Commission delayed new licensing actions for a year and a half. See Statement of Policy: Further Commi ssion Guidance for Power Reactor Operating Licenses, CLI-80-42, 12 NRC 654 (1980) ("TMI Policy Statement").

2 Finally, emergency action by the Commission is necessary because a number of the pending licensing proceedings are approaching completion (e.g.

., the Pilgrim license renewal proceeding, the AP1000 design certification proceeding, the Vogtle Units 3 and 4 COL proceeding, and the Economic Simplified Boiling Water ("ESBWR") design certification rulemaking proceeding). For these reasons, Petitioners therefore request a decision on this Petition within thirty (30) days. II. DESCRIPTION OF PETITIONERS Petitioners are organizations and individuals who seek, through this Petition, to ensure that they will have an opportunity to raise new safety and environmental issues emerging from

2 Petitioners believe that by establishing the Task Force and charging it with the task of investigating the implications of the Fukushima Daiichi accident with respect to its regulatory program, the Commission has, as a matter of law, bound itself to evaluate the significance of the information yielded by its investigation under NEPA and to analyze any information that is new and significant in supplemental environmental impact statements for all pending licensing decisions. Therefore, Petitioners do not believe it is necessary to submit an expert declaration in support of this petition.

In any event, Petitioners expect to submit additional expert su pport for this Petition early next week, in the form of a declaration by Dr. Arjun Makhijani, President of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research in Takoma Pa rk, Maryland. Because of other conflicting obligations, Dr. Makhijani was unable to complete his declaration in time to submit it by April 14, 2011. Due to the fact that some of the li censing decisions affected by this petition are imminent, however, the majority of the Petitioners are submitting their legal brief and request for relief at their earliest oppor tunity, starting today.

5 the Fukushima nuclear accident in licensing and related rulemaking proceedings. Some of the Petitioners have already intervened in pending NRC licensing proceedings and seek an opportunity to participate with respect to the application of new information regarding "lessons learned" from Fukushima to those proceedings. Other petitioners seek a renewed opportunity to participate in licensing proceedings that have been closed to public participation but that are still pending before the agency. Petitioners also seek to ensure that the NRC will not give final approval to the AP1000 and ESBWR standardized designs proposed by the NRC Staff until the agency has considered whether design modifications are necessary in light of the Fukushima accident.

Petitioners are the following i ndividuals and organizations:

AP1000 Group 3 Beyond Nuclear, Inc.

Blue Ridge Environmental Defens e League, Inc. ("BREDL") BREDL Chapters Bellefonte Efficiency and Sustainability Team, Peoples Alliance for Clean Energy and Concerned Citizens of Shell Bluff Center for a Sustainable Coast, Inc.

Citizens Allied for Safe Energy, Inc.

Citizens Environmental Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, Inc.

Don't Waste Michigan, Inc.

Ecology Party of Florida

3 The AP1000 Oversight Group consists of the Bellefonte Efficiency and Sustainability Team, BREDL, Citizens Allied for Safe Energy, Friends of the Earth, Georgia Women's Action for New Directions, Green Party of Florida, Moth ers Against Tennessee River Radiation, North Carolina Waste Awareness and Reduction Network, Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Nuclear Watch South, South Carolina Chapter - Sierra Club, and SACE.

6 Friends of the Earth, Inc.

Friends of the Coast, Inc.

Georgia Women's Action for New Directions, Inc.

Green Party of Florida

Green Party of Ohio

Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc.

Keith Gunter

Michael J. Keegan

Dan Kipnis

Leonard Mandeville

Frank Mantei Marcee Meyers

Edward McArdle National Parks Conservati on Association, Inc.

Henry Newnan Mark Oncavage

Missouri Coalition for the Environment, Inc.

Missourians for Safe Energy Mothers Against Tennes see River Radiation New England Coalition, Inc.

North Carolina Waste Reduction and Awareness Network, Inc. Northwest Environmental Advocates, Inc. ("NWEA")

Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Inc.

7 Nuclear Watch South, Inc.

Public Citizen, Inc.

San Luis Obispo Mothers for Peace, Inc.

Savannah Riverkeeper, Inc.

Seacoast Anti-Pollution League, Inc.

Sierra Club, Inc. (Michigan Chapter)

Sierra Club (South Carolina Chapter)

George Steinman Shirley Steinman

Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, Inc.

Gene Stilp

Harold L. Stokes

Southern Maryland CARES, Inc. (Citizens Alliance for Renewable Energy Solutions) Sustainable Energy and Economic Development ("SEED") Coalition, Inc.

Marilyn R. Timmer Village of Pinecrest, Florida III. DESCRIPTION OF PENDING PROC EEDINGS IN WHICH PETITIONERS HAVE AN INTEREST IN APPLICATION OF LESSONS LEARNED FROM FUKUSHIMA NUCLEAR FACILITY ACCIDENT.

As discussed above in Section II, Petitioners are organizations and individuals with an interest in pending licensing de cisions regarding new or exis ting nuclear reactors, including rulemakings for certification of standardized designs. A description of those pending proceedings and the Petitioners' interests in those proceedings follows. These descriptions of Petitioners' interests are not intended to be a complete representation of those interests nor are 8 they intended to limit Petitioners in raising safety or environmental concerns related to the Fukushima accident in any on-going or future proceedings. A. Construction Permit Proceedings B. Part 50 Operating License Proceedings Watts Bar Unit 2. TVA has attempted to resurrect the Watts Bar 2 reactor, which was all-but-abandoned in 1985. SACE was admitted as an in tervenor to the operating license proceeding that commenced in 2009. While a contention regarding aquatic impacts was admitted, the ASLB rejected contentions regarding the inadequacy of TVA's SAMA analysis, including its analysis of the reliability of AC power backup for resolution of GSI-189, "Susceptibility of Ice Condenser and Mark III Containments to Early Failure From Hydrogen Combustion During a Severe Accident." SACE is very concerned about the implications of the Fukushima accident with respect to the issues of backup power adequacy, hydrogen e xplosions, and the vulnerability of the proposed Watts Bar reactor's ice condenser containment.

C. Part 50 License Renewal Proceedings Columbia Generating Station. The license renewal proceeding for the Columbia Generating Station is now pending before the NRC Staff.

Under the schedule posted on the NRC's website, publication of a Draft Environmental Impact Statement ("EIS") is scheduled for June 2011.

See http://www.nrc.gov/reactors/opera ting/licensing/renewal/applications/columbia.html#schedule. Petitioner Northwest Environmental Advocates ("NWEA") is extremely concerned about the implications of the Fukushima accident with respect to the safety of operating the Columbia Generating Station. They are pa rticularly concerned about the implications of the Fukushima accident in light of earthquake risks to the Columbia Generating Station based on new findings of a structural zone that kinematically connects faults in central Washington with faults in the 9 Puget Sound, the entirety of which may be seismi cally active. These findings are scheduled for publication later this year. The Fukushima accident also highlights the ha zards associated with facility mismanagement which has been a chronic problem at the Columbia Generating Station. Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station, Unit 1. Beyond Nuclear, Citizens Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, Don't Waste Michigan, and the Green Party of Ohio have submitted four contentions challenging the proposed ex tension of the Davis-Besse license, including inadequate treatment of alternative of potential for commercial-scale wind power and commercial-scale photovoltaic pow er generation in the Environmental Report ("ER), and inadequate Severe Accident Mitigation Alternatives ("SAMA") analysis. Davis-Besse, a Babcock & Wilcox reactor, has a remarkable history of operational problems, the most recent being the infamous 2002 discovery of a massive corrosion hole in the reactor head the size of a loaf of bread, where a 3/16" stainless steel liner was all that was holding back the pressurized radioactive water in the vessel. Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2.

The Diablo Canyon license renewal proceeding is now pending before the ASLB. San Luis Obispo Mothers for Peace ("SLOMFP") has intervened and gained admission of safety and environmental contentions, including contentions which challenge Pacifi c Gas and Electric's failure to adequately address earthquake risks to the reactor and the spent fuel pools.

The ASLB has also referred to the Commission SLOMFP's petition for a waiver of NRC regul ations precluding consideration of the environmental impacts of pool storage of sp ent fuel, based on a f ootnote in the 2009 Draft Revised Generic Environmental Impact Statement for Nuclear Power Plant License Renewal which excludes Diablo Canyon and other western reactors from the NRC's finding that pool 10 storage of spent fuel does not pose significant environmental risks with respect to earthquake vulnerability. SLOMFP is extremely concerned about the implications of the Fukushima reactor accident for the Diablo Canyon reactors and spent fuel pools, including the reactors' vulnerability to severe earthquakes and tsunamis, the lack of re liable and adequate backup power capability for the site, and the infeasibility of emergency evacuation following an earthquake. Indian Point Nuclear Generating Station, Units 2 and 3. The Indian Point proceeding concerns the relicensing of two pressurized water reactors approximately 35 miles north of New York City. This proceeding has become the most complicated relicensing proceeding ever heard due to the large number of parties and admitte d contentions. Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Riverkeeper, and New York State all have multiple contentions admitted in the proceeding. A number of other municipal entities are participating as interested parties. Clearwater's admitted contention concerns the need to assess the environmental justice implications of severe accidents. Clearwater and Riverkeeper have recently moved to add both environmental and safety contentions regarding waste storage, based upon the recent waste confidence update. In addition, Clearwater, Riverkeeper, and New York State have moved to add environmental contentions based upon the publication of the FSEIS. Initial testimony regarding admitted contentions is now due in approximately 65 days.

Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station. The on-going Pilgrim Nuclear Power license renewal proceeding began in 2006. Two Pilgrim Watch contentions were admitted; one challenged the adequacy of the aging management program fo r buried pipes/tanks within scope containing radioactive liquids; the other challenged the applicant's SA MA analysis. Although the buried pipe contention was dismissed on summary disposition, the SAMA c ontention is still before the 11 ASLB. In late 2010, Pilgrim Watch filed tw o Requests for New Hearings regarding the inadequacy of Entergy's aging management of submerged non-environmentally qualified electric cables and the lack of measures for cleanup after a severe nuclear reactor accident. The contentions are before the ASLB. Given the relevance of these issues to the Fukushima accident, and given the fact that the Pilgrim reactor shares the same boiling water reactor ("BWR") design as the Fukushima reactors, Pilgrim Watch seeks to ensure that it will have an opportunity to raise accident-related issues during the Pilgrim re-licensing proceeding.

Seabrook Station, Unit 1.

In the license renewal proceeding for Seabrook Station Unit 1, the ASLB in this proceeding granted standing and admitted contentions submitted by Beyond Nuclear, Seacoast Anti-Pollution League, Sierra Club-New Hampshire Chapter, Friends of the Coast and New England Coalition. Admitted contentions that are relevant to the Fukushima accident include Beyond Nuclear's contention challenging the licensee's apparent failure to adequately consider the availability of more environmentally benign and less risk-laden alternatives for the proposed period of extended operation. Early reports from Japan indicate that unanticipated costs to the environment and the regional economy resulting from the release

of radiological fission products, activation products, and heavy radioactive elements to the environment from the Fukushima reactors and spen t fuel pools will dwarf those risks considered in NRC's Generic Environmental Impact Statem ent for License Renewal, NRC site specific evaluations or in the lice nse renewal application. Other conten tions that appear relevant to the Fukushima accident relate to failure to provide for aging management of transformers, failure to provide for adequate aging management of non-qualified safety-relate d electrical cables susceptible to wetting or submergence, and inadequate and non-conservative Severe Accident Mitigation Alternatives ("SAMA") analysis.

12 The flooding phenomena at Fukushima also ra ise questions about the potential for tsunami impact at Seabrook, something dismissed in the LRA documents. Friends of the Coast and New England Coalition found that tsunamis have indeed occurred in adjacent waters of the North Atlantic; the most pertinent and striking example being a tsunami generated by a 7.2 earthquake epi-centered on Georges Bank at the northeast extreme of the Gulf of Maine. That tsunami, when funneled in to the bays and inlets of Newfoundla nd, crested at 90 feet.

See http://www.maine.gov/doc/nrimc/mgs/explore/hazards/tsunami/jan05.htm Clearly, the implications of such examples from recent history, coupled with the Japanese experience, should no long er be ignored when evaluating accident prospects in license renewal proceedings.

D. Part 52 Combined Licensing Proceedings Bell Bend Nuclear Power Plant. In 2009, Gene Stilp requested a hearing on Pennsylvania Power and Light Co.'s application for a COL for the Bell Bend reactor, to be built adjacent to the two existing Susquehanna reactors. Although the ASLB found that Mr. Stilp had standing, it rejected his contentions as inadmissible. Among Mr. Stilp's reject ed contentions was his concern about the safety and environmental risks of storing Bell Bend's spent fuel adjacent to the existing spent fuel storage pools at the Susquehanna site.

Mr. Stilp would seek reconsideration of that issue in light of the events at the multi-unit Fukushima facility.

Bellefonte Nuclear Power Plant, Units 3 and 4.

BREDL and Southern Alliance for Clean Energy ("SACE") won the admission of four contentions in the COL proceeding regarding the Tennessee Valley Authority's ("TVA's") COL application for Bellefonte Units 3 and 4. There is considerable uncertainty regarding TVA's COL application which continues to delay the NRC's safety and environmental review schedule.

In the wake of the Fukushima accident, the 13 organizations are concerned about seismic risks to the proposed reactors:

the Bellefonte site is near the Eastern Tennessee Seismic Zone, which is considered to be one of the most active seismic areas east of the Rocky Mountains. Recent studies have indicated that this seismic zone may have the potential to produce large magnitude earthquakes.

Callaway Plant Unit 2. The Missouri Coalition for the Environment and Missourians for Safe Energy intervened in the COL proceeding for Callaway Unit 2. The case was suspended after

the applicant was unable to obtain construction work in progress funding from the state. Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3. Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3. Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Public Citizen, Beyond Nu clear and Southern Maryland CARES are intervenors in this COL proceeding. Contentions on foreign ownership of the Calvert Cliffs-3 project and on the failure of the NRC's Draft Environmental Impact Statement to adequately consider alternatives to Calvert Cli ffs-3 are pending, with no hearing date yet established. Comanche Peak Nuclear Power Plant, Units 3 and 4. Public Citizen, Inc. and the Sustainable Energy and Economic Development (SEED) Coalition, Inc. were admitted as Intervenors and raised several contentions in this COL proceeding for two new reactors on the site of the existing Comanche Peak Units 1 and 2. All of the contentions have been dismissed by the ASLB on motions for summary disposition. Intervenors ha ve filed a petition for review of the ASLB's dismissal of contentions regarding mitigation strategies for loss of large area (LOLA) incidents caused by fires and explosions under 10 C.F.R. 50.54(hh)(2), an issue that is the subject of the Task Force's investigation.

Fermi Nuclear Power Plant, Unit 3.

In July 2009, intervenors Don't Waste Michigan, Inc., Citizens for Alternatives to Chemical Contamination, Beyond Nuclear, Citizens Environmental 14 Awareness of Southwestern Ontario, Keith Gunter, Michael J. Keegan, Edward McArdle, Leonard Mandeville, Frank Mant ei, Marcee Meyers, Henry Ne wnan, Sierra Club (Michigan Chapter),George Steinman, Shirley Steinman, Harold L. Stokes, and Marilyn R. Timmer were granted standing and won the admission of five contentions in the COL proceeding for Fermi Unit 3. Three of those contentions are still pending.

Levy County Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2. Nuclear Information and Resource Service, The Green Party of Florida and The Ecology Party of Florida have been admitted as joint interveners in the COL proceeding for Progress Energy Florida's proposal to build two reactors on top of the recharge zone for some of the most pristine freshwater springs on the planet. The ASLB has two contentions before it and a hearing is currently set for January 2012.

North Anna Unit 3.

BREDL and its chapter People's Allia nce for Clean Energy have been admitted as intervenors in the COL proceeding for two proposed reactors on the site of the existing two-unit North Anna nuclear power plant.

One of the original proposed plants was cancelled and the application for th e other was replaced with one for a pressurized water reactor. On April 6, 2011, in LBP-11-10, the ASLB denied two additional contentions on water use and ability to withstand seismic incidents.

Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant, Units 2 and 3. NC WARN was admitted as an iIntervenor to this COL proceeding and submitted safety and environmental contentions on plant design, fire safety, aircraft attacks, spent fuel and emergency planning. One of the contentions on the underestimate of cost for the plants was settled when the applicant revised its cost estimates. The ASLB dismissed all of the other contentions and was affirmed by the Commission in CLI-10-05. The COL applicati on is still pending before the NRC Staff.

15 South Texas Project, Units 3 and 4. Public Citizen and the SEED Coalition were admitted as intervenors and gained admission of a number of contentions, including contentions regarding mitigation strategies for loss of large area (LOLA) incidents caused by fires and explosions under 10 C.F.R. 50.54(hh)(2). Although those contentions were dismissed by the ASLB, Intervenors believe they should now be subject to reconsideration based on the Fukushima accident and the Task Force investigation.

Turkey Point Units 6 and 7. SACE, the National Parks Conser vation Association, Dan Kipnis and Mark Oncavage have been admitted as joint intervenors in the COL proceeding for proposed new Units 6 and 7 at the Turkey Point Nuclear facility in Homestead, Florida. While the ASLB admitted contentions regarding groundwater impacts, it refused to admit the joint intervenors' eight other contentions, including one regarding sea level rise.

That contention, which concerned the potential environmental impact caused by construction and operation of new reactors in a region threatened by a predicted sea level rise of 1.5 to 5 feet by 2050, has pa rticular relevance in light of the Fukushima disaster. Turkey Poin t is located less than 25 miles south of Miami on Biscayne Bay along Florida's southeastern coast.

The lessons learned from the Task Force's investigation on external events should be applied to these coastal reactors.

V.C. Summer Units 2 and 3. Friends of the Earth and the Sierra Club were granted standing in the V.C. Summer COL case but no contentions were admitted. The COL application is still pending before the NRC Staff.

Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Units 3 and 4. BREDL, Center for a Sustainable Coast, Georgia Women's Action for New Directions, Sa vannah Riverkeeper, and SACE (collectively, "Vogtle Intervenors") intervened in the COL proceeding for Pl ant Vogtle Units 3 and 4 and gained admission of a contention regarding the onsite storage of low level radioactive waste. In 16 May 2010, the ASLB ruled that the issue was resolved and dismissed the case. New contentions regarding the flaws in AP1000 containment were subsequently raised, dismissed by the ASLB and are under appeal to the Commission. In April 2011, the NRC Staff issued a Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the COL, and the Staff plans to release the Final Safety Evaluation Report in June. According to the current schedule, the Plant Vogtle COL may be issued at the end of this year, making Vogtle Units 3 and 4 the firs t AP1000 reactors to be licensed. Before the license is issued, and in light of the Fukushima disaster, the following issues must be assessed at Plant Vogtle: the safety and environmental impact s of onsite spent fuel storage at multiple units; the impact of a power failure on the reactor cooling systems for the multiple units; and earthquake risks to the reactors, which lie in an area prone to seismic activity.

See NUREG-1923, Vogtle ESP Final Safety Eval uation Report, Chapter 2.5 (2009). Because Plant Vogtle will serve as the "reference" project for future AP1000 plants, the Vogtle Intervenors concern about the implications of the Fukushima disaster is heightened. If the lessons learned from Fukushima are not applied to Plant Vogtle, the repercussions will be multiplied by all plants referencing the Plant Vogtle COL in future applications.

William States Lee III Nuclear Station, Units 1 and 2. In 2008, BREDL petitioned for leave to intervene in the COL proceeding for Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC's application to construct and operate two AP1000 pressurized water reactors at the William States L ee III Nuclear Station site. On September 22, 2008, in LBP-08-17, the ASLB ruled that BREDL had standing to intervene but admitted no contentions. Among the contentions dismissed by the ASLB was a

contention challenging the adequacy of the proposed reactor's seismic design, an issue now under investigation by the Task Force.

17 F. Standardized Design Certification Rulemakings AP1000 Design Certification Amendment (NRC-2010-0131, RIN 3150-A18).

On April 6, 2011 the AP1000 Oversight Group filed a petition to suspend the rulemaking on the certification of the AP1000 design and operational procedures which was noticed on February 24, 2011, at 76 Fed. Reg. 10,269. Currently, the comment pe riod for the AP1000 design certification rulemaking is scheduled to close on May 10, 2011, long before the NRC concludes even its initial inquiry into the implications of the Fukushima accident. The Petitioners requested suspension of the AP1000 design approval process while the NRC investigates the implications of the ongoing catastrophic accident in Fukushima, Japan, and decides what "lessons learned" must be in corporated into the AP1000 design and operational procedures to ensure that they do not pose an undue risk to public health and safety or unacceptable environmental risks.

ESBWR Design Certification Amendment (NRC-2010-01325, RIN 3150-AI85).

The NRC issued a proposed rule for the Economic Simplified Boiling Water Reactor ("ESBWR")

standardized design certif ication on March 24, 2011, at 76 Fed. Reg. 16,549. The comment period closes on June 7, 2011. The ESBWR design has a particularly troublesome feature in common with the Mark I BWR design, which is the design of the Fukushima reactors: elevated spent fuel pools. Nevertheless, the Commission went ahead with the proposed rulemaking, even as the Fukushima accident unfolded. IV. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. Fukushima Accident Although many details about the Fukushima accident remain unclear, the general contours of the accident are described in NRC in Information Notice No. 2011-08 (March 31, 18 2011) (NRC Accession No. ML 110830824) as follows:

On March 11, 2011, the Tohoku-Taiheiyou-Oki ear thquake occurred ne ar the east coast of Honshu, Japan. This magnitude 9.0 earthquake and the subsequent tsunami caused significant damage to at least four of the six units of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station as the result of a sustaine d loss of both the offsite and onsite power systems. Efforts to restore power to emergency equipment were hampered and impeded by damage to the surrounding areas due to the tsunami and earthquake.

Units 1, 2 and 3 were operating at the time of the earthquake. Following the loss of electric power to normal and emergency core cooling systems and the subsequent failure of backup decay heat removal systems, water injection into the cores of all three reactors was compromised, and reactor decay heat removal could not be maintained. The

operator of the plant, Tokyo El ectric Power Company, injected sea water and boric acid into the reactor vessels of these three units, in an effort to cool the fuel and ensure that the reactors remained shut down. However, the fuel in the reactor cores became partially uncovered. Hydrogen gas built up in Units 1 and 3 as a result of exposed, overheated fuel reacting with water. Following gas venting from the primary containment to relieve pressure, hydrogen explosions occurred in both units and damaged the secondary containments.

Id. Units 3 and 4 were reported to have lo w spent fuel pool (SFP) water levels.

Fukushima Daiichi Units 4, 5 and 6 were shut down for refueling outages at the time of the earthquake.

Id. The fuel assemblies for Unit 4 had recently been offloaded from the reactor core to the SFP. The SFPs for Units 5 and 6 appear to be intact. Emergency power is available to provide cooling water flow through the SFPs for Units 5 and 6.

The damage to Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station appears to have been caused by initiating events beyond the design basis of the facilities.

Id. at 1-2.

In a March 21, 2011, briefing, NRC Chairman al so stated that the NRC believes that an accumulation of hydrogen which exploded on March 15 in Units Two and Four originated from overheated fuel in the spent fuel pool. Briefing on NRC Response to Recent Nuclear Events in Japan, Transcript at 11 (NRC ADA MS Accession No. ML110321). According to Chairman Jaczko's March 21 statement, the NRC believes that Units One, Two, and Three have had some degree of core damage. Cooling systems for the reactors have 19 not been restored. At the outset of the emergency, large volumes of sea water were used to cool the reactors and the spent fuel pools. The salt wa ter injections have now been replaced by fresh water injections. B. NRC Response to Fukushima Accident 1. Formation of Task Force In response to the Fukushima reactor accident, the NRC announced the formation of a "senior level task force to conduct a methodical and systematic review" of NRC processes and regulations. COMGBJ-11-0002, Memorandum from Chairman Jaczko to Commissioners, re:

NRC Actions Following the Events in Japan (March 21, 2011). The purpose of the task force is to "determine whether the agency should make additional improvements to our regulatory systems and make recommendations to the Commission for its policy direction."

Id. The Commission instructed the task force to undertake both a near-term review and a longer-term review. For the near-term review, the Commissi on required the task force to evaluate issues "affecting domestic operating r eactors of all designs" in areas that include "protection against earthquake tsunami, flooding, hurricanes; station blackout and a degraded ability to restore power; severe accident mitigation; emergency preparedness; and combustible gas control."

Id. at 1. The Commission instructed the task force to complete the report in 90 days. In the meantime, the task force was instru cted to provide a 30-day "quick look report" and another "status" report in 60 days.

Id. The Commission directed the task force to begin a "longer term" review "as soon as NRC has sufficient technical information from the events in Japan with the goal of no later than the completion of the 90 day near term report."

Id. at 2. The longer-term study should "evaluate all technical and policy issues related to the event to identify additional re search, generic issues, 20 changes to the reactor oversight process, rulemakings, and adjustments to the regulatory framework that should be conducted by the NRC."

Id. For the longer-term effort, the Commission instructed the task force to "receive input from and interact with all key stakeholders."

Id. The Commission specified that within 60 days after commencing the longer-term study, the task force should "provide a report with recommendations, as appropriate, to the Commission."

Id. The Task Force was establ ished in early April. 2. Task Force Charter The Task Force charter states th at the group's "objective" is to:

  • Evaluate currently available technical and operational information from the events that have occurred at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex in Japan to identify potential or preliminary near-term/immediate operational or regulatory actions affecting domestic reactors of all designs, including their spent fuel pools. The task force will evaluate, at a minimum, the following technical issues and determine priority for further examination and potential agency action:
  • External event issues (e.g. seismic, flooding, fires, severe weather)
  • Station blackout
  • 10 CFR 50.54 (hh)(2) which states, "Each licensee shall develop and implement guidance and strategies intended to maintain or restore core cooling, containment, and spent fuel pool cooling capabilities under the circumstances associated with loss of large areas of the plant due to explosions or fire, to include strategies in the following areas: (i) Fire fighting; (ii) Operations to mitigate fuel damage; and (iii) Actions to minimize radiological releas e." Also known as B.5.b.
  • Emergency preparedness (e.g., emergency communications, radiological protection, emergency planning zones, dos e projections and modeling, protective actions)
  • Develop recommendations, as appropriate, for potential changes to NRC's regulatory requirements, programs, and processes, and recommend whether generic

communications, orders, or other re gulatory actions are needed.

With respect to the longer-term review, the charter states that the Task Force will make:

21 "[r]ecommendations for the content, structure, and estimated resource impact." 3. NRC Brief to Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals By letter dated March 21, 2011, in the context of an appeal of the NRC's decision to re-license the Oyster Creek reactor, the U.S. Cour t of Appeals for the Third Circuit directed the NRC to "advise the Court what impact, if any, the damages from the earthquake and tsunami at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station have on the propr iety of granting the license renewal application for the Oyst er Creek Generating Station."

New Jersey Environmental Federation et al. v. NRC (No. 09-2567). The NRC responded that it is: carefully monitoring those events, and assisting the Japanese government in understanding, controlling and limiting plant damage. NRC is also evaluating the information from these events for planning both short-term and longe r-term responses to ensure the safety of United States reactors.

In support of these tasks, NRC is gathering and absorbing data from the Fukushima Da iichi site that will enable NRC, with appropriate public participation, to put in place any new safety measures necessary to protect public health and safety in the United States.

Federal Respondents' Memorandum on the Events at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, No. 09-2567 (April 4, 2011) ("NRC Memorandum"). In its Memorandum to the Third Circuit, the NRC also described its past "lessons learned" approach to significant events.

Id. at 8. Following the 1979 acc ident at the Three Mile Island Unit 2 reactor, for example, the Commissi on established a "Lessons Learned Task Force."

A Task Force "steering group" took recommendations from within and outside the NRC and developed a "comprehensive and integrated plan for all actions necessary to correct or improve the regulation and operation of nuclear facilities." In the course of that process, the NRC conducted a number of rulemakings "to update licensing requirements on the basis of TMI

'lessons learned.'"

Id. at 9. In response to the attacks of September 11, 2001, the NRC also 22 responded by ordering security improvements at a ll nuclear power plants, and eventually enacted many of those orders as formal regulations.

Id. at 10. The Commission's Memorandum to the Thir d Circuit does not describe one very important feature of the agency

's response to the TMI acciden t: it suspended all licensing decisions until conclusion of the lessons learned process. TMI Policy Statement, 12 NRC 654.

The Memorandum merely states that in this cas e the NRC has "not susp ended reactor operations or licensing activity," and points out that the NRC issued a renewed license for the Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant - a boiling water reactor ("BWR") of the same design as the Fukushima reactors - on March 21, 2011, during the accident. According to the NRC, "this decision reflects NRC's confidence in the robust and redundant safety design and construction of currently operating U.S. nuclear reactors . . ." Memorandum at 13. The Memorandum also omits any discussion of NEPA or its requirement that agencies must consider new and significant information before they take actions that could significantly affect the human environment. V. THE COMMISSION SHOULD EXERCISE ITS SUPERVISORY JURISDICTION TO STAY ALL PENDING LICENSING DECISIONS AND ALL PROCEEDINGS RELATED TO FUKUSHIMA ACCIDENT ISSUES PENDING INVESTIGATION OF REGULATORY IMPLICATIONS OF THE ACCIDENT.

A. Exercise of the Commission's Supervisory Jurisdiction is Appropriate. This petition invokes the Commission's supervisory authority under the AEA to "oversee all aspects of the regulatory and licensing proc ess and its overriding responsibility for assuring public health and safety in the opera tion of nuclear power facilities."

Consolidated Edison Co.

of N.Y., Inc. (Indian Point, Units 1, 2 a nd 3), CLI-75-8, 2 NRC 173 (1975).

See also 42 U.S.C.

§§ 2233(d), 2236(a), 2237. In the extraordinary circumstances of the Fukushima accident, it is appropriate for the Commission to establish clear and uniform procedures for the application of "lessons learned" to pending licensing and rulemaking decisions. Only the Commission has the 23 authority to establish a consiste nt and broadly applicable set of procedures that comply with NEPA and AEA requirements for consideration of significant new information and that also provides legally required opportuniti es for public participation. To leave the establishment of that process entirely to the separate ASLB panels that are now presiding over at least twenty-five separate licensing cases would invite uncertainty and chaos, especially in the administration of the general rule of thumb that significant new issues and information must be raised within thirty days of discovering them. See, e.g., Shaw Areva MOX Services, Inc. (Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabrication Facility), LBP-08-11, 67 NRC 460, 493 (2008) and cases cited therein. As illustrated by a recent New York Times article, the NRC's theories about what exactly has occurred during the Fukushima accident are continuing to change. Matthew L. Wald, "Japan's Reactors Still Not Stable" (New York Times, page A6, April 13, 2011) (Attachment 1). And, there is extremely littl e in the way of official documentation from any source upon which Petitioners can rely in order to make a case before an individual ASLB that the unfolding events at Fukushima are relevant to individual licensing or rulemaking proceedings. Therefore it will be very difficult for intervenors or the ASLB panels that must judge motions to re-open the record and new contentions to judge the timeliness of those submissions.

The Commission should also exercise its supe rvisory jurisdiction to establish an ordered process for the application of "lessons learned" in licensing proceedings and related rulemaking proceedings, because it is the Commission that bears the ultimate legal responsibility for evaluating new and significant information, and it is the Commission that has the resources to carry out that responsibility. If the Commission fails to establish such a process, intervenor groups will be placed in the position of rushing to file contentions, rulemaking comments, and 24 motions to re-open closed hearing records, based on whatever evaluations they are able to make of slowly-emerging and ever-evolving information from the accident. Such a process would not only be cumbersome, but its effectiveness would be limited by whatever limitations the intervenors or petitioners had on their resources for making a technical evaluation of the information yielded by the accident. It would place an unfair burden on intevenors and petitioners by forcing them to perform analyses that should be performed by the government in the first instance. And It would leave open the po ssibility of inconsistent ASLB decisions, which the Commission eventually would have to resolve.

Finally, the Commission should exercise its supervisory jurisdiction here because this petition seeks action in the non-adjudicatory context as well as the context of pending adjudications. The rulemaking proceedings for certification of the AP 1000 and ESBWR designs are being conducted by the NRC Staff, over which only the Commission has authority. In addition, the Staff will be responsible for preparing the environmental and safety analyses requested by this petition.

B. The NRC Must Comply With NEPA and the AEA in Considering The Lessons Learned From the Fukushima Accident.

Both the AEA and NEPA place a burden on the NRC to address safety and environmental issues before issuing licensing decisions for nuclear reactors. These statutes preclude the NRC from issuing licenses or approving standardized reactor designs until it has completed its investigation of the Fukushima accident and considered the safety and environmental implications of the accident with respect to its regulatory program. In order to comply with those statutes, the Commission should suspend all licensing decisions, including certification of standardized de sign applications, pending conclu sion of its investigation and issuance of proposed safety measures and environmental decision-making documents. In 25 addition, it should suspend all pending hearings and rulemakings with respect to issues that are related to the Fukushima accident.

1. AEA Under the AEA, the NRC may not issue a license for a reactor if it would pose an "undue risk" to public health and safety or the common s ecurity. 42 U.S.C. § 2311. "[P]ublic safety is the first, last, and a permanent consideration in any decision on the issuance of a construction permit or a license to oper ate a nuclear facility." Power Reactor Development Corp. v. International Union of Electrica l, Radio and Machine Workers, 367 U.S. 396, 402 (1961). The list of issues identified for investigation in the Task Force Charter demonstrates that the Fukushima accident raises significant questions about the adequacy of the NRC's regulatory program on a wide range of importa nt safety issues, including the safety of spent fuel storage, seismic and flooding risks, station blackout, emergency planning, and severe accident management guidelines. In addition the Fukushima accident once more raises longstanding questions about the effectiveness of the GE Mark 1 containment. Even taking into account the degree of discretion granted by federal courts to the NRC, to proceed with reactor licensing without concluding the Task Force's investigation would constitute a abuse of the NRC's discretion in its interpretation of the "adequate assurance" standard, because in the current climate of uncertainty, it would be almost impossible for the NRC to reach the "definitive finding" on safety required by Power Reactor Development Corp. It is also grossly inconsistent with the Commission's previous approach to the Three Mile Island accident, where the Commission prudently suspended all licensing acti ons while it considered the lessons to be learned from the accident. 2. NEPA 26 While the NRC may have some discretion in determining whether to increase its safety regulation of reactors under the Atomic Energy Ac t, NEPA deprives the NRC of any discretion to consider the environmental im pacts of its proposed actions.

Silva v. Romney, 473 F.2d 287, 292 (1st Cir. 1973) (holding that an agency's NEPA duties are "not discretionary, but are specifically mandated by Congress, and are to be reflected in th e procedural process by which agencies render their decisions.")

See also Public Service Co. of New Hampshire v. NRC, 582 F.2d 77, 81 (1st Cir. 1978) ("NEPA's mandate has been given strict enforcement in the courts, with frequent admonitions that it is insufficient to give mere lip service to the statute and then proceed in blissful disregard of its requirements.") Even where the NRC has concluded that a proposed reactor operation meets its basic safety regulations, NEPA still requires the NRC to consider cost-effective alternatives for avoiding or mitigating environmental impacts that are reasonably foreseeable and yet not covered by safety regulations. Limerick Ecology Action v. NRC, 869 F.2d 730-31 (3rd Cir. 1989) (holding that the NRC could not rely on the sufficiency of a reactor license application under its safety regulations to avoid considering the cost-effectiveness of severe accident mitigation alternatives under NEPA).

See also 40 C.F.R. § 1502.22(b)(1) (requiring consideration of "reasonably foreseeable" impacts which have "catastrophic consequences, even if their

probability is low.")

NEPA's requirement to consider the environmental impacts of proposed actions continues even after a final EIS has been prepared, if new and significant information arises which could affect the outcome of the environmental analysis. 10 C.F.R. § 51.92(a).

See also Marsh, 490 U.S. at 370-71. Here, by its own admission, the NRC has new information that

concededly could have a signifi cant effect on its regulatory program and the outcome of its 27 licensing decisions for i ndividual reactors. For the NRC to go ahead with licensing decisions and certification of standardized designs, ignoring the potenti al significance of this new information, would constitute a gross violation of NEPA. Even if the NRC ultimately concludes that the information does not have a significant effect on its licensing decisions, it must nevertheless follow NEPA's procedures for considering the information, in cluding preparation of an environmental assessment.

Marsh, 490 U.S. at 385 ("NEPA's manda te applies "regardless of [the agency's] eventual assessment of the significance of [the] information.") Therefore, the position taken by the Commission in its Memorandum to the Third Circuit, that it may continue with the issuance of licenses and apply the lessons of the Fukushima accident retrospectively, is fundamentally inconsistent with both NEPA and the AEA. Instead, the Commission must take all necessary measures to protect the integrity of the NEPA decision-making process, by immediately suspending all pending licensing and related design-certification rulemaking decisions until it has addressed the significance of the new information revealed by the Fukushima accident in environmental assessments and/or EISs.

4 C. Licensing Decisions and Hearings on Issues Related to the Fukushima Accident Must be Suspended and Should be Suspended Pending Completion of the Task Force Investigation and Publication of Proposed Decisions.

As discussed above, in order to ensure th at it complies with the AEA and NEPA in responding to the regulatory implications of the Fukushima accident, the Commission must take action to delay issuance of li censing decisions while it studies and proposes to implement the lessons learned from the Fukushima accident. And even assuming for purposes of argument that such relief is not legally mandated, it is prude nt and appropriate for the Commission to delay

4 Petitioners recognize that the NRC has the discretion to choose between site-specific and generic analyses in evaluating the environmental significance of the new information.

See, e.g., Baltimore Gas and Electric Co. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 462 U.S. 87, 101 (1983). The Commission completely lacks discretion, however, to ignore the requirements of NEPA.

28 making licensing decisions until it has studied and proposed measures to implement the lessons of the Fukushima accident. The Commission should suspend its licensing actions, just as it did after the Three Mile Island accident - an event that was much less serious than the Fukushima accident. Therefore Petitioners respectfully request the Commission to ta ke the following actions: The Commission should suspend all decisions regarding the issu ance of construction permits, new reactor licenses, COLs, ESPs, license renewals, or standardized design

certification pending completion by the NRC's Task Force of its investigation of the near-term and long-term lessons of the Fukushima accident and the issuance of any proposed regulatory decisions and/or environmental analyses of those issues; The Commission should suspend all proceedings with respect to hearings or opportunities for public comment, on any reactor-related or spent fuel pool-related issues that have been identified for investigation in the Task Force's Char ter of April 1, 2011 , including external event issues (i.e., seismic, floodi ng, fires, severe weather); station blackout; severe accident measures (e.g., combustible gas control, emergency operating procedures, severe accident management guidelines); implementation of 10 C.F.R. § 50.54(hh)(2) regarding response to explosions or fire; and emergency preparedness. The Commission should also instruct ASLB pane ls that are considering contentions to permit the parties an opportunity to make arguments regarding th e relevance of their concerns to the Fukushima accident. The Commission should suspend all licensing and related rulemaking proceedings with regard to any other issues that are identif ied by the Task Force as the subject of its investigation. The proceedings should be suspended pending completion of the Task 29 Force's investigation into those issues and the issuance of any proposed regulatory decisions and/or environmental analyses of those issues. The Commission should conduct an analysis , as required by NEPA, of whether the March 11, 2011 Tohoku-Chihou-Taiheiyo-Oki ea rthquake and ensuing radiological accident poses new and significant information that must be considered in environmental impact statements to support the licensing decisions for all new reactors and renewed licenses. All environmental assessments s hould be published in draft form for public comment. The Commission should conduct a safety analysis of the regulatory implications of the March 11, 2011 Tohoku-Chihou-Taiheiyo-Oki ea rthquake and ensuing radiological accident. While emergency safety measures that arise from that analysis may be issued as enforcement orders, any long-term requirements should be issued as proposed rules, with appropriate opportunities for comment. The Commission should establish procedures and a timetable for raising new issues relevant to the Fukushima accident in pending licensing proceedings. The Commission should allow all current intervenors in N RC licensing proceedings, all petitioners who seek to re-open closed licensing proceedings , and all parties who seek to comment on design certification proposed rules, a period of 60 days following the publication of proposed regulatory measures or environmenta l decisions, in which to raise new issues relating to the Fukushima reactor accidents. The Commission should suspend requirements to justify the late-filing of new issues if their relevance to the Fukushima accident can be demonstrated. D. Emergency Action is Needed in Order to Ensure Compliance with AEA and NEPA.

30 Petitioners request the Comm ission to grant the requested relief on an emergency basis, because several licensing proceedings are scheduled to conclude in the near future, including the COL proceeding for Vogtle Units 3 and 4, the license renewal proceeding for Pilgrim, and the rulemaking proceedings for the AP1000 standardized design and the ESBWR standardized design. In addition, the Commission has signaled its intent to continue with reactor licensing in spite of the emergence of new information from the Fukushima accident, by approving the renewal of the Vermont Yankee license on Marc h 21, 2011. Petitioners urgently request the Commission to reconsider that policy because of its fundamental inconsistency with NEPA and the AEA. VII. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, Petitioners request the Commission to grant the above-requested relief on an emergency basis.

Respectfully submitted, Signed (electronically) by:

Diane Curran Harmon, Curran, Spielberg & Eisenberg, L.L.P.

1726 M Street N.W. Suite 600

Washington, D.C. 20036

202-328-3500

Fax: 202-328-6918 E-mail: dcurran@harmoncurran.com Counsel to San Luis Obispo Mothers for Pea ce in Diablo Canyon License Renewal Proceeding

Counsel to Southern Alliance for Clean Ener gy in Watts Bar Unit 2 Operating License Proceeding Signed (electronically) by:

Nina Bell Northwest Environmental Advocates

P.O. Box 12187 Portland, OR 97212-0187

503-295-0490 E-mail: nbell@advocates-nwea.org

31 Duly authorized representative of Northwest Environmental Advocates in Columbia Generating Station license renewal proceeding

Signed (electronically) by: Sara Barczak Southern Alliance for Clean Energy

428 Bull Street

Savannah, GA 31401

912-201-0354 E-mail: sara@cleanenergy.org Duly authorized representative of Southern Alliance for Clean Energy in Bellefonte Units 3 and 4 COL proceeding Signed (electronically) by:

Cara L. Campbell Ecology Party of Florida 641 SW 6 Avenue E-mail: levynuke@ecologyparty.org

Fort Lauderdale, FL 33315 Duly authorized representative of Ecology Party of Florida Signed (electronically) by: Tom Clements Friends of the Earth

1112 Florence Street Columbia, SC 29201 803-834-3084 E-mail: tomclements329@cs.com Duly authorized representative of Friends of the Earth and South Carolina Chapter of Sierra Club in COL proceeding for V.C. Summer

Signed (electronically) by:

Robert V. Eye, KS Sup. Ct. No. 10689 Kauffman & Eye 112 SW 6 th Ave., Suite 202 Topeka, KS 66603

785-234-4040 E-mail: bob@kauffmaneye.com Counsel for Public Citizen and SEED Coaliti on in Comanche Peak COL proceeding and South Texas COL proceeding Signed (electronically) by: William C. Garner Nabors, Giblin & Nickerson, P.A.

1500 Mahan Drive Suite 200

Tallahassee, FL 32308 32 850-224-4070 Fax: 850-224-4073 E-mail: bgarner@nglaw.com Counsel to Village of Pinecrest, Florida in Turkey Point COL proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Mindy Goldstein Turner Environmental Law Clinic

1301 Clifton Road

Atlanta, GA 30322

404-727-3432

Fax: 404-7272-7853 Email: magolds@emory.edu Counsel to Center for a Sustainable Coast, Georgia Women's Action for New Directions, Savannah Riverkeeper, and the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy in Vogtle Units 3 and 4 COL proceeding.

Counsel to Dan Kipnis, Mark Oncavage, National Parks Conservation Association, and the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy in Turkey Point Units 6 and 7 COL proceeding.

Signed (electronically) by: Manna Jo Greene, Environmental Director Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc.

724 Wolcott Ave

Beacon, NY 12508

845-265-8080 (ext. 7113) Duly authorized representative for Hudson River Sloop Clearwater in Indian Point license renewal proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Paul Gunter Beyond Nuclear

6930 Carroll Ave., Suite 400 Takoma Park, MD 20912

202-546-4996 E-mail: paul@beyondnuclear.org Duly authorized representative of Beyond Nuclear in Calvert Cliffs COL proceeding, Davis-Besse license renewal proceeding, and Seabrook license renewal proceeding

33 Signed (electronically) by: Kevin Kamps Beyond Nuclear

6930 Carroll Ave., Suite 400 Takoma Park, MD 20912

202-546-4996 E-mail: paul@beyondnuclear.org Duly authorized representative of Beyond Nuclear in Davis-Besse license renewal proceeding

Signed (electronically) by: Mary Lampert Pilgrim Watch 148 Washington Street

Duxbury, MA 02332 Duly authorized representative of Pilgrim Wa tch in Pilgrim License Renewal Proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Terry J. Lodge 316 North Michigan St., Suite 520

Toledo, OH 43604-5627

419-255-7552 E-mail: tjlodge50@yahoo.com Attorney for Citizens Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, Don't Waste Michigan, and the Green Party of Ohio in Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Station Unit 1 license renewal proceeding.

Counsel to Keith Gunter, Michael J. Kee gan, Edward McArdle, Leonard Mandeville, Frank Mantei, Marcee Meyers, Henry Newnan, Sierra Club (Michigan Chapter),George Steinman, Shirley Steinman, Harold L. Stokes, and Marily n R. Timmer in the Fermi COL proceeding.

Signed (electronically) by: Michael Mariotte, Executive Director Nuclear Information and Resource Service

6930 Carroll Ave., Suite 340 Takoma Park, MD 20912

301-270-6477 E-mail: nirsnet@nirs.org Duly authorized representative of NIRS in Calvert Cliffs COL proceeding

Signed (electronically) by: Mary Olson NIRS Southeast

P.O. Box 7586

Asheville, NC 28802

828-252-8409 E-mail: maryo@nirs.org

34 Duly authorized representative of Nuclear In formation and Resource Service in Levy COL proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Henry B. Robertson Great Rivers Environmental Law Center

705 Olive Street, Suite 614

St. Louis, MO 63101-2208

314-231-4181 E-mail: hrobertson@greatriverslaw.org Counsel to Missouri Coaliti on for the Environment and Miss ourians for Safe Energy in Callaway COL proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

John D. Runkle P.O. Box 3793 Chapel Hill, NC 27515-3793

919-942-0600 E-mail: junkle@pricecreek.com Counsel to NC Waste Awareness and Reduc tion Network in Shearon Harris 2 and 3 COL proceeding Counsel to AP1000 Oversight Group in AP1000 Rulemaking Proceeding

Counsel to Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League fin Vogtle 3 and 4 COL proceeding Counsel to Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League and People's Alliance for Clean Energy in North Anna 3 COL proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Raymond Shadis Friends of the Coast/New England Coalition

Post Office Box 98 Edgecomb, Maine 04556

207-882-7801 E-mail: shadis@prexar.com Duly authorized representative of Friends of the Coast and New England Coalition in Seabrook license renewal proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Gene Stilp 1550 Fishing Creek Valley Road

Harrisburg, PA 17112

717-829-5600 E-mail: genestilp@comcast.net Pro se petitioner in Bell Bend COL proceeding

35 Signed (electronically) by:

Jason Totoiu Everglades Law Center

P.O. Box 2693 Winter Haven, FL 33883

561-568-6740 E-mail: Jason@evergladeslaw.org Counsel to Dan Kipnis, Mark Oncavage, National Parks Conservation Association, and the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy in Turkey Point Units 6 and 7 COL proceeding.

Signed (electronically) by: Barry White Citizens Allied for Safe Energy 1001 SW 129 Terr.

Miami, FL 33176

305-251-1960 E-mail: btwamia@bellsouth.net Duly authorized representative of Citizens Allied for Safe Energy in Turkey Point COL

proceeding

Signed (electronically) by:

Louis A. Zeller Blue Ridge Environmen tal Defense League P.O. Box 88

Glendale Springs, NC 28629

336-982-2691 E-mail: BREDL@skybest.com Duly authorized representative of Blue Ridge Environmental Defens e League and Bellefonte Efficiency and Sustainability Team in COL Proceeding for Bellefonte Units 3 and 4.

Duly authorized representative of Blue Ridge Environmental Defens e League and People's Alliance for Clean Energy in North Anna COL proceeding Duly authorized representative of Blue Ridge Environmental Defense Le ague in W.S. Lee COL proceeding

April 19, 2011

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD

In the Matter of ) Docket Nos. 50-247-LR

) and

) 50-286-LR ENTERGY NUCLEAR OPERATIONS, INC. )

) (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units 2 and 3) )

) April 19, 2011

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

Petitioner certifies that on April 19, 2011 copies of the enclosed "HUDSON RIVER SLOOP CLEARWATER'S EMERGENCY PETITION TO SUSPEND ALL PENDING REACTOR LICENSING DECISIONS AND RELATED RULEMAKING DECISIONS PENDING INVESTIGATION OF LESSONS LEARNED FROM FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI NUCLEAR POWER STATION ACCIDENT," plus attachment, was served on the following list by first-class mail and e-mail.

Lawrence G. McDade, Chair Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Atomic Safety and Licensing Board U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555 E-mail: Lawrence.McDade@nrc.gov Judge Kaye D. Lathrop 190 Cedar Lane East Ridgeway, CO 81432 E-mail: Kaye.Lathrop@nrc.gov Richard E. Wardwell Atomic Safety and Licensing Board U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555 E-mail: Richard.Wardwell@nrc.gov Michael J. Delaney Department of Environmental Protection 59-17 Junction Boulevard Flushing NY 11373 E-mail: mdelaney@dep.nyc.gov (718) 595-3982 John J. Sipos, Esq.

Assistant Attorney General Office of the New York Attorney General for the State of New York The Capitol Albany, NY 12224 E-mail: John.Sipos@oag.state.ny.us Kathryn M. Sutton, Esq.

Paul M. Bessette, Esq.

Jonathan M. Rund, Esq.

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, LLP 1111 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20004 E-mail: pbessette@morganlewis.com ksutton@morganlewis.com jrund@morganlewis.com 2Josh Kirstein, Law Clerk Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555 Josh.Kirstein@nrc.gov Martin J. O'Neill, Esq.

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, LLP 1000 Louisiana Street, Suite 4000 Houston, TX 77002 E-mail: martin.oneill@morganlewis.com Janice A. Dean, Esq.

Assistant Attorney General Office of the Attorney General 120 Broadway, 26th Floor New York, NY 10271 E-mail: Janice.dean@oag.state.ny.us Office of Commission Appellate Adjudication U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555 E-mail: OCAAMAIL@nrc.gov

Commissioner Gregory B. Jaczko, Chair Commissioner Kristine L. Svinicki Commissioner William D. Magwood IV Commissioner George Apostolakis Commissioner William C. Ostendorff Office of the Secretary Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555 E-mail: HEARINGDOCKET@nrc.gov William C. Dennis, Esq.

Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.

440 Hamilton Avenue White Plains, NY 10601 E-mail: wdennis@entergy.com Thomas F. Wood, Esq.

Daniel Riesel, Esq.

Jessica Steinberg, Esq.

Sive, Paget and Riesel, P.C.

460 Park Avenue New York, NY 10022 E-mail: driesel@sprlaw.com jsteinberg@sprlaw.com Phillip Musegaas, Esq.

Deborah Brancato, Esq.

Riverkeeper, Inc.

20 Secor Road Ossining, NY 10562 Emails: phillip@riverkeeper.org dbrancato@riverkeeper.org Melissa-Jean Rotini, of counsel Assistant County Attorney Office of Robert F. Meehan, Westchester County Attorney 148 Martine Avenue, 6th Floor White Plains, NY 10601 E-mail: MJR1@westchestergov.com Joan Leary Matthews, Esq.

Senior Attorney for Special Projects New York State Department of Environmental Conservation 625 Broadway, 14th floor Albany, New York 12233-5500 E-mail: jlmatthe@gw.dec.state.ny.us Ross H. Gould, Esq.

270 Route 308 Rhinebeck, NY 12572 E-mail: rgouldesq@qmail.com Stephen C. Filler, Board Member Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc.

724 Wolcott Ave Beacon, New York 12508 E-mail: sfiller@nylawline.com

3Robert D. Snook, Esq.

Assistant Attorney General 55 Elm Street, P.O. Box 120 Hartford, CT 06141-0120 E-mail: Robert.Snook@po.state.ct.us John L. Parker, Esq.

Regional Attorney, Region 3 New York State Department of Environmental Conservation 21 South Putt Corners New Paltz, NY 12561 E-mail: jlparker@gw.dec.state.ny.us Elise N. Zoli, Esq.

Goodwin Procter, LLP 53 State Street Boston, MA 02109 E-mail: ezoli@goodwinprocter.com Mylan L. Denerstein, Esq.

Executive Deputy Attorney General 120 Broadway, 25th Floor New York, NY 10271 E-mail: mylan.denerstein@oag.state.ny.us Sherwin E. Turk Beth N. Mizuno Brian G. Harris David E. Roth Andrea Z. Jones Emily Monteith Office of General Counsel Mail Stop: 0-15D21 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555-0001 E-mail: Sherwin.Turk@nrc.gov; Beth.Mizuno@nrc.gov; brian.harris@nrc.gov; David.Roth@nrc.gov; andrea.jones@nrc.gov; Emily.monteith@nrc.gov Sean Murray, Mayor Village of Buchanan Municipal Building 236 Tate Avenue Buchanan, NY 10511-1298 E-mail: vob@bestweb.net, SMurray@villageofbuchanan.com, Administrator@villageofbuchanan.com

___________ Manna Jo Greene, Environmental Director Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc.

724 Wolcott Avenue Beacon, New York 12508 E-mail: Mannajo@clearwater.org

April 19, 2011