ML14303A639

From kanterella
Revision as of 08:11, 21 June 2019 by StriderTol (talk | contribs) (Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

NRC Slides - SONGS PSDAR Public Meeting October 27, 2014
ML14303A639
Person / Time
Site: San Onofre  Southern California Edison icon.png
Issue date: 10/27/2014
From: Camper L
Division of Decommissioning, Uranium Recovery and Waste Programs
To:
Wengert T
References
Download: ML14303A639 (44)


Text

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Decommissioning Program:

San Onofre Post Shutdown Activities Report Public Meeting October 27, 2014 Carlsbad, California Larry W. Camper, CEP, REP, CIPM, Director Division of Decommissioning, Uranium Recovery and Waste Programs Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards

2 Welcome September 30, 2013 Public Meeting Meeting Agenda Meeting Facilitation and Protocol NRC Speakers and Experts Public Comments, Questions, and Answers Meeting Feedback Forms Adjourn at 9 PM

3 September 30, 2013 Public Meeting Public Outreach (via staff initiated public meeting) Government to Government Meeting Meeting with Non

-Government Organizations (NGOs)

Responses to Questions from NGOs Fuel Management Decommissioning Timing

4 SONGS PSDAR Meeting Agenda Bruce Watson

- PSDAR Requirements Douglas Broaddus

- NRC Review of the PSDAR and Licensing Status Ray Kellar

- Inspection Programs Al Csontos - Spent Fuel Safety Thomas Palmisano

- SONGS PSDAR Chip Cameron

- Public Comment Session Larry Camper - Summary Remarks and Meeting Closure by 9 PM

5 NRC Mission The NRC licenses and regulates the nation's civilian use of radioactive materials to protect public health and safety, promote the common defense and security, and protect the environment

6 NEPA National Environmental Policy Act 10 CFR Part 51, Environmental Protection Regulations for Domestic Licensing and Related Regulatory Functions Supplemental Environmental Report Environmental Assessment conducted during the license termination process

7 Decommission (10 CFR 20 Subpart E)

"To remove (as a facility) safely from service and reduce radioactivity to a level that permits:

Release of the property for unrestricted use and termination of the license; or Release of the property under restricted conditions and termination of the license

"

8 Release Criteria Unrestricted Release mrem (0.25 mSv/a) and As Low As is Reasonably Achievable (ALARA)

Average member of the critical group All pathways Period of performance

- 1000 years Restricted release mrem (0.25 mSv/a) TEDE and ALARA, with institutional controls in effect Legally enforceable institutional controls If institutional controls fail, doses do not exceed 1 mSv/a, or 5 mSv/a, under specific circumstances Financial assurance

- independent third party Licensee and NRC public input / outreach requirements

9 10 NRC Decommissioning Experience 0 2 4 6 810121998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013Power ReactorsResearch ReactorsMaterials Sites 11 Transition from Operations to Decommissioning Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation continues project

management until the Post Shutdown Defueled Technical Specifications are issued Transfer of project management responsibilities to the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards Inspection Program responsibilities are transferred to the Division of Nuclear Materials Safety from the Division of Reactor Projects Support continues from the Office of Nuclear Security and Incident Response

The NRC Decommissioning Process

- San Onofre Post Shutdown Decommissioning Activities Report October 27, 2014 Carlsbad, California Bruce A. Watson, CHP Chief, Reactor Decommissioning Branch Office of the Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards

13 NRC Decommissioning Regulations 10 CFR Part 20 Subpart E "License Termination" 10 CFR Part 50

- Power Reactor License 10 CFR Part 72

- Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation License (ISFSI)

17 Years of Implementing Experience

14 San Onofre 2 & 3 Decommissioning Milestones June 7, 2013

- SCE certification of permanent cessation of operation for SONGS Units 2 & 3 June 28, 2013

- Unit 3 defueled certification July 22, 2013

- Unit 2 defueled certification September 23, 2014 - PSDAR submitted NRC issued the public notice for this PSDAR public meeting PSDAR is available in ADAMS at ML14272A121

15 Reactor Decommissioning Options DECON: Equipment, structures, etc. are promptly removed or decontaminated to a level that permits radiological release SAFSTOR: Plant placed in a safe, stable condition and maintained in that state until it is subsequently decontaminated to levels that permit radiological release ENTOMB: Plant is encased in a structurally long

-lived substance to allow decay until levels permit unrestricted release (not currently available)

Radiological Decommissioning must be completed within 60 years

16 Post Shutdown Decommissioning Activities Report Contents (10 CFR 50.82

- Regulatory Guide 1.185)

A description and schedule for the planned decommissioning activities A site-specific decommissioning cost estimate, including the costs of managing irradiated fuel A discussion that provides the means for concluding that the environmental impacts associated with the decommissioning activities will be bounded by appropriately issued Environmental Impact Statements

17 Power Reactor Decommissioning Process - Post Shutdown Decommissioning Activities Report NRC regulations require that a public meeting be held in the vicinity of the facility to discuss the PSDAR and its contents, as well as to solicit comments NRC shall make the PSDAR available for public comment (ADAMS ML14272A121)

Licensee may begin major decommissioning activities 90 days after NRC receives the PSDAR The NRC Review Process

- San Onofre PSDAR and Irradiated Fuel Management Plan October 27, 2014 Carlsbad, California Douglas Broaddus, Chief LPL IV-2 and Decommissioning Transition Branch Office of the Nuclear Reactor Regulation

19 Content requirements in 10 CFR 50.82(a)(4)(i) Regulatory Guide 1.185 describes the type of information to be included in a PSDAR NRR project manager coordinates technical reviews of the PSDAR NRC staff may submit Requests for Additional Information (RAIs)

NRC's PSDAR Review Process

20 Does the PSDAR contain the information required by regulation?

Can the decommissioning be completed as described, and within 60 years?

Can the decommissioning be completed for the estimated cost?

Do the decommissioning activities endanger public health and safety or the environment?

NRC's PSDAR Review Process:

Evaluation Criteria

21 Site-specific Decommissioning Cost Estimate

-Reasonable assurance funds are available to perform the radiological cleanup

-If plans are delayed, ensure licensee has a means of adjusting the cost estimate and funding over the storage period Decommissioning Cost Estimate (DCE) and funding level are updated annually NRC's PSDAR Review Process:

Decommissioning Cost Estimate

22 Reasons for concluding that environmental impacts of site

-specific decommissioning activities are bounded by previous Environmental Impact Statement(s)

-NUREG-0586, "Final Generic Environmental Impact Statement on Decommissioning of Nuclear Facilities"

-Inspection program NRC's PSDAR Review Process:

Environmental Review / NEPA

23 Review considers public comments Staff will notify licensee when no additional information is required

-NRC does not approve the PSDAR

-Staff documents NRC review is complete Licensee may not begin major decommissioning activities until 90 days after NRC receives the PSDAR, per 10 CFR 50.82(a)(5)

NRC's PSDAR Review Process

24 Licensees are required to submit IFMP within 2 years of permanent cessation of operations [10 CFR 50.54(bb

)] Not part of the PSDAR -PSDAR / DCE must address the cost of managing irradiated (spent) fuel

-Not requesting comments on the IFMP The IFMP must describe the licensee's program for management and funding of all spent fuel activities until transferred to DOE for ultimate disposal in a repository Submitted for NRC's review and preliminary approval Must comply with the NRC requirements for possession of spent fuel Review of Irradiated Fuel Management Plan (IFMP)

25 SCE has requested other licensing actions that support its decommissioning plan

-Review of other actions is independent of the PSDAR review

-PSDAR may or may not depend on approval of the requested licensing actions NRC staff is not requesting comments on these other licensing actions at this meeting Other actions may offer separate opportunity for public involvement or comment Comments received on other licensing actions will be handled through the associated regulatory process, as appropriate Other Licensing Actions

NRC Inspection Program for Decommissioning Reactors and Spent Fuel Storage n October 27, 2014 Carlsbad, California Ray Kellar, P.E., Chief Fuels Safety and Decommissioning Branch Region IV, Division of Nuclear Materials Safety

How to safely get from this to this Connecticut Yankee, CT Maine Yankee, ME Trojan, OR San Onofre Unit 1, CA

28 Establish and ensure compliance with requirements contained in:

-Regulations

-License Basis Documents (i.e., License Conditions, Technical Specifications)

-Guidance Documents Perform licensing reviews and safety evaluations NRC inspection and enforcement How NRC Ensures Safety

29 Inspections of spent fuel pool safety Inspections of decommissioning activities -Generally scheduled during periods of higher risk activities

-During and after remediation activities, NRC conducts independent radiological measurements to confirm licensee survey methodologies Inspections of the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI)

Inspections of physical security Inspection Activities

30 Objectively verify safe conduct of licensee activities Verify adequacy of licensee controls Ensure safety problems and violations are promptly identified and corrected, and effective actions are taken to prevent recurrence Examine trends in licensee safety performance Objectives of the NRC Inspection Program

31 Routine inspection schedule

-Planned about a year in advance

-Coordinated with the program office in NMSS Inspection planning and execution

-Inspections may be announced or unannounced

-Inspection Plans

-Inspection Procedures

-Exit Meetings Issue inspection report -30 day goal for normal inspection reports (post exit)

-45 day goal for team inspections (post exit)

NRC Enforcement Policy http://pbadupws.nrc.gov/docs/ML0934/ML093480037.pdf Inspection Planning and Reports

32 Prompt inspection debrief with NRC management Determination of any significant findings and enforcement related issues Issue inspection report Most NRC inspection reports are publicly available. To locate reports, go to ADAMS web page (http://www.nrc.gov/reading

-rm/adams.html), use advanced search feature with docket numbers 05000361, 05000362, and 07200041 for SONGS Track and follow up on safety issues Post Inspection Activities

NRC Regulation of Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage and Transportation October 27, 2014 Carlsbad, California Dr. Aladar A. Csontos, Chief Renewals and Materials Branch Division of Spent Fuel Management Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards

34 Licensing, certification and inspection:

-Spent fuel storage facilities

-Spent fuel dry cask storage systems

-Radioactive material transportation packaging Coordination with: -State and federal agencies (most notably DOT) -Foreign and international regulatory agencies

-Native American tribes Applicable regulations:

-10 CFR Part 71: Packaging and Transportation of Radioactive Material

-10 CFR Part 72: Licensing Requirements for the Independent Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel, High

-Level Radioactive Waste, and Reactor

-Related Greater Than Class C Waste NMSS / DSFM: Overview

35 Spent Fuel Storage Casks Once the spent fuel has cooled, it is loaded into special canisters which are designed to hold Pressured Water Reactor or Boiling Water Reactor assemblies. Canisters are filled with inert gas, welded, and rigorously tested for leaks. It may then be placed in a "cask" for storage or transportation.

The canisters can also be stored in above-ground bunkers, each of which, is about the size of a one

-car garage.

Eventually they may be transported elsewhere for storage.

36 Status of U.S. ISFSIs

37 Review Areas: -General Design Criteria:

Off-site radiation dose /

subcriticality

/ confinement

-Quality Assurance - Siting -Physical Protection

- Reporting -Training and Certification of Personnel Technical Review Disciplines:

-Structural

- Materials -Thermal - Confinement

-Criticality

- Quality Assurance

-Shielding and Radiation Protection 10 CFR Part 72 Regulations

38 Normal and Off-Normal Conditions Accident Conditions and Natural Phenomena:

-Tornado winds/tornado missiles

- Earthquakes

-Floods and tsunamis - Fires and explosions Technical Reviews:

-Structural: Confinement maintained under all conditions

-Criticality: Fuel subcritical under all conditions

-Shielding: Meets off-site radiation dose rate requirements

-Thermal: Cladding protected under normal conditions

-Materials:

Properties appropriately assumed in evaluations Aging effects managed during renewed storage period Storage System Design Review

39 Same set of technical discipline reviews as for storage

-Ensure that package meets external dose rate limits

-Ensure fuel remains subcritical

-Ensure containment is maintained Normal and accident conditions differ from storage -Normal transport:

Vibration drops and impacts Heat and cold

-Postulated Accidents:

30-ft. drop on unyielding surface Fire immersion Transportation

40 Established NRC Storage Renewal Strategy Team to review existing regulatory framework and aging management guidance Updating guidance found in NUREG-1927, Rev. 1 - Standard Review Plan for Dry Cask Storage Systems Renewals Updated Storage Renewal Framework:

-Operations

-focused Aging Management

-Learning, Proactive, and Responsive Aging Management

-Aging Management Programs that consider and respond to operating experience and results of confirmatory research Develop guidance report: "Managing Aging Processes for Storage"

-Aging Management Programs to include inspection guidance

-Stakeholder engagement to discuss proposed changes to storage renewal guidance and solicit feedback Storage Renewal Guidance Update

41 Over $9M invested in research and staff efforts Cladding Integrity:

-High burnup fuel is safe for storage and transportation

-NRC confirmatory research activities

-DOE Cask Demonstration Surveillance Project Chloride Induced Stress Corrosion Cracking (CISCC):

-Information Notice November 2012, "Potential Chloride

-Induced Stress Corrosion, Cracking of Austenitic Stainless Steel and Maintenance of Dry Cask Storage System Canisters

" -Regulatory Issue Resolution Protocol for CISCC NUREG-1927, Rev. 1:

-Specific aging Management Programs Cladding Integrity & Cl Induced Stress Corrosion Cracking

42 Regulations in 10 CFR Parts 71 and 72 assure safety for both storing and transporting spent nuclear fuel:

-Multi-disciplinary technical review

-Confinement maintained under routine and accident scenarios Operations

-focused Aging Management Learning, Proactive, and Responsive Aging Management Storage renewal guidance updates underway -Aging Management Programs Creating a stable, predictable, and efficient renewal regulatory framework with clear, open, transparent, and reliable regulatory expectations Summary 43 Comments and Questions from Members of the Public

44 Public comments may be submitted online via the federal government's rulemaking website, www.regulations.gov, using Docket ID NRC

-2014-0223. They may also be mailed to Cindy Bladey, Office of Administration, Mail Stop: 3WFN A44M, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555

-0001. Comments will be accepted through Dec. 22, and will be posted on www.regulations.gov.