ML20195C914

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Requests Commission Approval to Publish Proposed Rule Amending 10CFR70, Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material
ML20195C914
Person / Time
Issue date: 06/02/1999
From: Travers W
NRC OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR FOR OPERATIONS (EDO)
To:
References
SECY-99-147, SECY-99-147-R, NUDOCS 9906090032
Download: ML20195C914 (400)


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, t RULEMAKING ISSUE W (Notation Vote) Ll l June 2.1999 SECY-99-147 '

i EQB: The Commissioners D1lll FROM: William D. Travers  ; l Executive Director for Operations

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SUBJECT:

PROPOSED RULEMAKING - DOMESTIC LICENSING OF SPECIAL NUCLEAR  !

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&y PURPOSE: b 'l To obtain Commission approval to publish a proposed rule amending 10 CFR Part 70, " Domestic y Licensing of Special Nuclear Material."

1 BACKGROUND:

A near-criticality incident at a low enriched fuel fabrication facility in May 1991 prompted the i Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to evaluate its safety regulations for licensees that i possess and process large quantities of special nuclear material (SNM). As a result of this  !

review, the Commission [ Staff Requirements Memorandum (SRM) dated January 15,1993] a the staff recognized the need for revision of its regulatory base for these licensees and,  ; j specifically, for those possessing a critical mass of SNM. Further, the staff concluded that to l increase confidence in the margin of safety at a facility possessing this type and amount of / l material, a licensee should perform an integrated safety analysis (ISA). An ISA is a systematic A , i analysis that identifies: 1) plant and external hazards and their potential for initiating accident sequences; 2) the potential accident sequences and their likelihood and consequences; and '

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3) the structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel relied on for '

safety to prevent or mitigate potential accidents at a facility. -

j CONTACT: Theodore S. Sherr, NMSS/FCSS (301) 415-7218 a

1 q i m6o'#2 99-147 R

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, + g The Commissioners 2 The Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) explained to the Commission industry's position on the need for revision of NRC regulations in Part 70 at a meeting on July 2,1996, and in a subsequent filing, in September 1996, of a Petition for Rulemaking (PRM 70-7). In SECY-97-137, dated June 30,1997, the staff proposed a resolution to the NEl PRM and recommended that the Commission direct the staff to proceed with rulemaking. The Commission, in an SRM dated August 22,1997, approved the staff's proposal to revise Part 70 and directed the staff to submit a draft proposed rule by July 31,1998.

The staff forwarded a draft proposed rule to the Commission in SECY-98-185," Proposed Rulemaking - Revised Requirements for the Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material,"

dated July 30,1998. SECY-98-185 also discusses the history of this rulemaking. The staff briefed the Commission about the draft proposed rule at a Commission meeting held on August 25,1998. NEl expressed its concerns with the proposed rule at the same meeting. After the Commission meeting, the rule was discussed at a public meeting that was held on September 29,1998.

The Commission issued an SRM dated December 1,1998, that directed the staff not to publish the proposed rule contained in SECY-98-185 for public comment. Instead, the Commission f directed the staff to obtain stakeholder input and revise the draft proposed rule. In that SRM, the )

Commission also directed the staff to: (1) decide what is fundamental for NRC's regulatory purposes for inclusion as part of the license or docket and what can be justified from a public health and safety and cost-benefit basis, and assure that Part 70 captures, for submittal, those few significant changes that currently would require license amendments; (2) require licensees / applicants to address baseline design criteria and develop preliminary ISAs for new processes and new facilities; (3) justify, on a health and safety or cost-benefit basis, any requirement to conduct a decommissioning ISA; (4) require that any new backfit pass a cost-benefit test, without the " substantial" increase-in-safety test; (5) require the reporting of certain significant events because of their potential to impact worker or public health and safety; (6) clarify the basis for use of chemical safety and chemical consequence criteria, particularly within the context of the Memoranda of Understanding with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and other Govemment agencies; (7) critically review the Standard Review Plan (SRP) to ensure that by providing specific acceptance criteria, it does not inadvertently prevent licensees or applicants from suggesting attemate means of demonstrating compliance with the rule; and (8) request input on how applicable ISA methodologies should be employed in the licensing of new technologies for use within new or existing facilities. 4 DISCUSSION:

As directed in the SRM for SECY-98-185, stakeholder input was solicited and obtained at public meetings held in December 1998, and January and March 1999. A website was established to facilitate communication with stakeholders and to further solicit input. The nuclear industry submitted comments by letters and postings on the website. The draft proposed rule in the Federal Register Notice (Attachment 1) takes into consideration all public comments received through April 16,1999. Attachment 2 discusses how the staff addressed the issues contained in the SRM, namely: (1) whether the ISA should be in the license; (2) the change process; (3) baseline design criteria; (4) preliminary ISA; (5) decommissioning; (6) backfit; (7) reporting of m

3 y The Commissioners '3 events; (8) chemical hazards; (9) SRP modifications; and (10) ISA methodologies used in the licensing of new technologies. Attachment 3 discusses how the staff addressed the public comments.

The staff's proposed revisions to Part 70 are intended to provide a risk-informed,

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performance-based approach for increasing confidence in the margin of safety for licensees authorized to possess a critical mass of SNM, and address many of the weaknesses identified in NUREG-1324. The draft proposed rule: (1) requires that each licensee or applicant establish a safety program; (2) identifies performance requirements, consisting of consequences and associated likelihoods, that limit the risk of accidents at the facility; and (3) contains a change

- process that allows licensees to make certain changes to the safety programs or the facilities without NRC preapproval, only post-notification, and describes those changes that require NRC -

preapproval. The safety program consists of process safety information; an ISA that analyzes facility hazards and potential accident sequences, and identifies items relied on for safety; and management measures to ensure that items relied on for safety are available and reliable to perform their function when needed. The draft proposed rule requires that an ISA summary be submitted with the application and be included on the docket but not in the license. Facility changes, including changes reflected in the ISA summary, are discussed in 10 CFR 70.72 of the rule. The change process in that section of the rule reflects the staff's recommended approach, which is also strongly supported by the industry. The staff recommends this approach because it focuses on high-risk changes, contains straightforward, objective criteria, and is consistent with the direchon in the SRM. This approach differs significantly from the 10 CFR 50.59 approach which was designed for reactors and considered by the staff. The $50.59-like approach that was considered by the staff is included as Attachment 4, for the Commission's consideration.

- With one exception, the staff's approach is in accordance with the Commission's SRM of December 1,1998. The exception is that a preliminary ISA (or preliminary hazard analysis) is not required. The industry opposed submitting such an analysis, and, after consideration of industry's view, the staff decided that its pre-licensing needs could be addressed through existing requirements in 10 CFR 70.21(f).

As in SECY 98-185, the staff continues to believe that a qualitative backfit mechanism should be considered for implementation only after the safety basis is established and incorporated in the license, and after licensees and staff have gained experience with the implementation of the ISA requirements of the rule. However, given the views expressed by industry, the Federal Register Notice requests public comment on the intent to defer implementation of a backfit provision in Part 70. A more detailed discussion of backfit is contained in Attachment 2.

The Federal Register Notice also specifically requests public comment on h'ow applicable ISA methodologies should be employed in the licensing of new technologies for use within new or

- existing facilities and on the NRC-OSHA interface with respect to regulation of chemical hazards.

Two draft guidance documents support the rulemaking, an SRP (Attachment 5), and an ISA guidance document (Attachment 6). The draft SRP provided as Attachment 5 to this Commission Paper reflects the results of extensive stakeholder interaction as it pertains to the SRP, including some of the more recent comments received. The staff continues to analyze the recent comments and will make further revisions to the SRP text, as considered appropriate. When the proposed rule is l

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The Commissioners 4 published for comment, staff proposes to make available at that time the latest version of the draft SRP, i.e., reflecting additional revisions in response to the recent comments received.

The rulemaking package does not contain an enforcement and inspection plan. NMSS staff is developing a revised inspection program for fuel cycle facilities. As part of this activity, NMSS staff will address the inspection activities under the proposed rule, and will develop, with the Office of Enforcement, an enforcement approach. As part of the final rulemaking, these issues will be addressed.

COORDINATION:

The Office of the General Counsel has no legal objection to this paper. The Office of the Chief Financial Officer has reviewed this Commission Paper for resource implications and has no 1 objections. The Office of the Chief Information Officer has reviewed the proposed rule for

'information technology and information management implications and concurs in it. However, the

. rule amends information collection requirements that must be submitted to and approved by the Office of Management and Budget no later than the date the rule is published in the Federal Register.

RESOURCES:

Resources to complete and implement the rule are included in the current budget.

RECOMMENDATIONS: l That the Commission:

1. Approve the notice of proposed rulemaking for publication (Attachment 1).
2. Certify that this rule, if promulgated, will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, to satisfy requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,5 U.S.C. 605(b)3.

Note:

a) The proposed rule will be published in the Federal Register for a 75-day public comment period; b) A draft SRP will be available in the Public Document Room (Attachment 5);

c) A draft ISA Guidance Document will be available in the Public Document Room (Attachment 6);

d) A draft " Regulatory Analysis" will be available in the Public Document Room (Attachment 7);

e) The Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration will be l

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The Commissioners 5 informed of the certification regarding economic impact on small entities and the reasons for it, as required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act; f) Copies of the Federal Register Notice of proposed rulemaking wi'l be distributed to all affected licensees. The notice will be sent to other interested parties on request; g) A press release will be issued (Attachment 8);

h) The appropriate Congressional committees will be informed (Attachment 9);

i) A draft Environmental Assessment will be available in the Public Document Room (Attachment 10);

j) An Office of Management and Budget (OMB) clearance package must be submitted to OMB no later than the date the proposed rule is submitted to the Federal Reaister.

William rave q # Executive Director 4

for Operations Attachments:

1. Federal Register Notice - Proposed Rule
2. Disposition of SRM issues
3. Disposition of Public Comments
4. Section 70.72 Change Process Option 2
5. Standard Review Plan (Draft)
6. ISA Guidance Document (Draft)
7. Regulatory Analysis (Draft)
8. Press Release (Draft)
9. Congressional Letters (Draft)
10. Environmental Assessment (Draft)

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Constissioners' completed ' vote sheets / comments should be provided directly to the' Office of the Secretary by COB Monday, June 21, 1999.

Commission Staff Office comments, if any, should be submitted to the Commissioners NLT June 14',1999, with an information copy to the Office of the Secretary.

If the paper is of such a nature that it requires additional review and comment, the Commissioners and the Secretariat should be apprised of when comments may be expected.

DISTRIBUTION:

Commissioners OGC OCAA OIG OPA OCA CIO CFO EDO REGIONS-SECY-i

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[7590-01-P]

NUOLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION 10 CFR Part 70 RIN 3150- AF22 Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material; Possession of a Critical Mass of Special Nuclear Material AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

SUMMARY

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is proposing to amend its regulations goveming the domestic licensing of special nuclear material (SNM) for licensees authorized to possess a critical mass of SNM, that are engaged in one of the following activities:' enriched uranium processing; fabrication of uranium fuel or fuel assemblies; uranium

. enrichment; enriched uranium hexafluoride conversion; plutonium processing; fabrication of mixed-oxide fuel or fuel assemblies; scrap recovery of special nuclear material; or any other activity involving a critical rnass of SNM that the Commission determines could significantly affect public health and safety or the environment. The proposed amendments would identify appropriate consequence criteria and the level of protection needed to prevent or mitigate accidents that exceed these criteria; require affected licensees to perform an integrated safety analysis (ISA) to identify potential accidents at the facility and the items relied on for safety necessary to prevent these potential accidents and/or mitigate their consequences; require the implementation of measures to ensure that the items relied on for safety are available and reliable to perform their function when needed; require the inclusion of the safety bases, including a summary of the ISA, with the license application; and allow for licensees to make certain changes to their safety program and facilities without prior NRC approval.

ATTACHMENT 1

4 f DATES: The comment period expires (insert 75 days after publication in the Federal Reaister). Comments received after this date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but, the Commission is able to ensure consideration only for comments received on or before this date.

ADDRESSES: Submit comments to: Secretary of the Commission, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC,20555-0001, Attention: Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff.

Deliver comments to: 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland, between 7:30 a.m. and 4:15 p.m. on Federal workdays.

You may also provide comments via NRC's interactive rulemaking website through the NRC'home page (http //www.nrc. gov). From the home page, select "Rulemaking" from the tool bar at the bottom of the page. The interactive rulemaking website can then be accessed by  !

selecting "Rulemaking Forum." This site provides the ability to upload comments as files (any format), if your web browser supports that function. For information about the interactive rulemaking website, contact Ms. Carol Gallagher by telephone at (301) 415-5905 or e-mail cag @ nrc. gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: Theodore S. Sherr, Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC,20555-0001, telephone (301) 415-7260; e-mail tss @ntc. gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

1. Background a

ll. Description of Proposed Action

1. Background

A near-criticality incident at a low enriched fuel fabrication facility in May 1991 prompted NRC to review its safety regulations for licensees that possess and process large quantities of SNM. [See NUREG-1324," Proposed Method for Regulating Major Materials Ucensees" (U.S.

- Nuclear Regulatory Commission,1992) for additional details on the review.] As a result of this review, the Commission and the staff recognized the need for revision of the regulatory base for. l these licensees, especially for those possessing a critical mass of SNM. Further, the NRC staff 2

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concluded that to increase confidence in the margin of safety at a facility possessing this type and amount of material, a licensee should perform an ISA. An ISA is a systematic analysis that identifies:

(1) Plant and extemal hazards and their potential for initiating accident sequences; (2) The potential accident sequences, their likelihood, and consequences; and (3) The structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel relied on to prevent or mitigate potential accidents at a facility.

NRC held public meetings with the nuclear industry on this issue during May and November 1995. The Nuclear Energy institute (NEI) explained, to the Commission, industry's position on the need for revision of NRC regulations, in 10 CFR Part 70, at a July 2,1996, meeting, and in a subsequent filing of a Petition for Rulemaking (PRM-70-7) in September 1996. NRC published in the Federal Reaister a notice of receipt of the PRM and requested public comments on August 21,1996 (61 FR 60057). The PRM requested that NRC amend Part 70 to:

(1) Add a definition for a uranium processing and fuel fabrication plant; (2) Require the performance of an ISA, or acceptable altemative, at uranium processing, fuel fabrication, and enrichment plants; and (3) Include a requirement for backfit analysis, under certain circumstances, within Part 70.

In SECY-97-137, dated June 30,1997, the staff proposed a resolution to the NEl PRM and recommended that the Commission direct the staff to proceed with rulemaking. The staff's recommended approach to rulemaking included the basic elements of the PRM, with some modification. In brief, staff's proposed resolution was to revise Part 70 to include the following major elements:

(1) Performance of a formal ISA, that would form the basis for a licensee's safety program. This requirement would apply to all licensed facilities or activities, subject to NRC regulation, that are authorized to possess SNM in quantities sufficient to constitute a potential for nuclear criticality (except power reactors and the gaseous diffusion plants regulated under 10 CFR Part 76);

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(2) Establishment of criteria to identify the adverse consequences that licensees must

- protect against; L (3) inclusion of the safety bases in a license application (i.e., the identification of the potential accidents, the items relied on for safety to prevent these accidents and/or mitigate their consequences, and the measures needed to ensure the availability and reliability of these items);

(4) Ability of licensees, based on the results of an ISA, to make certain changes without NRC prior approval; and (5) Consideration by the Commission, after licensees' initial conduct and implementation of the ISA, of a qualitative backfitting mechanism to enhance regulatory stability.

In an SHM dated August 22,1997, the Commission "... approved the staff's proposal to revise Part 70" and directed the NRC staff to "... submit a draft proposed rule...by July 31,

' 1998."

A draft proposed rule was provided to the Commission in SECY-98-185, " Proposed

. Rulemaking - Revised Requirements for the Domestic Ucensing of Special Nuclear Material,"

dated July 30,1998. The draft proposed rule reflected the approach recommended in SECY-97-137. In particular, the safety basis for a facility, including the ISA results, would be submitted as part of an application to NRC, for review, and incorporated in the license. Also in

. SECY 98-185, the staff recommended that a qualitative backfit mechanism should be considered fdr implementation only after the safety basis, including the results of the ISA, is established and incorporated in the license, and after licensees and staff have gained experience with the implementation of the ISA requirement.

In response to SECY-98-185, the Commission issued an SRM dated December 1,1998, which directed the staff not to publish the draft proposed rule for public comment. Instead, the Commission directed the staff to obtain stakeholder input and revise the draft proposed rule. In that SRM, the Commission also directed the staff to:

(1) Decide what is fundamental for NRC's regulatory purposes for inclusion as part of the license or docket and what can be justified from a public health and safety and cost-benefit 4

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' basis, and assure that Part 70 captures for submittal those few significant changes that

' currently would require license amendments;

- (2) Require licensees / applicants to address baseline design criteria and develop a preliminary ISA for new processes 'and new facilities; (3) Justify, on a health and safety or cost-benefit basis, any requirement to conduct a decommissioning ISA;.

- (4) Require that any new backfit pass a cost-benefit test, without the " substantial" increase in safety test;

' (5) Require the reporting of certain significant events because of their potential to impact worker or public health and safety; (6) Clarify the basis for use of chemical safety and chemical consequence criteria,

. particularly within the context of the Memoranda of Understanding with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and other government agencies; (7) Critically review the Standard Review Plan (SRP) to ensure that by providing specific acceptance criteria, it does not inadvertently prevent licensees or applicants from suggesting alternate means of demonstrating compliance with the rule; and (8) Request input on how applicable ISA methodologies should be employed in the licensing of new technologies for use within new or existing facilities.

As directed in the SRM, stakeholder input was solicited and obtained at public meetings held in December 1998 and January and March 1999. A website was established to facilitate

. communication with stakeholders and to solicit further input. The nuclear industry submitted comments by letters and postings on the website. This revised proposed rule incorporates much of the December 1,1998 SRM direction and reflects language responsive to many of the comments received, it appears that most of the major concems with the earlier draft proposed rule have been resolved.

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11. Description of Proposed Action The proposed rule grants the NEl September 1996 PRM in part and modifies the petitioner's proposal as indicated in the following discussion.

The Commission is proposing to modify Part 70 to provide increased confidence in the margin of safety at certain facilities authorized to process a critical mass of SNM. The Commission believes that this objective can be best accomplished through a risk-informed and performance-based regulatory approach that includes:

(1) The identification of appropriate risk levels, considering consequence criteria and the level of protection needed to prevent accidents that could exceed such criteria; (E) The performance of an ISA to identify potential accidents at the facility and the items relied on for safety; (3) The implementation of measures to ensure that the items relied on for safety are available and reliable to perform their function when needed; (4) The inclusion of the safety bases, including the ISA summary, in the license application; and (5) The allowance for licensees to make certain changes to their safety program and facilities without prior NRC approval.

The Commission's approach agrees in principle with the NEl petition. However, in contrast to the petition's suggestion that the ISA requirement be limited to "... uranium processing, fuel fabrication, and uranium enrichment plant licensees," the Commission would require the performance of an ISA for a broader range of Part 70 licensees that are authorized to possess a critical mass of SNM. The Part 70 licensees that would be affected include licensees engaged in one of the following activities: enriched uranium processing; fabrication of uranium fuel or fuel assemblies; uranium enrichment; enriched uranium hexafluoride conversion; plutonium processing; fabrication of mixed-oxide fuel or fuel assemblies; scrap recovery of special nuclear material; or any other activity involving a critical mass of SNM that the Commission determines could significantly affect public health and safety. The proposed rule would not apply to licensees authorized to possess SNM under 10 CFR Parts 50,60,72, and 76.

Furthermore, the Commission is not currently proposing, as suggested in the NEl petition, to include a backfit provision in Part 70. Based on the discussions at public meetings held on May 28,1998, and March 23,1999, the purpose of the NEl-proposed backfit provision 6

1 6 is to ensure that NRC staff does not impose safety controls that are not necessary to satisfy the performance requirements of Part 70, unless a quantitative cost-benefit analysis justifies this action. The Commission believes that once the safety basis, including the ISA summary, is incorporated in the license application, and the NRC staff has gained sufficient experience with implementation of the ISA requirements, a qualitative backfit mechanism could be censidered.

Without a baseline determination of risk, as provided by the initial ISA process, it is not clear how a determination of incremental risk, as needed for a backfit analysis, would be accomplished. Furthermore, although NEl previously stated that a quantitative backfit approach is currently feasible, it would appear that a quantitative determination of incremental risk would require a Probabilistic Risk Assessment, to which the industry has been strongly opposed.

Given the differences of opinion on this subject, the Commission requests public comment on its intent to defer consideration of a qualitative backfit provision in Par 170, and any specific suggestions for backfit provisions that would specifically address fuel cycle backfit needs, and the information that would be available to conduct the associated analysis.

The majority of the proposed modifications to Part 70 are found in a new Subpart H,

" Additional Requirements for Certain Licensees Authorized to Possess a Critical Mass of Special Nuclear Material," that consists of 10 CFR 70.60 through 70.74. These proposed modifications to Part 70, discussed in detail below, are required to increase confidence in the margin of safety and are in general accordance with the approach approved by the Commission in its SRMs of August 22,1997, and December 1,1998.

Section 70.4 Definitions.

Definitions of the following 12 terms would be added to this section to provide a clear understanding of the meaning of the new Subpart H: " Acute", "Available and reliable to perform their function when needed", " Configuration management", " Critical mass of SNM", " Double contingency", " Hazardous materials produced from licensed materials", " Integrated safety analysis", " Integrated safety analysis summary", " Items relied on for safety", " Management measures", " Unacceptable performance deficiencies", and " Worker."

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e t Section 70.14 Foreian military aircraft.

This paragraph reflects an administrative change to renumber the paragraph from 70.13a.

Section 70.17 Specific exemotions.

This paragraph reflects an administrative change to renumber the paragraph from 70.14.

Section 70.50 Recodina reauirements.

Paragraph (c) would be reworded to include information to be transmitted when making verbal or written reports to NRC. The new information derives from the specifics of the new Subpart H, such as sequence of events and whether the event was evaluated in the ISA. To the extent the new information is also applicable to licensees not subject to Subpart H, the information was added with no differentiation noted. The new information that would only appiy to Subpart H licensees is noted.

Section 70.60 Aoolicability.

This section lists the types of NRC licensees or applicants who would be subject to the new Part 70, Subpart H. The Commission has decided that the new requirements should not apply to alllicensees authorized to possess critical masses of SNM. Instead, the Commission l

has identified a subset of these licensees that, based on the risk associated with operations at these facilities, should be subject to the new requirements. This change would exclude certain facilities (e.g., those authorized only to store SNM or use SNM in sealed form for research and educational purposes) from the new requirements, because of the relatively low level of risk at i

these facilities. In general, the new Subpart is intended to ensure that the significant accidents that are possible at fuel fabrication facilities (and the other listed facility types) have been 4 analyzed in advance, and that appropriate controls or measures are established to ensure adequate protection of workers,' public, and the environment. The requirements and provisions

'A worker, in the context of this rulemaking. is defined as an individual whose assigned duties in the course of employment involve exposure to radiation and/or radioactive material from licensed and unlicensed sources of radiation (i.e., an individual who is subject to an occupational dose as in 10 CFR 20.1003).

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t 6 in Subpart H are in addition to, and not a substitute for, other applicable requirements, including l

those of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Labor, OSHA. The requirements being added by NRC only apply to NRC's areas of responsibility l (radiological safety and chemical safety directly related to licensed radioactive material). In this regard, the requirements for hazards and accident analyses that NRC is adding are intended to complement and be' consistent with the parallel OSHA and EPA regulations.

The regulation states that Subpart H does not apply to decommissioning activities. NRC notes that the existing regulation [670.38(g)(4)(iii)] requires an approved decommissioning plan (DP) that includes " a description of methods used to ensure protection of workers and the environment against radiation hazards during decommissioning." Because the DP is submitted for NRC approval before initiation of "... procedures and activities necessary to carry out decommissioning of the site or separate building or outdoor area," the DP will continue to be the vehicle for regulatory approval of the licensee's practices for protection of health and safety during decommissioning. The ISA should provide valuable information with respect to developing the DP and the use of the ISA in this manner is encouraged.

Section 70.61 Performance Reauirements.

in the past, the regulation of licensees authorized to possess SNM, under 10 CFR Parts 20 and 70, has concentrated on radiation protection for persons involved in nuclear activities conducted under normal operations. The proposed amendments to Part 70 would explicitly address potential exposures to workers or members of the public and environmental releases as a result of accidents. Part 20 continues to be NRC's standard for protection of workers and public from radiation during normal operations, anticipated upsets (e.g., minor process upsets  !

that are likely to occur one or more times during the life of the facility), and accidents. Although it is the Commission's intent that the regulations in Part 20 also be observed to the extent practicable during an emergency, it is not the Commission's intent that the Part 20 requirements apply as the design standard for all possible accidents at the facility, irrespective of the likelihood of those accidents. Because accidents are unanticipated events that usually occur over a relatively short period of time, the Part 70 changes seek to assure adequate protection of workers, members of the public, and the environment by limiting the risk (combined likelihood and consequence) of such accidents.

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  1. t There are three risk-informed performance requirements for the rule, each of which is set out in 10 CFR 70.61: (1) section 70.61(b) states that high-consequence events must meet a likelihood standard of highly unlikely; (2) section 70.61(c) requires that intermediate-consequence events must meet a likelihood standard of unlikely; and (3) section 70.61(d) requires that risk of nuclear criticality be limited by assuring that all processes must remain subcritical under any normal or credible abnormal conditions. The term " performance requirements" thus considers together consequences and likelihood. For regulatory purposes, each performance requirement is considered an equivalent level of risk. For example, the acceptable likelihood of intermediate-consequence events is allowed to be greater than the acceptable likelihood for high-consequence events.

A risk-informed approach must consider not only the consequences of potential accidents, but also their likelihood of occurrence / As mentioned above; the performance requirements rely on the terms "unlikely" and " highly unlikely" to focus on the risk of accidents.

However, the Commission has decided not to include quantitative definitions "unlikely" and

" highly unlikely" in the proposed rule, because a single definition for each term, that would apply to all the facilities regulated by Part 70, may not be appropriate. Depending on the type of facility and its complexity, the number of potential accidents and their consequences could differ markedly. Therefore, to ensure that the overall facility risk from accidents is acceptable for different types of facilities, the rule requires applicants to develop, for NRC approval (see G70.65), the meaning of "unlikely" and " highly unlikely" specific to their processes and facility.

To accommodate this development, the Commission believes that the SRP is the appropriate

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document to include guidelines for licensees to use. A draft " Standard Review Plan for the Review of a License Application for a Fuel Cycle Facility" has been developed. The draft SRP provides one acceptable approach for the meaning of "unlikely" and " highly unlikely" that can be applied to existing fuel cycle facilities.

The general approach for complying with the performance requirements is that, at the time of licensing, each hazard (e.g., fire, chemical, electrical, industrial) that can potentially affect radiological safety is identified and evaluated, in an ISA, by the licensee. The impact of accidents, both intemal and external, associated with these hazards is compared with the three performance requirements. Any (and all) structures, systems, components, or human actions, for which credit is taken in the ISA for mitigating (reducing the consequence of) or preventing (reducing the likelihood of) the accident such that all three performance requirements are satisfied, must be identified as an "itern relied on for safety." "ltems relied on for safety" is a 10 m

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. term that is defined in 10 CFR 70.4, and in this approach, the applicant has a great deal of flexibility in selecting and identifying the actual " items." For example, they can be defined at the systems-level, component-level, or sub-component-level. " Management measures" (see discussion in 10 CFR 70.62(d)) are applied to each item in a graded fashion to ensure that it will

- perform its safety function when needed. The combination of the set of " items relied on for safety" and the " management measures" applied to each item will determine the extent of the licensee's programmatic and design requirements, consistent with the facility risk, and will ensure that at any given time, the facility risk is maintained safe and protected from accidents (viz., satisfies the performance requirements).

The proposed performance requirements also address certain chemical hazards that result from the processing of licensed nuclear material. The question of the extent of NRC's authority to regulate chemical hazards at its fuel cycle facilities was raised after an accident in 1986 at a Part 40 licensed facility, in which a cylinder of uranium hexafluoride ruptured and resulted in a worker fatality. The cause of the worker's death was the inhalation of hydrogen fluoride gas, which was pmduced from the chemical reaction of uranium hexafluoride and water (humidity in air). Partly as a result of the coordinated Federal response and resulting -

Congressional investigation into that accident, NRC and the OSHA entered into an MOU, in 1988, that clarified the agencies' interpretations of their respective responsibilities for the regulation of chemical hazards at nuclear facilities. The MOU identified the following four areas of responsibility. Generally, NRC covers the first three areas, whereas OSHA covers the

' fourth area:

(1) - Radiation risk produced by radioactive materials; (2) Chemical risk produced by radioactive materials; (3) Plant conditions that affect the safety of radioactive materials; and (4) Plant conditions that result in an occupational risk, but do not affect the safety of licensed radioactive materials.

One goal of the performance requirements in 670.61 is to be consistent with the NRC-OSHA MOU. Therefore, the performance requirements in 670.61 include explicit standards for the MOU's first two areas of responsibility. In addition, the third MOU area of responsibility is specifically evaluated by licensees under the ISA requirements of $70.62(c)(1)(iii). As an example of the third MOU area, if the failure of a chemical system adjacent to a nuclear system could affect the safety of the nuclear system such that the radiation dose (and associated likelihood of that accident) exceeded a performance requirement, the chemical system failure 11 4

U

] /

  • t would be within the scope of the ISA and the means to prevent the chemical system failure from impacting the nuclear system would be within NRC's regulatory purview.

OSHA provided comments, by a letter dated February 1,1999, on a draft of the rule

, that had been revised to be consistent with the MOU. In that letter, OSHA expressed concerns

./

' ~ that the rule language would preempt OSHA from enforcing any of its standards, rules or other requirements with respect to chemical hazards at the facilities covered by the NRC draft rule.

This concem is based on case law under the OSH Act. The pertinent provision in the OSH Act '

states:

"(b)(1) Nothing in this chapter shall apply to working conditions of employees with respect to which other Federal agencies, and State agencies acting under section 2021 of title 42, exercise statutory authority to prescribe or enforce standards or regulations affecting occupational safety or health." [29 U.S.C. 9653(b)(1)]

i NRC staff subsequently met with OSHA officials on February 25,1999, and some clarifications and further information were provided at that meeting. As a result of the meeting -

docussions, some changes were made to the rule language to more clearly specify the scope of NRC involvement. However, these changes do not fully resolve the basic preemption issue.

. The problems identified with the rule are not unique, i.e., the preemption issue is generic and may already exist for any NRC-licensed facilities where there are requirements to analyze hazards. At the February 25 meeting, OSHA confirmed that the rule language is consistent with the October 21,1988 MOU; indicated that they have no suggested changes to the MOU;

) and indicated that they are not opposed to the proposed rule. The Commission's view is that the proposed rule is consistent with NRC responsibilities and authority under the Atomic Energy Act, and consistent with the OSHA MOU. The only resolution of the preemption issue appears to be a legislative modification of the OSH Act. Public comments would be appreciated on any options that may have been overlooked.

'Within each performance requirement, NRC recognizes that the proposed radiological standards are more restrictive, in terms of acute health effects to workers or the public, than the chemical standards for a given consequence (high or intermediate) and that this is consistent with current regulatory practice. The choice of each criterion is discussed below in a paragraph-by-paragraph discussion of $70.61.

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- The use of any of the performance requirements is not intended to imply that the specified worker or public radiation dose or chemical exposure constitutes an acceptable criterion for an emergency dose to a worker or the public. Rather, these values have been proposed in this section as a reference value, to be used by licensees in the ISA (a forward-looking analysis) to establish controls (i.e., items relied on for safety and associated management measures) necessary to protect workers from potential accidents with low or exceedingly low probabilities of occurrence that are not expected to occur during the operating

. life of the facility.

Section 70.61(b). This section addresses performance requirements for high-consequence events.

The consequences identified in $70.61(b) of the proposed rule are referred to as "high-consequence events" and include accdontal exposure of a worker or an individual located outside of the controlled area to high levels of radiation or hazardous chemicals. These

. accidents, if they occurred, would represent radiation doses to a worker or an individual located outside of the controlled area at levels with clinically observable biological damage or concentrations of hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material at which death or life-threatening injury could occur. The goal is to ensure an acceptable level of risk by limiting the combination of the likelihood of occurrence and the identified consequences. Thus, high-consequence events must be sufficiently mitigated to a lower consequence or prevented such -

that the event is highly unlikely (or lower). The application of " items relied on for safety" provides this prevention or mitigation function.

Section 70.61(b)(1). An acute exposure of a worker to a radiation dose of 1 Sv (100 rem) or greater total effective dose equivalent (TEDE) is considered to be a high-consequence event. According to the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP,

.1971), life-saving actions - including the "... search for and removal of injured persons, or entry to prevent conditions that would probably injure numbers of people"- should be undertaken

only when the "... planned dose to the whole body shall not exceed 100 rems." This is consistent with a later NCRP position (NCRP,1987) on emergency occupational exposures, that states "...when the exposure may approach or exceed 1 Gy (100 rad) of low-LET [ linear energy transfer) radiation (or an equivalent high-LET exposure) to a large portion of the body, in a short time, the worker needs to understand not only the potential for acute effects but he or 13

3 I

a i she should also have an appreciation of the substantial increase in his or her lifetime risk of cancer."

Section 70.61(b)(2). The exposure of an individuallocated outside of the controlled area to a radiation dose of 0.25 Sv (25 om) or greater TEDE is considered a high-consequence event. This is generall/ consistent with the criterion established in 10 CFR 100.11, ~ Determination of Nelusion area, low population zone, and population center distance," and 10 CFR 50.34, " Contents of applications; technical information," where a whole-body dose of 0.25 Sv (25 rem) is used to determine the dimensions of the exclusion area and low-population zone required for siting nuclear power reactors.

Section 70.61(b)(3). The intake of 30 mg of soluble uranium by an individuallocated outside of the controlled area is considered a high- consequence event. This choice, which is based on a review of the available literature [ Pacific Northwest Laboratories (PNL),1994), is consistent with the selection of 30 mg of uranium as a criterion that was discussed during the Part 76 rulemaking. " Certification of Gaseous Diffusion Plants." In particular, the final rule that established Part 76 (59 FR 48944; September 23,1994) stated that "The NRC will consider whether the potential consequences of a reasonable spectrum of postulated accident scenarios exceed... uranium intakes of 30 milligrams...." The final rule also stated that "The Commission's intended use of chemical toxicity considerations in Part 76 is consistent with its practice elsewhere (e.g.,10 CFR 20.1201(e)], and prevents any potential regulatory gap in public protection against toxic effects of soluble uranium."

Section 70.61(b)(4). An acute chemical exposura to hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material at concentrations that either (1) could cause death or life-threatening injuries to a worker; or (2) could cause irreversible health effects to an individual located outside of the ::ontrolled area, is considered a high-consequence event. Chemical consequence criteria corresponding to anticipated adverse health effects to humans from acute exposures (i.e., a single exposure or multiple exposures occurring within a short time - 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> or less) have been developed, or are under development, by a number of organizations. Of particular interest, the National Advisory Committee for Acute Guideline Levels for Hazardous Substances is developing Acute Exposure Guideline Limits (AEGLs) that will eventually cover approximately 400 industrial chemicals and pesticides. The committee, which works under the auspices of 14

g a ey s-

- the EPA and the National Academy of Sciences, has identified a priority list of approximately 85

, chemicals.- Consequence criteria for 12 of these have currently been developed and criteria for approximately 30 additxmal chemicals per year are expected. Another set of chemical consequence criteria, the Emergency Response Planning Guidelines (ERPGs), has been

- developed by the American industrial Hygiene Association to provide estimates of concentration ranges where defined adverse health effects might be observed because of short exposures to hazardous chemicals. ERPG criteria are widely used by those involved in assessing or responding to the release of hazardous chemicals including "... community emergency planners and response specialists, air dispersion modelers, industrial process safety engineers, implementers of environmental regulations such as the Superfund Amendment and Reauthorization Act, industrial hygienists, and toxicologists, transportation safety engineers, fire protection specialists, and govemment agencies...." (DOE Risk Manaaement Quarterly.1997).

Despite their general acceptance, there are currently only approximately 80 ERPG criteria available, and some chemicals of importance (e.g., nitric acid) are not covered.

The qualitative language in the performance requirement allows the applicantilicensee to propose and adopt an appropriate standard, which may be an AEGL or ERPG standard, or where there is no AEGL or ERPG value available, the applicant may develop or adopt a criterion that is comparable in severity to those that have been established for other chemicals.

For example, for the worker performance requirement, existing criteria that can be used by licensees to define appropriate concentration levels to satisfy the performance requirement are the AEGL-3 and ERPG-3. AEGL-3 is defined as "The airborne concentration (expressed in 8 i ppm or mg/m ) of a substance at or above which it is predicted that the general population, including susceptible, but excluding hypersusceptible, individuals, could experience life-threatening effects or death." ERPG-3 is defined as "The maximum airbome concentration L below which it is believed that nearly all individuals could be exposed for up to 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> without

. experiencing or developing life-threatening health effects." Similarly, for the public, AEGL-2 is defined as "The airbome concentration (expressed in ppm or mg/m8) of a substance at or above which it is predicted that the general population, including susceptible, but excluding hypersusceptible, individuals, could experience irreversible or other serious, long-lasting effects

. or impaired ability to escape," and ERPG-2 is defined as "The maximum airbome concentration below which it is believed that nearly all individuals could be exposed for up to 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> without experiencing or developing irreversible or other health effects or symptoms that could impair an

. Individual's ability to take protective action."

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Section 70.61(c). This section addresses performance requirements for intermediate-consequence events.

The consequences identified in $70.61(c) of the proposed rule are referred to as

- " intermediate-consequence events" and include accidental exposure of a worker or an indevidual outside of the cbntrolled area to levels of radiation or hazardous chemicals that generally correspond to permanent injury to a worker, transient injury to a non-worker, or significant releases of radcactive material to the environment. The goal is to ensure an i acceptable level of risk by limiting the combination of the likelihood of occurrence and the identified consequences. Thus," intermediate-consequence events" must be sufficiently mitigated to a lower consequence or prevented such that the event is unlikely (or lower). The application of " items relied on for safety" provides this prevention or mitigation function.

Section 70.61(c)(1). A worker radiation dose between 0.25 Sv (25 rem) and 1 Sv (100 -

rem) TEDE is considered an intermediate-consequence event [over 1 Sv (100 rem) is a high-consequence event]. .This value was chosen because of the use of 0.25 Sv (25 rem) as a criterion in existing NRC regulations. For example, in 10 CFR 20.2202," Notification of incidents," immediate notification is required of a licensee if an individual receives "... a total effective dose equivalent of 0.25 Sv (25 rem) or more." Also, in 10 CFR 20.1206," Planned special exposures," a licensee may authorize an adult worker to receive a dose in excess of normal occupational exposure limits if a dose of this magnitude does not exceed 5 times the

. annual dose limits (i.e.,0.25 Sv (25 rem)] during an individual's lifetime, in addition, EPA's -

Protective Action Guides (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,1992) and NRC's regulatory guidance (Regulatory Guide 8.29,1996) identify 0.25 SV (25 rem) as the whole-body dose limit to workers for life-saving actions and protection of large populations. NCRP has also stated that a TEDE of 0.25 Sv (25 rem) corresponds to the once-in-a-lifetime accidental or emergency

' dose for workers.

Section 70.61(c)(2). A dose to any individual located outside of the controlled area between 0.05 Sv (5 rem) and 0.25 Sv (25 rem) is considered an intermediate-consequence event. NRC has used a 0.05-Sv (5-rem) exposure criterion in a number of its existing

- regulations. For example,10 CFR 72.106, " Controlled area of an ISFSI or MRS," states that "Any individual located on or beyond the nearest boundary of the controlled area shall not receive a dose greater than 5 rem to the whole body or any organ from any design basis 16

% i accident." In addition, in the regulation of the above-ground portion of the geologic repository, 10 CFR 60.136, states that "...for [ accidents), no individual located on or beyond any point on the boundary of the preciosure controlled area will receive...a total effective dose equivalent of 5 rem...." A TEDE of 0.05 Sv (5 rem) is also the upper limit of EPA's Protective Action Guides of between 0.01 to 0.05 Sv (1 to 5 rem) for emergency evacuation of members of the public in the event of an accidental release that could result in inhalation, ingestion, or ab' sorption of radioactive materials.

Section 70.61(c)(3). The release of radioactive material to the environment outside the restricted area in concentrations that, if averaged over a period of 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />, exceed 5000 times the values specified in Table 2 of Appendix B to Part 20, is considered an intermediate-consequence event. In contrast to the other consequences criteria that directly protect workers and members of the public, the intent of this criterion is to ensure protection of the environment from the occurrence of accidents at certain facilities authorized to process greater than critical 1 mass quantities of SNM. This implements NRC's responsibility for protecting the environment, in accordance with the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, et seo., and the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, et seg, The value established for the environmental consequence criterion is identical to the NRC Abnormal Occurrence (AO) criterion that addresses the discharge er dispersal of radioactive material 1 rom its intended place of confinement (Section 208 of the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, as amended, requires that AOs be reported to Congress annually).

In particular, AO reporting criterion 1.B.1 requires the reporting of an event that involves "...the release of radioactive material to an unrestricted area in concentrations which, if averaged over a period of 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />, exceed 5000 times the values specified in Table 2 of Appendix B to 10 CFR Part 20, unless the licensee has demonstrated compliance with 10 CFR 20.1301 using 10 CFR 20.1302(b)(1) or 10 CFR 20.1302(b)(2)(li)"[ December 19,1996; 61 EB 67072). The concentrations listed in Table 2 of Appendix B to Part 20 apply to radioactive materials in air and water effluents to unrestricted areas. NRC established these concentrations based on an i

implicit effective dose equivalent limit of 0.5 mSv/yr (50 mrem /yr) for each medium, assuming an individual were continuously exposed to the listed concentrations present in an unrestricted I area for a year. l If an individual were continuously exposed for 1 day to concentrations of radioactive material 5000 times greater than the values listed in Appendix B to Part 20, the projected dose l 17 i

s I would be about 6.8 mSv (680 mrem), or 5000 x 0.5 mSv/yr x 1 day x 1 yr/365 days. In addition,

~

- a release of radioactive material, from a facility, resulting in these concentrations, would be expected to cause some environmental contamination in the area affected by the release. This -

contamination would pose a longer-term hazard to the environment and members of the public until it was properly remediated. Depending on the extent of environmental contamination caused by such a release, the contamination could require considerable licensee resources to remediate. For these reasons, NRC considered the existing AO reporting criterion for decharge or dispersal of radioactive material as an appropriate consequence criterion in this 3 rulemaking.

Secten 70.61(c)f4). An acute chemical exposure to hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material at concentrations that either; a) to a worker, could cause irreversible health effects (but at concentrations below those which could cause death or life-threatening effects); or b) to an individual located outside of the controlled area, could cause notable decomfost (but at concentrations below those which could cause irreversible effects), is considered an intermediate-consequence event. Chemical consequence criteria corresponding to anticipated adverse health effects to humans from acute exposures (i.e., a single exposure or multiple exposures occurring within a short time - 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> or less) have been developed, or are under development, by a number of organizations. Of particular interest, two existing standards, AEGL-2 and ERPG-2, can be used to define the concentration level for irreversible health effects, and two existing standards, AEGL-1 and ERPG-1, can be used to define the concentration level for notable discomfort. The qualitative language in the performance

. requirement allows the applicant / licensee to adopt and propose an appropriate standard, which may be an AEGL or ERPG standard, or where there is no AEGL or ERPG value available, the applicant may develop or adopt a criterion that is comparable in severity to those that have -

i been established for other chemicals.

Section 70.61(d). This section addresses performance requirements for an accidental nuclear criticality.

The third performance requirement states that the risk of nuclear criticality accidents must be limited by assuring that under normal and credible abnormal conditions, all nuclear processes are subcritical, including use of an approved margin of subcriticality for safety. It also requires that preventive controls and measures shall be the primary means of protection against nuclear critmality accidents. Although detecting and mitigating the consequences of a 18

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nuclear criticality are important objectives (e.g., for establishing alarm systems), the prevention of a criticality is a primary NRC objective.

The basis for this provision is the NRC strategic plan (NUREG-1614, Vol.1), which, for nuclear materials safety, states NRC's performance goal of "...no accidental criticality involving

, licensed material." The language chosen for this performance requirement closely follows the language of the applicable industry standard, ANSI /ANS Standard 8.1-1983," Nuclear Criticality Safety in Operations with Fissionable Materials Outside Reactors."

Section 70.61(e). This section addresses items relied on for safety and management measures.

Paragraph 70.61(e) would require that each engineered or administrative control or control system that is needed to meet the performance requirements be designated as an item relied on for safety. This means that any control or control system that is necessary to maintain the acceptable combination of consequence and likelihood for an accident is designated an item relied on for safety. The importance of this section is that, once a control is designated as an item relied on for safety, it falls into the envelope of the safety program required by section 70.62. For example, records will be kept regarding the item, and management measures such as the configuration control program are applied to the item and to changes that affect the item, to ensure that the item will be available and reliable to perform its function when needed.

The failure of an item relied on for safety does not necessarily rrean that an accident will occur which will cause one of the consequences listed in the performance requirements to be exceeded. Some control systems may have parallel (redundant or diverse) control systems that would continue to prevent the accident. The need for such defense-in-depth and single-failure resistance would ideally be based on the severity and likelihood of the potential accident. In other cases, the failure of an item may mean that the particular accident sequence is no longer

" highly unlikely", or "unlikely." In these cases, the performance requirement is not met, and the expectation would be ths' a management measure would exist (possibly in the form of an operating procedure) that ensured that the facility would not operate in a condition that exceeds the perforraance requirement. For example, a facility that relies on emergency power could not operate for an extended time in the absence of an emergency power source even if grid power is available. In this manner, the items relied on for safety and the management measures complement each other to ensure adequate protection f,om accidents at any given time.

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Section 70.61(f). This section addresses the term " controlled area" used in the performance requirements.

Section 70.61(f) requires licensees to identify a controlled area consistent with the use of that term in Part 20, and provides clarification regarding the activities that may occur inside the controlled area. The function of this term is to delimit an area over which the licensee exercises control of activities. Controlincludes the power to exclude individuals, if necessary.

The size of the controlled area is not specified in the regulation because it will be dependent J upon the particular activities that are conducted at the site and their relationship to the licensed activities. [Within the controlled area will be a restricted area (as defined in @20.1003), access l

to which is controlled by the licensee fer purposes of radiation safety.]

Individuals who do not receive an occupational dose (as that term is used in Part 20) in the controlled area will be subject to the dose limits for members of the public in 10 CFR 20.1301. However, the Commission recognizes that certain licensees may have ongoing activities at their site (i.e., within the controlled area) that are not related to the licensed activities. For example, a non-nuclear facility may be adjacent to the nuclear facility but both are within the controlled area (which may be defined similar to the site boundary). This raises a question regarding the appropriate accident standard for these individuals. Protection of the l individuals at the non-nuclear facility must consider that the nature of many potential accidents at a fuel cycle facility is such that there may not be sufficient time during which to take action to exclude individuals from the controlled area. Therefore, for purposes of the ISA accident evaluation, the rule explicitly contains two options for these individuals (as well as an implicit third option). In the first option, the licensee evaluates, in the ISA, the risk at its location (as opposed to that at any point at or beyond the controlled area boundary) and determines that it meets the performance requirements for members of the public, in the second option, performance requirements for workers may be applied to individuals in the controlled area if the provisions of Section 70.61(f)(2) are satisfied. These conditions ensure that the individuals are aware of the risks to them from the potential accidents at the nuclear facility and have received appropriate training and access to information. This parallels and is consistent with the use of the term, " Exclusion area", by 10 CFR Parts 50 and 100, which states, " Activities unrelated to operation of the reactor may be permitted in an exclusion area under appropriate limitations, provided that no significant hazards to the public health and safety will result." The implied third option is to define (or redefine) a controlled area such that within it only activities associated with the licensed nuclear facility are permitted.

20

n The Commission's intent is that the ISA does not evaluate compliance with the accident standards for individuals who make infrequent visits to the controlled area and restricted area (e.g., visitors). Use of the ISA to determine the risks to these individuals would need to consider second-order effects such as the probability of the individual being present at the time that the unlikely (or highly unlikely) accident occurred. This level of detail is unnecessary to accomplish the purpose of this rule (viz., to document and maintain the safety basis of the facility design and operations). ' Application of the Part 20 regulations provides adequate protection for these individuals. In addition, the provisions (i.e., performance requirements) to protect workers and non-workers during accidents should, implicitly, provide 'a degree of protection to the infrequently present individuals.

Section 70.62 Safety Proaram and Intearated Safety Analysis.

This paragraph addresses the safety program, that includes process safety information, ISA, and management measures. The performance of an ISA, and the establishment of measures to ensure the availability and reliability of items relied on for safety when needed, are the means by which licensees demonstrate an adequate level of protection at their facilities.

The ISA is a systematic analysis to identify plant and extemal hazards and their potential for initiating accident sequencos; the potential accident sequences and their consequences; and the site, structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel relied on for i safety. As used here," integrated" means joint consideration of, and protection from, all relevant hazards, including radiological, criticality, fire, and chemical. The structure of the safety program recognizes the critical role that the ISA plays in identifying potential accidents and the items relied on for safety. However, it also recognizes that the performance of the ISA, by itself, will not ensure adequate protection. Instead, an effective management system is needed to ensure that the items relied on for safety are available and reliable to perform their function when needed. Detailed requirements for each part of the safety program are included in this section.

Section 70.62(a). Each licensee would be required to establish and maintain a safety program that demonstrates compliance with the performance requirements of 670.61. Although the ISA would be the primary tool in identifying the potential accidents requiring consequence mitigation and accident prevention, process safety information would be used to develop the ISA, and management measures would be used to ensure the availability and reliability of items 21

o e relied on for safety identified through the ISA.. The management measures may be graded according to the risk importance associated with an item relied on for safety.

The licensee is also required to establish and maintain records demonstrating that it has, and continues to meet, the requirement of this section. These records serve two major purposes. First, they can supplement information that has been submitted as part of the license application. Second, records are often needed to demonstrate licensee compliance with applicable regulations and license commitments. It is important, therefore, that an appropriate system of recordkeeping be implemented to allow easy retrieval of required information.

Finally, each licensee would also be required to establish and maintain a log riocumenting each discovery that an item relied on for safety has failed to perform its function either in the context of the performance requirements of 670.61 or on demand. The phrase

"...in the context of the performance requirements of $70.61" means that items relied on for safety that fail would require logging even if their failures did not result in process upsets or accidents but could have resulted in the accident conditions they are protecting against, had all conditions been optimum for the accident. This would not include failures during times, such as routine maintenance on an item, when the item or measure was clearly documented to not be available. The log must contain: (a) the identity of the item that failed and the safety function affected; (b) date of discovery of the failure; (c) duration of time that the item was unable to perform its function; (d) any other affected items relied on for safety and their safety function; (e) affected processes; (f) the cause of the failure; (g) whether the failure was in the context of performance requirements, or on demand, or both; and (h) any corrective or compensatory actions taken. The log should be initiated at the time of discovery and updated promptly at the completion of each investigation of a failure of an item relied on for safety. The purpose of the log is to assist NRC in determining whether items relied on for safety are, in fact, available and reliable and in detecting system problems that may impact ISA evaluations.

Section 70.62(b). This paragraph would require the licensee to maintain process-safety information pertaining to the hazards of the materials used or produced in the process, the  ;

technology of the process, and the equipment in the process. NRC confidence in the margin of safety at its licensed facilities depends, in part, on the ability of licensees to maintain a set of current, accurate, and complete records available for NRC inspection. The process-safety information should be used in support of development of an ISA.

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3: a Section 70.62(c). This paragraph proposes requirements for conducting an ISA. There

' are four major steps in performing an ISA:

- (1) Identify all hazards at the facility, including both radiological and non-radiological hazards. Hazardous materials, their location, and quantities, should be identified, as well as all hazardous conditions, such as high temperature and high pressure, in addition, any interactions that could result in the generation of hazardous materials or conditions should be

' identified.

(2) Analyze the hazards to identify how they might result in potential accidents. These accdonts could be caused by process deviations or other events intemal to the plant, or by I credible external events, including natural phenomena such as floods, earthquakes, etc. To accomplish the task of identifying potential accidents, the licensee needs to ensure that detailed and accurate information about plant processec is maintained and made available to the i

. personnel performing the ISA.

(3) Determine the consequences of each accident that has been identified. For an accident with consequences at a "high" or " intermediate level," as defined in 10 CFR 70.61, the likelihood of such an accident must be shown to be commensurate with the consequences, as required in 10 CFR 70.61.

(4) Identify the items relied on for safety (i.e., those items that are relied on to prevent accidents or to mitigate their consequences, identified in the ISA). These items are needed to reduce the consequences or likelihood of the accidents to acceptable levels. The identification of items relied on for safety is required only for accidents with consequences at a high or intermediate level, as defined in 10 CFR 70.61.

It is expected that the licensee or applicant would perform the ISA using a " team" of individuals with expertise in engineering and process operations related to the system being evaluated; the team should include persons with experience in nuclear criticality safety, radiation safety, fire safety, and chemical process safety, as warranted by the materials and  !

potential hazards associated with the process being evaluated. At least one member of the ISA team should be an individual who has experience and knowledge that is specific to the process being evaluated. Finally, at least one individual in the team must be knowledgeable in the specific ISA methodology being used.-

)

Current Part 70 licensees, for whom the rule applies, would be required to develop I plans and submit them to NRC within 6 months of.the effective date of the rule. Each plan would identify the processes that would be cueject to an ISA, the ISA approach that would be 23

> a implemented for each process, and the schedule for completing the analysis of each process.

Licensees would be expected to complete their ISA within 4 years of the effective date of the rule; correct any unacceptable vulnerabilities identified; and submit the results to NRC for approvalin the form of an ISA summary that contains the information required by 10 CFR 70.65(b). Pending the correction of any unacceptable vulnerabilities, licensees would be expected to implement appropriate compensatory measures to ensure adequate protection until

' the vulnerability can be more appropriately corrected.

~ Applicants for licenses to operate new facilities or new processes at existing facilities

- would be expected to design their facilities or processes to protect against the occurrence of the adverse consequences identified in 10 CFR 70.61, using the baseline design criteria 10 I

..CFR 70.64(a). Before operation, applicants would be expected to update their ISAs, based on as-built conditions and submit the results to NRC as ISA summaries, along with the applications, following the requirements in 10 CFR 70.65(b).

' The Commission believes that sufficient flexibility is permitted in the ISA methodology chosen to be able to accommodate a wide range of technologies. However, to assure that sufficient flexibility exists, the Commission is requesting comments on this matter.

Section 70.62(d). - Although the ISA would play a critical role in identifying potential accidents and the items relied on for safety, the performance of an ISA would not, by itself, ensure adequate protection. In addition, as would be provided for in 10 CFR 70.62(d), an effective management system would be needed to ensure that the items relied on for safety are available and reliable to perform their function when needed. As stated before, management measures may be graded to better implement the results of the ISA.

Management measures are functions performed by the licensee, in general on a continuing basis, that are applied to items relied on for safety. Management measures include:

a) configuration management; b) maintenance; c) training and qualifications; d) procedures; e) audits and assessments; f) incident investigations; g) records management; and h) other quality assurance elements. Changes in the configuration of the facility need to be carefully controlled

- to ensure consistency among the facility design and operational requirements, the physical configuration,' and the facility documentation. Maintenance measures must be in place to ensure the availability and reliability of all hardware, identified as items relied on for safety, to j perform their function when needed. Training measures must be established to ensure that all personnel relied on for safety are appropriately trained to perform their safety functions.

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( Periodic audits and assessments of licensee safety programs must be performed to ensure that facility operations are conducted in compliance with NRC regulations and protect the worker

. and the public health and safety and the environment. When abnormal events occur,

~ investigations of those events must be carried out to determine the root cause and identify corrective actions to prevent their recurrence and to ensure that they do not lead to more serious consequences. Finally, to demonstrate compliance with NRC regulations, records that document safety program activities must be maintained for the life of the facility.

This section also would require that the safety program ensure that each item relied on for safety would perform its intended function when needed and in the context of the performance requirements of this section. The utility of the two modifying requirements,"when needed," and "in the context of the performance requirements of this section,"is clarified as follows:

The phrase "when needed" is used to acknowledge that a particular safety control need not be continuously functioning For example, it may not be operational during maintenance or calibration testing, or may not be required when the process is not operational or when special nuclear material is not present. However, the phrase, when needed, does not relieve a licensee from compliance with the performance requirements. For example, if a particular component is out for maintenance, the licensee must consider credible event sequences in developing the ISA and identifying items relied on for safety - a high-consequence event sequence still has to be highly unlikely. Compliance with the performance requirements in these cases can be established by various means including identification of additional items relied on for safety (and application of safety program management measures to them), or by limiting operations or placing the plant in a different operating mode during the maintenance of the item relied on for safety.

To illustrate, a loss of offsite power during a one-week maintenance outage of the emergency diesel generator that is relied on for safety would still be a credible event sequence.

If the loss of' power, combined with the generator's inoperable status, could result in a

. combination of dose and likelihood that exceeds a performance requirement, then the licensee would not be in compliance with the performance requirements of $70.61. A licensee cannot claim, after the maintenance, that since the power was not lost, the generator was available when needed. The concept is that the ISA is used as a risk-informed, forward-look at the credible facility hazards and their effects on plant systems and modes of operation. The rule would require that each item necessary to comply with the performance requirements be 25

7 A f identified as important to safety and placed under the safety program management controls. In identifying each item, the ISA must consider various modes of operation and the likelihood that a given safety control will be inoperable (e.g., because of being off-line for maintenance) during  ;

credible event sequences.

The section would also require that the safety control perform its function "...in the

'. context of the performance requirements of this section." This phrase indicates that the function of interest is the one credited in the ISA to meet certain consequence criteria with a certain frequency. Second, this phrase would require that additional safety controls be. defined in cases where one control does not result in compliance with the performance requirement or has periods when it is inoperable. Using the loss of offsite power example again, a licensee would still be required to meet the risk-informed performance requirements of the rule when an emergency diesel generator used as an item relied on for safety is not operable or out of service for maintenance.

' Section 70.64 Reauirements for new facilities or new orrv=smas at avistina facilities.

This section deals with baseline design criteria for new facilities or new processes at existing facilities.

A major feature of the proposed amendments to Part 70 is the requirement that licensees and applicants for a license perform an ISA and use the ISA process to develop risk-informed decisions regarding facility safety. The ISA process is applied to existing designs to identify risk insights on those areas that warrant additional preventive or mitigative measures.-

For new facilities, the proposed rule would require the performance of the ISA before construction [see the existing $70.21(f) and $70.23(a)(7)], and the updating of the ISA before beginning operations. For new processes and facilities, the Commission recognizes that good engineering practice dictates that certain minimum requirements be applied as design and safety considerations for any new nuclear process or facility. In addition, a fundamental element of NRC's safety philosophy is that designs and operations should provide for defense-in-depth protection against accidents. Therefore, the Commission has specified baseline design criteria in $70.64 that are similar in use to the general design criteria in Part 50 Appendix A; Part 72, Subpart F; and 10 CFR 60.131. The baseline design criteria identify 10 initial safety design considerations, including: a) quality standards and records; b) natural phenomena 26

I1 3; a

);

g hazards; c) fire protection; d) environmental and dynamic effects"; f) chemical protection; g)-

emergency capability; h) utility services; i) inspection, testing, and maintenance; j) criticality control; and k) instrumentation and controls. The baseline design criteria do not provide relief from compliance with the safety performance requirements of $70.61. The baseline design criteria are generally an acceptable set of initial design safety considerations, which may not be

, sufficient to ensure adequate safety for all new processes and facilities. The ISA process is intended to identify additional safety features that may be needed. On the other hand, the Commission recognizes that there may be processes or facilities for which some of the baseline

!- design criteria may not be necessary or appropriate, based on the results of the ISA. For these

' processes and facilities, any design features that are inconsistent with the baseline design criteria should be identified and justified.

L l Using the baseline design criteria and considering defense-in-depth practices in the _j P

design should result in a new facility design that is based on providing successive levels of protection such that health and safety will not be wholly dependent on any single element of the design, construction, maintenance, or operation of the facility. The net effect of incorporating defense-in-depth practices is a conservatively designed facility and system that will exhibit l greater tolerance for faiiures and extemal challenges. The risk insights obtained through performance of the ISA can be then used to supplement the final design by focusing attention on the prevention and mitigation of the potential accidents having higher-risk.

Section 70.65 Additional content of acDlicetions.

In addition to the information that currently must be submitted to NRC, under $70.22, for a license application, this section requires additional information to be submitted to demonstrate compliance with the proposed new subpart. In particular, this additional information would need to include a description of the applicant's safety program established under $70.62, a description of the management measures, and an ISA summary.

The ISA summary would contain: a) a description of the site and the facility; b) a description of the team qualifications and ISA methodology; c) the processes analyzed in the ISA and the maximum consequences of each; d) a demonstration of how the licensee meets I

8 Environmental and dynamic effects are effects that could be caused by amtnent condihons. For example, an item relied on for safety will need to function within its expected environment (i.e., under normal operating conditions,  ;

expected accedent conditions, etc.). These conditions could include high temperatures, or a corrosive environment. j lt could also include dynamic changes in surrounding conditions caused by an accident (e.g., the bursting of a high- '

pressure pipe). ,

27 l

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i I I

a e

. the requirements for criticality monitoring and alarms in 970.24; e) a demonstration of how the

- licensee meets the performaace requirements of 970.61 and, if applicable,970.64; f) a list of items relied on for safety and a description of their safety function; g) a description of the proposed standards used to assess the consequences from acute chemical exposures; and h) the definitions of "likely", "unlikely", " highly unlikely", and " credible" as used in the ISA. .

' The plant and process descriptions, ISA team qualifications and methods, and definitions of terms used in the ISA, are all needed to fully understand the facility and the ISA and how it was developed. Although some of the facility information is also requested in

. 970.22, there may be information about the facility which would be too detailed for inclusion in the general site description, but would be needed to be included here to understand the ISA and ISA results. - The demonstration of how the licensee meets $$70.24,70.61, and 70.64 is a critical element in determining whether the applicant understands and complies ath the regulations and can operate the facility safely. Another critical element is the applicant's

' identification of the items relied on for safety. Through the ISA process, the applicant should have identified potential accidents that can occur in individual processes and in the facility as a whole. As discussed earlier, these accidents are prevented or their consequences mitigated using controls that are identified in the ISA summary as items relied on for safety. It is important for NRC staff to review the items relied on for safety, that were identified as such by the applicant or licensee, to determine whether potential accidents are adequately prevented or mitigated. Since items relied on for safety play a key role in assuring that the performance requirements are met, and because the applicant has great flexibility in selecting and identifying what the actual " items" are (as discussed in relation to $70.61), the items relied on for safety would be clearly and unambiguously identified on a list. This list of items is then managed and controlled by the applicant through the management measures in 970.61 to ensure that they continue to perform the safety function required. By evaluating the ISA methodology, and the ISA summary, supplemented by reviewing the ISA and other information, as needed, at the licensee's facility, the staff can better understand the potential hazards at the facility, how the applicant plans to address these hazards, and thereby have confidence in the safety basis on which the license will be issued.

The ISA summary would be required to be submitted on the docket in conjunction with the license application but would not be considered part of the license. The ISA, on which the ISA summary is based, would be. maintained current at the licensee's facility and available for NRC review, but it would not be submitted and docketed. The information and commitments 28 l

is 1 3_ ,.

contained in the license application that are incorporated into the license conditions cannot be

~ changed without prior review and approval of NRC staff, at which time a license amendment is

issued. Although the ISA summary will be on the docket, since it is not part of the license it can 1 be changed without a license amendment, unless it reflects a change that cannot be made without prior approval per $70.72(c). However, the information used to perform the ISA, and the ISA summary, both form integral parts of the safety basis for issuance of the license and therefore must be maintained to adequately represent the current status of the facility. So that NRC knows the current status of the facility, changes to these documents, on which NRC based its safety conclusion,'are to be submitted to NRC, as discussed in 670.72.

Section 70.66 Additional reouirements for the anoroval of license a_na!!cetions.

In addition to the requirements found in the existing rule (i.e.,10 CFR 70.23), the Commission must determine that the requirements in the new subpart,10 CFR 70.60 through 70.66, will be satisfied.

Section 70.72 Facility chanoes and chance orarass. .

This section deals with changes to site, structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel after a license application has been approved.

Past incidents at fuel cycle facilities have often resulted from changes not fully analyzed, not authorized by licensee management, or not adequately understood by facility personnel.

Therefore, effective control of changes to a facility's site, structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel is a key element in assuring safety at that facility. This section would require the licensee to establish and use a system to evaluate changes and the potentialimpacts of those changes before implementing them. By using this system to evaluate, implement and track changes to the facility, the licenses can make certain changes without NRC pre-approval. If the change affects information contained in the ISA summary, the licensee would be required to notify NRC within 90 days of the change by submitting updated ISA summary pages in that time. For changes that affect the on-site documentation, such as

- the ISA, management measures or process-safety information, the licensee would be required to notify NRC within 12 months of the change. This update frequency would allow NRC staff to review the changes being made to the facility in enough time to ensure that the licensee's evaluations of potential impacts to health and safety were accurate. It also allows NRC staff to maintain relatively current facility and safety information on the docket at all times. In addition, 29 l

1

a e maintaining the license and ISA summary so that they reflect the current configuration of the facility would facilitate a relatively simple, cost-effective license renewal process.

Some changes, however, would require NRC pre-approval before they can be

' implemented. These are changes that are considered major and could have a significant impact on health and safety. The staff considered two options for the types of changes that would require NRC pre-approval.- Option 1 is consistent with the types of changes that have required pre-approval at Part 70 licensees in the past, and which the staff believes would require NRC pre-approval for only a relatively few significant changes. Option 2 is consistent with the' change control process required for Part 50 licensees (power reactors) and which the staff believes would. require more requests for NRC pre-approval.

The advantages of Option 1 are that it focuses on the most significant changes to the facility and is equivalent to looking at the highest risk changes.- it contains very little subjective criteria and is therefore easier to implement and inspect. It also would likely only result in a few license amendments a year which is generally consistent with the past practice at these facilities. Since Option 1 would permit more changes without NRC pre-approval, a relatively

- short timeframe (90 days) for submitting updated ISA summary pages is required in order for NRC to have information that reflects the current status of the facility and to be confident that adequate protection is still provided with the changes, as reflected in the ISA summary. The advantages of Option 2 are that NRC would have more control over the changes at the

- facilities, i.e., staff expects that more changes would be reviewed by the staff before being

' implemented; thus, it would be less likely that NRC would have a concem with a change after the fact; and it is consistent with the change control process at power reactors, where changes are reported only after 12 months. 1 The proposed rule language reflects Option 1.

Section 70.73 Renewal of licenses.

Under the proposed amendments to Part 70, changes to site, structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel made by the licensee pursuant to 970.72 would be document'ed on a continuing basis on-site. A description of those changes would also be sent to NRC periodically.- This process is intended to keep the documents, which support the license, current ana thereby establish a "living" license. In the past, the license renewal 2

process was burdensome to NRC and the licensee because all changes made to the facility since the last license renewal would be reviewed at one time. However, with the proposed 30

e $ 4 "living license," changes to the facility will be reviewed by NRC either before changes are made, or relatively shortly thereafter. As a result, review of the license renewal application is expected to be performed with minimal additional review of the licensee's safety program. This approval would be contingent on the licensee satisfying any requirements associated with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 as implemented in 10 CFR Part 51.

Section 70.74 Additional reportina reauirements.

The new requirements that would be incorporated in the proposed amendments to Part 70 would revise the reporting of events to NRC. This new approach, based on consideration of the risk and consequences established in 10 CFR 70.61(b) is intended to replace and expand on the approach licensees have currently been using for reporting criticality events under Bulletin 91-01. The new approach would cover all types of events, not just criticality events, and establish a timeframe for reporting that is scaled accord;ng to risk. The new reporting requirements are intended to supplement the requirements in the existing Parts 20 and 70 and elsewhere in the regulations. A more detailed discussion of the new requirements is found in the following discussion of Appendix A to Part 70.

Apoendix A Reportable Events.

The reporting of events supports NRC's need to be aware of conditions that could result in an imminent danger to the worker or to public health and safety or to the environment. In particular, NRC needs to be aware of licensee efforts to address potential emergencies.

Further, once safe conditions have been restored after an event, NRC has an interest in disseminating information on the event to the nuclear industry and other interested parties, to reduce the likelihood that the event will occur in the. future. Also, in the event of an accident, NRC must be able to respond accurately to requests for information by the public and the media. Finally, NRC must evaluate the performance of individual licensees and the industry as a whole to fulfill its statutory mandate to protect the health and safety of the worker and the public and the environment.

Licensee reporting of events would consist of two reporting classes based on the hazard

- reports that must be made in 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> and those to be reported within 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />. According to this approach, licensees would report events based on two criteria: 1) whether actual consequences have occurred or whether a potential for such consequences exists; and 2) the seriousness of the consequences. The events that must be reported within the shortest 31 l

.e e I timeframe (1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br />) are high-consequence events. These events encompass unintended criticalities and loss of criticality controls, and loss of chemical controls or the occurrence of chemical exposures that exceed the performance requirements in $70.61(b).

Less serious events or failure to meet the performance requirements for reasons not otherwise specifically stated, that have occurred shall be reported within 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />. These include chemical exposure to licensed material or hazardous chemicals that exceed the lower threshold limits in $70.61(c)(4), and events that were dismissed in the ISA based on likelihood.

Events that could potentially lead to exceeding the performance requirements in $70.61 should also be reported. Extemal events, such as a hurricane, tomado, earthquake, flood, or fire, either intemal or external to the plant, that affected or could have affected a facility, must be reported within 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />. This reporting requirement would capture, for example, a tornado

. that strikes a facility, an earthquake motion experienced by a facility, or any type of fire. Since these events could have affected a facility, NRC would want to know about such events to assess a licensee's conclusion of whether any detrimental effects did in fact occur, or could have occurred in the absence of controls that were present but not part of the safety basis.

Another category of potential events that would be reported is one that involves the existence of

. an unsafe condition that is not identified in the ISA. This condition could be caused by a deviation from established safe operating conditions, by an unanticipated and unanalyzed set of circumstances, or by an improper analysis. This type of event would be reported within 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />.

The proposed rule also would require concurrent reporting of events when a news release is made or if other Govemment agencies are notified, as is done under 10 CFR Part 50.72, to support NRC's ability to be responsive to questions conceming the safety of NRC-

. licensed facilities.

p 32 )

4

_3 A REFERENCES Graig, D.K., gLg,, "Altemative Guideline Limits for Chemicals Without Environmental Response Planning Guidelines," American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal,1995.

Fisher, D.R., Hui, T.E., Yurconic, M., and Johnson, J.R., " Uranium Hexafluoride Public Risk," Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, PNL-10065, Richland, WA, August 1994.

National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP), " Basic Radiation Protection Criteria," NCRP Report No. 39, Washington, DC,1971.

National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP),

" Recommendations on Limits for Exposure to lonizing Radiation," NCRP Report No. 91, Washington, DC,1987.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, " Proposed Methods for Regulating Major Materials Licensees," NUREG-1324, Washington, DC, February 1992.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission / Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)," Memorandum of Understanding Between NRC and OSHA; Worker Protection at NRC Ucensed Facilities" (53 FR 43950; October 31,1988).

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission," Certification of Gaseous Diffusion Plants"(59 FR 48944; September 23,1994).

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, " Abnormal Occurrence Reports: Implementation of Section 208 of Energy Reorganization Act of 1974"(61 FR 67072; December 19, 1996).

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, " Site Decommissioning Management Plan,"

NUREG-1444, Washington, DC, October 1993.

33

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a e U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, " Strategic Plan, Fiscal Year 1997 - Fiscal Year 2002," NUREG-1614, Washington, DC, September 1997.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency," Manual of Protective Action Guides and Protective Actions for Nuclear incidents," EPA-400-R-92-001, May 1992.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, " Instruction Conceming Risks from Occupational Radiation Exposure," Regulatory Guide 8.29, Rev.1, February 1996.

' Theide, L., " Emergency information Where it's Needed," DOE Risk Management Quarterly, VoIS, No 2, Richland, WA, May 1997.

These documents are available for inspection and copying for a fee at the NRC Public Document Room,2120 L Street, N.W. (Lower Level), Washington DC 20555-0001.

Copies of NUREG-1324, NUREG-1614, and NUREG-1444 may also be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Govemment Printing Office, P.O. Box 37082, Washington DC 20402-9328. . Copies are also available from the National Technical Information Service,5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield VA 22161.

Regulatory Guide 8.29 may be purchased from the Govemment Printing Office (GPO)

. at the current GPO price. Information on current GPO prices may be obtained by contacting the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Govemment Printing Office, P.O. Box 37082, Washington DC 20402-9328. Issued guides may also be purchased from the National s Technical Information Service on a standing-order basis. Details on this service may be

' obtained by. writing NTIS,5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161.

' Copies of the following draft regulatory guidance documents may be requested by writing to U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Reproduction and Distribution Services, Washington, DC 20555-0001: " Standard Review Plan for the Review of a License Application for a Fuel Cycle Facility" (Draft NUREG-1520); and " integrated Safety Analysis Guidance Document" (Draft NUREG-1513).

Finding of No Significant EnvironmentalImpact: Availability 34 1

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- p o The Commission has determined, under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended, and the Commission's regulations in Subpart A of 10 CFR Part 51, that this rule, if adopted, would not be a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment, and therefore an environmental impact statement is not required.

' The proposed amendments to Part 70 are intended to provide increased confidence in the margin of safety at certain facilities that possess a critical mass of SNM. To accomplish this objective, the amendments: (1) identify appropriate consequence criteria and the level of )

1 protection needed to prevent or mitigate accidents that exceed such criteria; (2) require affected licensees to perform an integrated safety analysis (ISA) to identify potential accidents at the -

facility and the items relied on for safety; (3) require the implementation of measures to ensure that the items relied on for safety are available and reliable to perform their function when needed; and (4) require the inclusion of the safety bases, as reflected in the ISA summary, in the license application. The language, in the proposed rule, that defines an environmental consequence of concem, is relevant to the question of environmentalimpact. Licensees would be required to provide an adequate level of protection against a "... release of radioactive material to the environment outside the restricted area in concentrations that, if averaged over 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />, exceed 5000 times the values specified in Table 2 of Appendix B to 10 CFR Part 20."

Implementation of the new amendments, including the requirement to protect against events l; that could damage the environment, is expected to result in a significant improvement in licensees * (and NRC's) understanding of the risks at their facilities and their ability to ensure j that those risks are acceptable. For existing licensees, any deficiencies identified in the ISA

. would need to be promptly addressed. ' For new licensees,6perations would not begin unless I

licensees demonstrated an adequate level of protection against potential accidents identified in i the ISA. As a result, the safety and environmental impact of the new amendments is positive.

There will be less adverse impact on the environment from operations carried out in accordance I

. with the proposed rule than if those operations were carried out in accordance with the existing Part 70 regulation.

The determination of this Environmental Assessment is that there will be no significant offsite impact on the public from this action. However, the general public should note that NRC welcomes public participation. NRC has also committed to complying with Executive Order

- (EO) 12898," Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-income Populations," dated February 11,1994, in all its actions. Therefore, NRC has also determined that there are no disproportionate, high, and adverse impacts on minority and low-35

o 4 income populations. In the letter and spirit of EO 12898, NRC is requesting public comment on any environmentaljustice considerations or questions that the public thinks may be related to this proposed rule, but somehow were not addressed. Comments on any aspect of the Environmental Assessment, including environmental justice, may be submitted to NRC, as indicated under the ADDRESSES heading.

NRC has sent a copy of the Environmental Assessment and this proposed rule to all State Liaison Officers and requested their comments on the Environmental Assessment. The Environmental Assessment is available for inspection at the NRC Public Document Room,2120 L Street NW. (Lower Level), Washington, D.C. and the Part 70 website. Single copies of the .

environmental assessment are available from Barry Mendelsohn, Office of Nuclear Material {

Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC,20555-0001, telephone (301) 415-7262; e-mail: btm1 Onrc. gov.

Paperwork Reduction Act Statement This prapanad rule amends information collection requirements that are subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501, et sec.). This rule has been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval of the paperwork requirements.

The public reporting burden for this information collection is estimated to average 70 hours8.101852e-4 days <br />0.0194 hours <br />1.157407e-4 weeks <br />2.6635e-5 months <br /> per response, and the recordkeeping burden is estimated to average 500 hours0.00579 days <br />0.139 hours <br />8.267196e-4 weeks <br />1.9025e-4 months <br /> per licensee, including the time for reviewing instructions,' searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the information collection. NRC is seeking public comment on the potential impact of the information

. collections contained in the proposed rule and on the following issues:

1. Is the proposed information collection necessary for the proper performance of NRC's function? Will the information have practical utility?
2. . Is the burden estimate accurate?
3. Is there a way to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected?
4. How can the burden of the information collection be minimized, including the use of automated collection techniques?

36 1

  • o Send comments on any aspect of this proposed information collection, including suggestions for reducing the burden, to the Records Management Branch (T-6 F33), U.S.

Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, or by Internet electronic mail at bjs10nrc. gov; and to the Desk Officer, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, NEOB-10202 (3150-0009), Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC 20503.

Comments to OMB on the information collections or on the above issues should be submitted by (insert 30 days after publication in the Federal Reaister). Comments received after this date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but assurance of consideration cannot be given to comments received after this date.

Public Protection Notification if a means usod to impose an information collection does not display a currently valid OMB control number, the NRC may not conduct nor sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, the information collection.

Regulatory Analysis The Commission has prepared a draft Regulatory Analysis on this proposed regulation.

The analysis examines the benefits and costs of the alternatives considered by the Commission. The draft Regulatory Analysis is available for inspection in the NRC Public Document Room,2120 L Street N.W. (Lower Level), Washington, D.C. and the Part 70 website. Single copies of the analysis may be obtained from Barry T. Mendelsohn, Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington,

  • DC, telephone (301) 415- 7262, e-mail: btm1 Onrc. gov.

The Commission requests public comment on the draft Regulatory Analysis. Comments on the draft analysis may be submitted to NRC as indicated under the ADDRESSES heading.

Regulatory Fiexibility Certification As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended,5 U.S.C. 605(b), the Commission certifies that this proposed rule, if adopted, would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This proposed rule would affect facilities that 37

.c .

l are authorized to possess a critical mass of SNM and who are engaged in one of the following activities: a) enriched uranium processing; b) fabrication of uranium fuel or fuel assemblies; c)

.. uranium enrichment; d) enriched uranium hexafluoride conversion; e) plutonium processing; f) fabrication of mixed-oxide fuel or fuel assemblies; g) scrap recovery of special nuclear material; or h) any other activity involving a critical mass of SNM that the Commission determines could significantly affect public health and safety or the environment. These licensees do not fall within the scope of the definition of "small entities" set forth in the Regulatory Flexibility Act, nor the size standards published by NRC (10 CFR 2.810).

i Voluntary Consensus Standards The National Technology Transfer Act of 1995, Pub. L.104-113, requires that Federal Agencies use technical standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies unless the use of such a standard is inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. In this proposed rule, the NRC proposes to use the following voluntary

)

consensus standard, ANSI /ANS Standard 8.1-1983, " Nuclear Criticality Safety in Operations

]

with Fissionable Material Outside Reactors," developed by the American Nuclear Society.

Portions of the standard were used in the definition of double contingency and in $70.61(d).

The NRC invites comment on the applicability and use of other standards.

Backfit Analysis NRC has determined that the backfit rule does not apply to this preposed rule; therefore, a backfit analysis is not required for this picposed rule because these amendments do not -

involve any provisions that would impose backfits as defined in 10 CFR Chapter 1.

List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 70 Criminal penalties, Hazardous materials transportation, Material control and accounting, Nuclear materials, Packaging and containers, Radiation protection, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Scientific equipment, Security measures, Special nuclear material.

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s o For the reasons set out in the preamble and under the authority of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended; the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, as amended; and 5 U.S.C.

553, NRC is proposing to adopt the following amendments to Part 70.

i f

i 39 Li' _

e a Part 70 - DOMESTIC LICENSING OF SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL

1. The authority citation for Part 70 continues to read as follows:

AUTHORITY: Secs. 51,53,161,182,183,68 Stat. 929,930,948,953,954, as amended, sec.

234,83 Stat. 444, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2071,2073,2201,2232,2233,2282,2297f); secs. 201, as amended,202,204,206,88 Stat.1242, as amended,1244,1245,1246 (42 U.S.C. 5841,5842, 5845,5846). Sec.193,104 Stat. 2835, as amended by Pub. L.104-134,110 Stat.1321,1321-349 (42 U.S.C. 2243).

Sections 70.1(c) and 70.20a(b) also issued under secs. 135,141, Pub. L.97-425, 96 Stat.

2232,2241 (42 U.S.C.10155,10161). Section 70.7 also issued under Pub. L 95-601, sec.10, 92 Stat. 2951 (42 U.S.C. 5851). Section 70.21(g) also issued under sec.122,68 Stat. 939 (42 U.S.C. 2152). Section 70.31 also issued under sec. 57d, Pub. L. G3-377,88 Stat. 475 (42 U.S.C.

2077). Sections 70.36 and 70.44 also issued under sec.184,68 Stat. 954, as amended (42 U.S.C.

2234). Section 70.61 also issued under secs. 186,187, 68 Stat. 955 (42 U.S.C. 2236, 2237).

Section 70.62 also issued under sec.108,68 Stat. 939, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2138).

2. The undesignated center heading " GENERAL PROVISIONS" is redesignated as "Subpart A - General Provisions."

3.In 70.4, the definitions of Acute, Available and reliable to perform their function when needed, Configuration Management, Critical mass of special nuclear material, Double contingency, Hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material, Integ rated safety analysis (ISA), Integ rated safety analysis summary, items relied on for safety, Management measures, Unacceptable performance deficiencies, and Worker are added, in alphabetical order, as follows: -

70.4 Definitions.

Acute as used in this Pcrt means a single radiation dose or chemical exposure event or multiple radiation dose or chemical exposure events occurring within a short time (24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> or less).

Available and reliable to perform their function when needed as used in Subpart H of this Part means that, based upon the analyzed, credible conditions in the integrated safety analysis,  ;

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items relied on for safety will perform their intended safety function when needed and management measures will be implemented that ensure continuous compliance with the performance requirements of $70.61 of this Part, considering factors such as necessary maintenance, operating limits, common cause failures, and the likelihood and consequences of failure or degradation of the items and measures.

Confiouration manaoement (CM) means ensuring, as part of the safety program, oversight and control of design information, safety information, and modifications (both temporary. and permanent) that might impact the ability of items relied on for safety to perform their function when needed.

Critical mass of special nuclear material (SNM) means special nuclear material in a quantity exceeding 700 grams of contained uranium-235; 520 grams of uranium-233; 450 grams of plutonium; 1500 grams of contained uranium-235, if no uranium enriched to more than 4 percent by weight of uranium-235 is present; 450 grams of any combination thereof; or one-half such quantities if massive moderators or reflectors made of graphite, heavy water, or beryllium may be present.

Double continoency means a process design that incorporates sufficient factors of safety to require at least two unlikely, independent, and concurrent changes in process conditions before a criticality accident is possible.

Hazardous chemicals oroduced from licensed materials means substances having licensed material as precursor compound (s) or substances that physically or chemically interact with licensed materials; that are toxic, explosive, flammable, corrosive, or reactive to the extent that they can endanger life or health if not adequately controlled. These include substances commingled with licensed material, and include substances such as hydrogen fluoride that is produced by the reaction of uranium hexafluoride and water, but do not include substances prior to process addition to licensed material or after process separation from licensed material.

In_tagrated safety analysis (lSA) means a systematic analysis to identify plant and external hazards and their potential for initiating accident sequences, the potential accident sequences, their likelihood and consequences, and the items relied on for safety. As used here, Integrated means 41

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Joint consideration of, a'nd protection from, all relevant hazards, including radiological, nuclear criticality, fire, and chemical. However, with respect to compliance with the regulations of this Part, the NRC requirement is limited to consideration of the effects of all relevant hazards on radiological safety, prevention of nuclear criticality accidents, or chemical hazards directly associated with NRC licensed radioactive material.

Intearated safety analysis summary means the document submitted with the license application, license amendment application, orlicense renewal application that provides a synopsis of the results of the integrated safety analysis and contains the information specified in 970.65(b).

Items relied on for safety means structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel that are relied on to prevent potential accidents at a facility that could exceed the performance requirements in 970.61 or to mitigate their potential consequences. This does not limit the licensee from identifying additional structures, systems, equipment, components, or

. activities of personnel (i.e., beyond those in the minimum set necessary for compliance with the performance requirements) as items relied on for safety.

Management measures mean the functions performed by the licensee, generally on a 1

continuing basis, that are applied to items relied upon for safety, to ensure the itmes are available and reliable to perform their functions when needed. Management measures include configuration management, maintenance, training and qualifications, procedures, audits and assessments, incident investigations, records management, and other quality assurance elements.

Unaccootable performance deficiencies mean deficiencies in the items relied on for safety or the management measures that need to be corrected to ensure an adequate level of protection as defined in 10 CFR 70.61(b), (c), or (d).

Woder means an indmdual whose assigned duties in the course of employment involve

)

exposure to radiation and/or radioactive material from licensed and unlicensed sources of radiation  ;

(i.e., an individual who is subject to an occupational dose as in 20 CFR 20.1003).-

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4. In 970.8 paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows.

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$70.8 Information collection requirements: OMB approval.

(b) The approved information collection requirements contained in this part appear in ff 70.9, 70.14, 70.19, 70.20a, 70.20b, 70.21, 70.22, 70.24, 70.25, 70.32, 70.33, 70.34, 70.38, 70.39,70.42,70.50,70.51,70.52,70.53,70.57,70.58,70.59,70.60,70.61,70.62,70.64,70.65, 70.66,70.72, and Appendix A.

5. The undesignated center heading
  • EXEMPTIONS" is redesignated as "Subpart B -

Exemptions."

ff 70.13a and 70.14 [ Redesignated]

6. Sections 70.13a and 70.14 are redesignated as $$ 70.14 and 70.17, respectively.
7. The undesignated center heading " GENERAL LICENSES" is redesignated as "Subpart C - General Licenses."
8. The undesignated center heading " LICENSE APPLICATIONS" is redesignated as "Subpart D -- License Applications."
9. The undesignated center heading " LICENSES" is redesignated as "Subpart E --

Licenses."

10. The undesignated center heading " ACQUISITION, USE AND TRANSFER OF SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL, CREDITORS' RIGHTS,"is redesignated as "Subpart F-- Acquisition, Use, and Transfer of Special Nuclear Material, Creditors' Rights."

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11. The undesignated center heading "SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL CONTROL RECORDS, REPORTS AND INSPECTIONS" is redesignated as "Subpart G -- Special Nuclear Material Control Records, Reports, and Inspections."
12. In 70.50 paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows.

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1 4 e f70.50 Reporting Requirements (c) Preparation and submission of reports. Reports made by licensees in response to the requirements of this section must be made as follows:

(1) Licensees shall make reports required by paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, and by section 70.74 and Appendix A of this Part if applicable, by telephone to the NRC Operations Center 8 To the extent that the information is available at the time of notification, the information provided in these reports must include:

(i) Caller's name, position title and call back telephone number; (ii) Date,' time, and exact location of the event; (iii) Description of the event, including; (A) Radiological or chemical hazards involved including isotopes, quantities, and chemical and physical fcrm of any material released; (B) Actual or potential health and safety consequences to the workers, the public, and the environment,' including relevant chemical and radiation data for actual personnel exposures to radiation or radioactive materials or chemicals (e.g., level of radiation exposure, concentration of chemicals, and duration of exposure);

(C) The sequence of occurrences leading to the event, including degradation or failure of structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel relied on to prevent

, potential accidents or mitigate their consequences; and (D) Whether the remaining structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel relied on to prevent potential accidents or mitigate their consequences are available and reliable to perform their function.

(iv) Extemal conditions affecting the event; (v) Additional actions taken by the licensee in response to the event; (vi) Status of the event (e.g., whether the event is on-going or was terminated);

(vii) Current and planned site status, including any declared emergency class; (viii). Notifications related to the event that were made or are planned to any local, State, or other Federal agencies; (ix) Status of any press releases related to the event that were made or are planned.  ;

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8 The commercial telephone number for the NRC Operations Center is (301) 816-5100.

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(2) Written report. Each licensee who makes a report required by paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, or by 670.74 and Appendix A of this Part if applicable, shall submit a written follow-up report within 30 days of the initial report. Written reports prepared pursuant to other regulations may be submitted to fulfill this requirement if the report contains all of the necessary information and the appropriate distribution is made. These written reports must be sent to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Document Control Desk, Washington, DC 20555, with a copy to the appropriate NRC regional office listed in Appendix D of 10 CFR Part 20. The reports must include 1

the following: 1 (i) Complete applicable information required by 670.50(c)(1);

(ii) The probable cause of the event, including all factors that contributed to the event and the manufacturer and model number (if applicable) of any equipment that failed or malfunctioned;

)

(iii) Corrective actions taken or planned to prevent occurrence of similar or identical events i in the future and the results of any evaluations or assessments; and (iv) For licensees subject to Subpart H of this Part, whether the event was identified and evaluated in the Integrated Safety Analysis.

(d) The provisions of 670.50 do not apply to licensees subject to 950.72. They do apply to those Part 50 licensees possessing material licensed under Part 70 who are not subject to the notification requirements in 50.72.

13. The undesignated center heading " MODIFICATION AND REVOCATION OF LICENSES"is redesignated as "Subpart I - Modification and Revocation of Licenses."

f$ 70.61 and 70.62 [ Redesignated)

14. Sections 70.61 and 70.62 are redesignated as 970.81 and 70.82, respectively. -
15. The undesignated center heading
  • ENFORCEMENT" is redesignated as "Subpart J -

Enforcement."

9 70.71 and 70.72 [ Redesignated]

16. Sections 70.71 and 70.72 are redesignated as 9 70.91 and 70.92, respectively.

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17. In Part 70, a new "SUBPART' H" ($$ 70.60 - 70.74) is added to read as follows:

Subpart H - Additional Requirements for Certain Licensees Authorized to Possess a Critical Mass of Special Nuclear Material.

'Sec.

  • 70.60 Applicability.

70.61 Performance requirements.

70.62 Safety program and integrated safety analysis.

70.64 Requirements for new facilities or new processes at existing facilities. 4 70.65 Additional content of applications.

70.66 Additional requirements for approval of license application.

70.72 Facility changes and change process.

70.73 Renewal of licenses.

70.74 Additional reporting requirements.

670.60 Ann!!rahility.

The regulations in $70.61 through 670.74 apply, in addition to other applicable Commission regulations, to each applicant or licensee that is or plans to be: (1) authorized to possess greater j than a critical mass of special nuclear material, and (2) engaged in enriched uranium processing, fabrication of uranium fuel or fuel assemblies, uranium enrichment, enriched uranium hexafluoride conversion, plutonium processing, fabrication of mixed-oxide fuel or fuel assemblies, scrap recovery of special nuclear material, or any other activity that the Commission determines could significantly affect public health and safety. The regulations in $70.61 through 670.74 do not apply to decommissioning activities performed pursuant to other applicable Commission regulations including $70.25 and $70.38 of this Part. Also, the regulations in 670.61 through $70.74 do not f apply to activities that are certified by the Commission pursuant to Part 76 of this chapter or licensed by the Commission pursuant to other parts of this chapter.

670.61 Performance Reauirements.

(a) Each applicant or licensee shall evaluate, in the integrated safety analysis performed in accordance with $70.62, its compliance with the performance requirements in paragraphs (b),

-(c), and (d) of this section.

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(b) The risk of each credib'e high-consequence event must be limited, unless the event is highly unlikely, through the application of engineered controls, administrative controls, or both, that reduce the likelihood of occurrence of the event or its consequence. Application of additional controls is not required for those high-consequence events demonstrated to be highly unlikely. ,

High-consequence events are those internally or externally initiated events that result in:

(1) An acute worker dose of 1 Sv (100 rem) or greater total effective dose equivalent; (2) An acute dose of 0.25 Sv (25 rem) or greater total effective dose equivalent to any l

individual located outside the controlled area identified pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section; (3) An intake of 30 mg or greater of uranium in soluble form by any individual located outside the controlled area identified pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section; or (4) An acute chemical exposure to an individual from licensed material or hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material that:

(i) Could endanger the life of a worker, or Di) Could lead to irreversible or other serious, long-lasting health effects to any individual loca'ed outside the controlled area identified pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section. If an l apraicant possesses or plans to possess quantities of material capable of such chemical exposures, then the applicant shall propose appropriate quantitative standards for these health I effects, as part of the information submitted pursuant to 70.65 of this Part.

(c) The risk of each credible intermediate-consequence event must be limited, unless the event is unlikely, through the application of engineered controls, administrative controls, or both, that reduce the likelihood of occurrence of the event or its consequence. Application of additional controls is not required for those intermediate-consequence events demonstrated to be unlikely.

Intermediate-consequence events are those intemally or externally initiated events, that are not high-consequence events, that result in:

(1) An acute worker dose of 0.25 Sv (25 rem) or greater total effective dose equivalent; (2) An acute dose of 0.05 Sv (5 rem) or greater total effective dose equivalent to any individual located outside the controlled area identified pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section; (3) A 24-hour averaged release of radioactive material outside the restricted area in concentrations exceeding 5000 times the values in Table 2 of Appendix B to 10 'CFR Part 20; or (4) An acute chemical exposure to an individual from licensed material or hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material that:

(i) Could lead to irreversible or other serious, long-lasting health effects to a worker, or 47

a

  • l (ii) Could cause mild transient health effects to any individuallocated outside the controlled area as specified in paragraph (f) of this section. If an applicant possesses or plans to possess quantities of material capable of such chemical exposures, then the applicant shall propose appropriate quantitative standards for these health effects, as part of the information submitted pursuant to 670.65 of this Part.

(d) In addition to complying with paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, the risk of nuclear criticality accidents must be limited by assuring that under normal and credible abnormal conditions, all nuclear processes are suberitical, including use of an approved rnargin of subcriticality for safety. Preventive controls and measures must be the primary means of protection against nuclear criticality accidents.

(e) Each engineered or administrative control or control system necessary to comply with paragraphs (b), (c), or (d) of this section shall be designated as an item relied on for safety. The safety program, established and maintained pursuant to 970.62 of this Part, shall ensure that each item relied on for safety will be available and reliable to perform its intended function when needed and in the context of the performance requirements of this section.

(f) Each licensee must establish a controlled area, as defined in 620.1003, in which the licensee retains the authority to determine all activities, including exclusion or removal of personnel and property from the area. For the purpose of complying with the performance requirements of this section, individuals who are not workers, as defined in $70.4, may be permitted to perform ongoing activities (e.g., at a facility not related to the licensed activities) in the controlled area, if the licensee:

(1) Demonstrates and documents, in the integrated safety analysis, that the risk for those individuals at the location of their activities does not exceed the performance requirements of Paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), (b)(4)(ii), (c)(2), and (c)(4)(ii) of this section; or (2) Provides: (i) Training in accordance with 10 CFR 19.12(a)(1)-(5) to these individuals to ensure that they are aware of the risks associated with accidents involving the licensed activities as determined by the integrated safety analysis, and (ii) Conspicuously posts and maintains notices stating where the information in 10 CFR 19.11(a) may be examined by these individuals. Under these conditions, the performance requirements for workers specified in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section may be applied to these individuals.

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670.62 Safety Proaram and intearated Safety Analysis (a) Safetyprogram. ' (1) Each licensee shall establish and maintain a safety program that demonstrates compliance with the performance requirements of $70.61. The safety program may

{

be graded such that management measures applied are commensurate with the reduction of the risk attributable to that item.: The three elements of the safety program, namely process safety -

information, integrated safety analysis, and management measures, are described in paragraphs I 1

(b) through (d) of this section.

(2) Each licensee shall establish and maintain records that demonstrate compliance with the requirements of paragraphs (b) through (d) of this section.

(3) Each licensee shall' establish and maintain a log, available for NRC inspection, I documenting each discovery that an item relied on for safety or management measure has failed ,

I to perform its function either in the context of the performance requirements of $70.61 or upon demand.' This log must identify the item relied on for safety or management measure that has l failed and the safety function affected, the date of discovery, date (or estimated date) of the failure, duration (or estimated duration) of the time that the item was unable to perform its function, any other affected items relied on for safety or management measures and their safety function,

- affected processes, cause of the failure, whether the failure was in the context of the performance requirements or upon demand or both, and any corrective or compensatory action that was taken.

The log must be initiated at the time of discovery and updated promptly upon the conclusion of q

each investigation of a failure of an item relied on for safety or management measure. l (b) Process safetyinformation. Each licensee or applicant shall maintain process safety
information to enable the performance of an integrated safety analysis. This process safety l

- information must include information pertaining to the hazards of the materials used or produced in the process, information pertaining to the technology of the process, and information pertaining 1

to the equipment in the process. ,

1

_ (c) Integrated safety analysis. (1) Each licensee or applicant shall conduct an integrated

" safety analysis, that is of appropriate detail for the complexity of the process, that identifies:

(i) Radiological hazards related to possessing or processing licensed material at its facility;  ;

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_(ii) Chemical hazards of licensed material and hazardous chemicals produced frorn licensed material; (iii) Facility hazards which could affect the safety of licensed materials and thus present an increased radiological risk; (iv) Potential accident sequences caused by process deviations or other events internal to 1 l the plant and credible external events, including natural phenomena; l l

(v) The consequence and the likelihood of occurrence of each potential accident sequence j identified pursuant to paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this section, and the methods used to determine the consequences and likelihoods; and (vi) Each item relied on for safety identified pursuant to 670.61(e) of this Part, the characteristics of its preventive, mitigative, or other safety function, and the assumptions and conditions under which the item is relied upon to support compliance with the performance requirements of $70.61.

(2) Integrated safety analysis team qualifications. In order to assure the adequacy of the integrated safety analysis, the analysis must be performed by a team with expertise in engineering I and process operations. The team shall include at least one person who has experience and knowledge specific to each process being evaluated, and persons who have experience in nuclear criticality safety, radiation safety, fire safety, and chemical process safety. One member of the team must be knowledgeable in the specific integrated safety analysis methodology being used.

(3) Requirements for existing licensees. Notwithstanding other provisions regarding the effective date for Part 70 Subpart H requirements, licensees shall comply with the provisions in paragraphs (c)(3)(i), (ii), and (iii) of this section beginning on <the date of publication of the final rule >. Individuals holding an NRC license on <the date of publication of the final rule > shall, with regard to existing licensed activities:

(i) Within 6 months of <the date of publication of the final rule >, submit for NRC approval,

- a plan that describes the integrated safety analysis approach that will be used, the processes that will be analyzed, and the schedule for completing the analysis of each process.

(ii) Within 4 years of <the date of publication of the final rule >, complete an integrated safety analysis, correct all unacceptable performance deficiencies, and submit an integrated safety analysis summary in accordance with $70.65 or the approved plan submitted under paragraph  !

l.

(c)(3)(i) of this section.  ;

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e a (iii) Pending the correction of unacceptable performance deficiencies identified during the conduct of the integrated safety analyd), the licensee shallimplement appropriate compensatory measures to ensure adequate protection.

(d) Management measures. Each applicant or licensee shall establish management measures to provide continuing assurance of compliance with the performance requirements of

$70.61. The measures applied to a particular engineered or administrative control or control system may be commensurate with the reduction of the risk attributable to that control or control

)

system. The management measures shall ensure that engineered and administrative controls and control systems that are identified as items relied on for safety pursuant to $70.61(e) of this Part are designed, implemented, and maintained, as necessary, to ensure they are available and reliable to perform their function when needed, in the context of compliance with the performance requirements of $70.61 of this Part.

670.64 Raouirements for new facilitia= or new ormerer at aviatina faniti*ian.

(a) Baseline design criteria. Each prospective applicant or licensee shall address the following baseline design criteria in the design of new facilities. Each existing licensee shall address the following baseline design criteria in the design of new processes at existing facilities that require a license amendment under $70.72. The baseline design criteria must be applied to the design of new facilities and new processes, but do not require retrofits to existing facilities or existing processes (e.g., those housing or adjacent to the new process); however, all facilities and processes must comply with the performance requirements in $70.61. Licensees shall maintain the application of these criteria unless the evaluation performed pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section demonstrates that a given item is not relied on for safety or does not require adherence to the specified criteria.

(1) Quality standards and records. The design must be developed and implemented in accordance with management measures, to provide adequate' assurance that items relied on for safety will be available and reliable to perform their function when needed. Appropriate records of these items must be maintained by or under the control of the licensee throughout the life of the facility.

(2) Natural obenomena hazards. The design must provide for adequate protection against natural phenomena with consideration of the most severe documented historical events for the site.

51

J (3) Fire orotection. The design must provide for adequate protection against fires and explosions.

(4) Environmentai and dynamic effects. The design must provide for adequate protection from environmental conditions and dynamic effects associated with normal operations, maintenance, testing, and postulated accidents that could lead to loss of safety functions.

(5) Chemical orotection. The design must provide for adequate protection against chemical risks produced from licensed material, plant conditions which affect the safety of licensed material, I and hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material.

(6) Emeraency caoability. The design must provide for emergency capability to maintain control of:

(i) Licensed material; (ii) Evacuation of personnel; and (iii) Onsite emergency facilities and services that facilitate the use of available offsite services.

(7) Utility servjggs. The design must provide for continued operation of essential utility services.

(8) Inspection. testina. and maintenance. The design of items relied on for safety must provide for adequate inspection, testing, and maintenance, to ensure their availability and reliability to perform their function when needed.

(9) Criticality control. The design must provide for criticality controlincluding adherence to the double contingency principle.

(10) Instrumentation and controls. The design must provide for inclusion of instrumentation and control systems to monitor and control the behavior of items relied on for safety. 1 (b) Facility and system design and plant layout must be based on defense-in-depth practices *. The design process must incorporate, to the extent practicable:

  • As used in {70.64, defense-in-depth practices means a design philosophy, applied from the outset and through completion of the design, that is based on providing successive levels of protection )

such that health and safety will not be wholly dependent upon any single element of the design, l construction, maintenance, or operation of the facility. The net effect of incorporating defense-in-depth practices is a conservatively designed facility and system that will exhibit greater tolerance to failures

]

and extemal challenges. The risk insights obtained through performance of the integrated safety analysis can be then used to supplement the final design by focusing attention on the prevention and ,

mitigation of the higher-risk potential accidents.

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3 s (1) Preference for the selection of engineered controls over administrative controls to increase overall system reliability; and (2) Features that enhance safety by reducing challenges to items relied on for safety.

670.65 Additional content of aoolicatio_n_sm (a) In addition to the contents required by 670.22, each application must include a description of the applicant's safety program established under 670.62, including the integrated safety analysis summary and a description of the management measures.

(b) The integrated safety analysis summary must be submitted with the license or renewal application (and amendment application as necessary), but shall not be incorporated in the license.

How3ver, changes to the integrated safety analysis summary shall meet the conditions of 670.72.

The integrated safety analysis summary must contain:

(1) A general description of the site with emphasis on those factors that could affect safety (i.e., meteorology, seismology);

(2) A general description of the facility with emphasis on those areas that could affect safety, including an identification of the controlled area boundaries; (3) A description of each process (defined as a single reasonably simple integrated unit operation within an overall production line) analyzed in the integrated safety analysis in sufficient detail to understand the theory of operation; and, for each process, the hazards that were identified in the integrated safety analysis pursuant to l70.62(c)(1)(l)-(iii) and a general description of the types of accident sequences; (4) Information that demonstrates the licensee's compliance with the performance requirements of $70.61; the requirements for criticality monitoring and alarms in 670.24; and, if applicable, the requirements of 670.64; (5) A description of the team, qualifications, and the methods used to perform the integrated safety analysis; (6) A list briefly describing all items relied on for safety which are identified pursuant to 670.61(e) in sufficient detail to understand their functions in relation to the performance requirements of 670.61; (7) A description of the proposed quantitative standards used to assess the consequences from acute chemical exposure to licensed material or chemicals produced from licensed materials which are on-site, or expected to be on-site as described in 670.61(b)(4) and (c)(4);

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(8) A descriptive list that identifies all items relied on for safety that are the sole item preventing or mitigating an accident sequence that exceeds the performance requirements of

. $70.61; and (9) A description of the definitions of likely, unlikely, highly unlikely, and credible as used in the evaluations in the integrated safety analysis.

670.66 Additional reauirements for aooroval of license aoolication.

An application for a license from an applicant subject to Subpart H will be approved if the Commission determines that the applicant has complied with the requirements of $70.21,670.22, 970.23 and $70.60 through $70.65.

6 70.72 Facility chanaes and chance process.

(a) The licensee shall establish a configuration management system to evaluate, implement, and track each change to the site, structures, processes, systems, equipment, components, computer programs, and activities of personnel. This system must be documented in written procedures and must assure that the following are addressed prior to implementing any change:

(1) The technical basis for the change; (2) Impact of the change on safety and health or control of licensed material; (3) Modifications to existing operating procedures including any necessary training or retraining before operation; (4) Authorization requirements for the change; (5) For temporary changes, the approved duration (e.g., expiration date) of the change; and

. (6) The impacts or modifications to the integrated safety a nalysis, integrated safety analysis summary, or other safety program information, developed in accordance with 670.62.

(b) Any change to site, structures, processes, systems, equipment, components, computer programs, and activities of personnel must be evaluated by the licensee as specified in paragraph (a) of this section, before the change is implemented. The evaluation of the change must determine, before the change is implemented, if an amendment to the license is required to be  ;

submitted in accordance with 670.34. l 1

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I (c) The licensee may make changes to the site, structures, processes, systems, equipment, components, computer programs, and activities of personnel, without prior Commission approval, if the change:

(1) does not:

5 (i) Create new types of accident sequences that, unless mitigated or prevented, would exceed the performance requirements of 70.61 and that have not previously been described in the integrated safety analysis summary; or (ii) Use new processes, technologies, or control systems for which the licensee has no prior )

experience; (2) Does not remove, without at least an equivalent replacement of the safety function, an 1 item relied on for safety that is listed in the integrated safety analysis summary; (3) Does not alter any item relied on for safety, listed in the integrated safety analysis summary, that is the sole item preventing or mitigating an accident sequence that exceeds the performance requirements of 670.61; and (4) is not otherwise prohibited by this section, license condition, or order.

I 1

(d)(1) For any changes that affect the integrated safety analysis summary, as submitted in f

accordance with 670.65, but do not require NRC pre-approval, the licensee shall submit revised pages to the integrated safety analysis summary, to NRC, within 90 days of the change.

(2) For changes that require pre-approval under 670.72, the licensee shall submit an amendment request to the NRC in accordance with 670.34 and 70.65.

(3) A brief summary of all changes to the records required by 670.62(a)(2) of this Part, that are made without prior Commission approval, must be submitted to NRC every 12 months.

(e) If a change covered by Q70.72 is made, the affected on-site documentation must be j updated promptly.

(f) The licensee shall maintain records of changes to its facility carried out under this section. These records must include a written evaluation that provides the bases for the f 8

Any change in the defining characteristics of the elements of an accident sequence may change the " type" of the accident sequence for a given process. For example, a new type of accident could involve a different initiator, significant changes in the consequence, or a change in the safety j function of a control (e.g., temperature limiting device versus a flow limiting device).

{

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l determination that the changes do not require prior Commission approval under paragraph (c or d) of this section. These records must be maintained until termination of the license.

670.73 Renewal of licenses.

Applications for renewal of a license must be filed in accordance with $$2.109,70.21,70.22, 70.33,70.38, and 70.65. Information contained in previous applications, statements, or reports filed with the Commission under the license m'ay be incorporated by reference, provided that these references are clear and specific.

. $ZQ.74 Additional recci1;ric reauirements.-

(a) Reports to NRC Operations Center.

-(1) Each licensee shall report to the NRC Operations Center the events described in Appendix A to Part 70.

(2) Reports must be made by a knowledgeable licensee representative and by any method -

that will ensure compliance with the required time period for reporting.

(3) The information provided must include a description of the event and other related information as described in 970.50(c)(1)

-(4) Follow-up information to the reports must be provided until all information required to be reported in $70.50(c)(1) of this Part is complete. j (5) Each licensee shall provide reasonable assurance that reliable communication with the NRC Operations Center is available during each event.

(b) Written Reports. Each licensee who makes a report required by paragraph (a)(1) of this

~ section shall submit a written follow-up report within 30 days uf the initial report. The written report must contain the information as described in 670.50(c)(2).

i 56

Il .

Appendix A to Part 70 - Reportable Safety Events As required by 10 CFR 70.74, licensees subject to the requirements in Subpart H of Part 70, shall report:

(a) One hour reports. Events to be reported to the NRC Operations Center within 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> of discovery, supplemented with the information in 10 CFR 70.50(c)(1) as it becomes available, followed by a written report within 30 days:

(1) An inadvertent nuclear criticality.

(2) An acute intake by an individual of 30 mg or greater of uranium in a soluble form.

(3) An acute chemical exposure to an individual from licensed material or hazardous chemicals produced from licensed material that exceeds the quantitative standards established to satisfy the requirements in $70.61(b)(4).

(4) An event or condition such that no items relied on for safety, as documented in the Integrated Safety Analysis summary, remain available and reliable, in an accident sequence evaluated in the Integrated Safety Analysis, to perform their function:

(i) In the context of the performance requirements in 670.61(b) and f70.61(c), or (ii) Prevent a nuclear criticality accident (i.e., loss of all controls in a particular sequence). ]

(5) Loss of controls such that only one item relied on for safety, as documented in the Integrated Safety Analysis summary, remains available and reliable to prevent a nuclear criticality accident, and has been in this state for greater than eight hours.

(b) Twenty-fourhourreports. Events to be reported to the NRC Operations Center within 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> of discovery, supplemented with the information in 10 CFR 70.50(c)(1) as it becomes available, followed by a written report within 30 days:

57

, e (1) Any event or condition that results in the facility being in a state that was not analyzed, was improperly analyzed, or is different from that analyzed in the Integrated Safety Analysis, and which results in failure to meet the performance requirements of 70.61. ,

(2) Loss or degradation of items relied on for safety that results in failure to meet the performance requirement of 70.61.

(3) An acute chemical exposure to an individual from licensed material or hazardous chemicals produced from licensed materials that exceeds the quantitative standards that satisfy the requirements of 670.61(c)(4).

(4) Any natural phenomenon or other extemal event, including fires internal and extemal to the facility, that has affected or may have affected the intended safety function or availability or reliability of one or more items relied on for safety.

(5) An occurrence of an event or process deviation that was considered in the integrated Safety Analysis and:

(i) Was dismissed due to its likelihood; or (ii) Was categorized as unlikely and whose associated unmitigated consequences would have exceeded those in 970.61(b) had the item (s) relied on for safety not performed their safety function (s).

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0 m (c) Concurrent Reports. Any event or situation, related to the health and safety of the public or onsite personnel, or protection of the environment, for which a news release is planned or notification to other government agencies has been or will be made, shall be reported to the NRC Operations Center concurrent to the news release or other notification.

Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this day of .1999.

For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Annette Vietti-Cook, Secretary of the Commission.

1 59

e a DISPOSITION OF STAFF REQUIREMENTS MEMORANDUM (SRM) ISSUES in response to SECY-98-185, the Commission issued a Staff Requirements Memorandum .4 7 (SRM), dated December 1,1995, that directed the staff to obtain stakeholder input and revise the draft proposed 10 CFR Part 70 rule revisions while considering the input received, and according to Commission direction. In that SRM, the Commission directed the staff to:

(1) decide what is fundamental, for NRC's regulatory purposes, for inclusion as part of the license or docket, and what can be justified from a public health and safety and cost-benefit basis, and assure that Part 70 captures, for submittal, those few significant changes that currently would require license amendments; (2) require licensees / applicants to address baseline design criteria and develop a preliminary integrated safety analysis (ISA) for new processes and new facilities; (3) Justify, on a health and safety or cost benefit basis, any requirement to conduct a decommissioning ISA; (4) require that any new backfit pass a cost-benefit test, without the " substantial" increase-in-safety test; (5) require the reporting of certain significant events because of their potential to impact worker or public health and safety; (6) clarify the basis for use of chemical safety and chemical consequence criteria, particularly within the context of the Memoranda of Understanding with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and other Government agencies; (7) critically review the Standard Review Plan (SRP) to ensure that by providing specific acceptance criteria .it does not inadvertently prevent licensees or applicants from suggesting attemate means of demonstrating compliance with the rule; and (8) request input on how applicable ISA methodologies should be employed in the licensing of new technologies for use within new or existing facilities.

The following discussion describes how the staff incorporated the Commission direction.

!p_ sue 1(ah ISA Sige rr ,arv in the License A. Contents of SECY-98-185 in SECY-98-185 the staff proposed that the results or summary of the ISA be submitted along with the license application and that this information would be considered part of the license.

This was stated in 10 CFR 70.65, which addressed the additional information that is required to be submitted with the license application, to comply with the new proposed subpart. One of the reasons for including the ISA summary as part of the license was to control, and to keep NRC informed of, future changes to the document.

B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in an SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows: '

"The Commission agrees that Part 70 should require licensees to perform, document, maintain, and update an Integrated Safety Analysis (ISA)." " The Commission was not persuaded that it is necessary for the results of the ISA to be included in the license and is l 1 Attachment 2 I

1

m s'

concerned that such a requirement would bring with it the need for what appears to be an unworkable 10CFR 50.59-like change process.

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language During the December 3-4,1998 public meeting, the Nuclear Energy institute (NEI) stated its continued concern that placing the ISA summary in the license would create numerous and unnecessary license amendments, in a follow-up letter dated December 22,1998 NEl stated that it concurred with the Commission that licensees should be required to perform, document, maintain, and update an ISA; however NEl does not believe the ISA summary should be in the license it stated:

"This requirement would create an unnecessary administrative burden in managing commercially sensitive documents, would drastically increase the number of requests for license amendments (via a 10 CFR 50.59-like change process), would require appreciable administrative support and would force both the NRC and licensee to allocate significant resources away from safety at the facilities."

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments in response to these concerns the staff has removed the requirement for the ISA summary to be included as part of the license. The summary is required to be submitted in conjunction with the license application but will be maintained on the docket. Since the document is not contained in the license, an amendment is not required before a change for those changes that are permitted by 10 CFR 70.72(c).

l

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l lasue 1(b): 10 CFR 70.72 Chanae Process l

A. Contents of SECY-98-185 in SECY-98-185 the staff proposed a modified 10 CFR 50.59-type change process.

Section 70.72 stated A licensee may make changes to site, structures, systems, equipment, components, and activities of personnel, without prior Commission approval, if the change-  !

1) Results in, at most, a minimalincrease in the likelihood or consequences of an j accident previously evaluated in the ISA;
2) Would not create a potential for an accident different from any previously evaluated in the ISA; and z
3) is not inconsistent with NRC requirements and license conditions.

B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in an SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"With regard to changes to the ISA or safety program, Part 70 does need to capture for submittal those few significant changes that currently would require license amendments. The staff should decide what is fundamental for NRC's regulatory purposes for inclusion as part of a license or docket and what can be justified from a public health and safety and cost-benefit basis."

C Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language NEl has commented that the proposed change process in SECY-98-185 would require too many amendments and would require NRC pre-approval for small changes that industry is currently allowed to make without pre-approval. l in a letter dated January 26,1999. NEl stated that the change mechanism should be structured

" to limit the number of change (and license amendment) requests to the NRC to those that are risk-significant..." and "...(it) should be risk-informed and be consistent with current practices in the regulation of fuel cycle facilities."

In addition, NEl also stated in that letter:

"NEl is concerned, however, that the proposed 70.72 change mechanism may prove difficult to implement. The inherently qualitative nature of the ISA used to establish whether or not NRC pre-approval is needed for a change makes assessment of what j constitutes '...a minimal increase...' a highly subjective call".

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments in response to these concerns the staff has revised the change process as reflected in Section 70.72. The staff reviewed alllicense amendment requests that NRC has received for Part 70 licensees over the past 3 years. In addition, the Task Force determined that only substantial changes to the facilities required license amendments in the past for fuel cycle licensees, such j 3

a e

as the creation and use of a new process at a facility (i.e., downblending, or increased enrichment). This section was then revised to place the threshold for pre-approval of changes at a level consistent with past practice. - In addition the subjective "more than minimal" words were removed and specific situations where pre-approval would be required were added. This section was also modified to tie-back to the information submitted as part of the ISA summary.

This helps remove the subjective nature of the determination or pre-approval, and made it clear

- which information should be considered when making this determination.

I 1

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_. _ _ _ _ _ o

r O D lasue 2(a): Baseline Desian Criteria (BDC)

A. Contents of SECY-98-185 in SECY-98-185,10 CFR 70.64, the staff proposed that a set of 10 BDC be applied to new facilities and to new processes at existing facilities. These BDC represent design principles that were to be applied from the outset of the design activity (i.e., before obtaining risk information through the performance of the ISA or preliminary ISA). The draft statement of considerations for SECY-98-185 explained the purpose of the BDC requirements:

. . . for new processes and facilities, the Commission recognizes that good engineering practice dictates that certain minimum requirements be applied as design and safety considerations for any new nuclear process or facility.

Therefore, the Commission has specified baseline design criteria in 10 CFR 70.64 that are similar to the general design criteria in Part 50, Appendix A; Part 72, Subpart F; and 10 CFR 60.131. The baseline design criteria identify 10 initial safety design considerations, including: quality standards and records; natural phenomena hazards; fire protection; environmental and dynamic effects; chemical protection; emergency capability; utility services; inspection, testing, and maintenance; criticality control; and instrumentation and controls. The baseline design criteria do not provide relief from compliance with the safety performance requirements of [then) 10 CFR 70.60. The baseline design criteria are generally an acceptable set of initial design safety considerations, which may not be sufficient to assure adequate safety for all new processes and facilities.

The ISA process is intended to identify additional safety features that may be needed. On the other hand, the Commission recognizes that there may be processes or facilities for which some of the baseline design criteria may not be necessary or appropriate, based on the results of the updated ISA. For such processes and facilities, any design features that are inconsistent with the baseline design criteria should be identified and justified.

B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in the SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"Part 70 should also require licensees / applicants to address baseline design criteria . . . for new processes and new facilities."

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language NEl provided two separate written comments on this issue during the period of public interaction on the staff's draft requirements. NEl's second set of comments was a change in position from the first. In addition, one existing Part 70 licensee submitted comments in this area through the World Wide Web discussion forum. Each of the comments is described below.

In a January 26,1999, letter, NEl commented on the BDC requirement in SECY-98-185:

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i I

. . . the December 1,1998 Staff Requirements Memorandum (SRM) for SECY-98-185 supports the need for a license applicant to address baseline criteria in the design of a new facility or process. NEl recommends that this requirement remain in the proposed Part 70 revisions, but that it not apply to existing licensees."

The basis provided for this recommendation and the added emphasis on the word address was'

given by NEl as

. . . a properly executed ISA will have already addressed baseline design criteria and other factors to protect against undesirable consequences in a risk-informed manner. There is, therefore, no need for a current licensee to address or adhere ,

! to the baseline design criteria of 70.74 [ sic; 70.64 intendedj. The license l commitment to perform, implement, update, and maintain an ISA is a broad  !

i licensing basis which encompasses, by reference, stringent baseline design l criteria. NEl further believes that changes to an existing facility (e.g., process technology) should not be subject to the @70.64 baseline design criteria.

in a second set of written comments provided March 26,1999, NEl commented on the staff's

revised rule language that was posted on the World Wide Web on March 1,1999. These NEl I

recommendations represented changes in position from the earlier NEl comments. NEl no longer objected to the application of BDC to existing licensees, subject to limitation and clarification:  ;

The baseline design criteria (BDC) should be clarified to state that BDC should not be backfitted onto existina facilities or processes, even if the new process is housed in an i existing building or is adjacent to an existing process. Unless a licensee proposes a l l change that lies outside a facility's licensing basis, the licensee should not be subject to i l the provisions of $70.64. For new processes at existing facilities NEl has modified  ;

970.64 to state that the BDC would only apply if implementation of the new process j would require a license amendment under 70.72. j NEl provided suggested rewording for 10 CFR 70.64(a) and also for 10 CFR 70.64(b), l regarding a design preference for the selection of engineered controls over administrative controls. NEl a!so: (1) recommended deletion of the definition "new process at existing facility"; (2) commented that the regulation should not mandate that licensees identify a

" defense-in-depth" strategy or incorporate " defense-in-depth" design principles for new facilities and new processes at existing facilities; and (3) recommended that the BDC on instrumentation and controls should be incorporated into the BDC for inspection, testing, and maintenance 1 (under a new name, " monitoring, inspection, testing, and maintenance"). NEl stated that

" defense-in-depth" was appropriate for inclusion as guidance, but was not appropriate for rule language.

The only other comment related to BDC was submitted by a Part 70 licensee on the World Wide Web site discussion forum. The comment took issue with the draft definition posted by the staff - New Processes at Existing Facilities - stating that one reasonable interpretation of the definition would result in many more changes requiring application of BDC, and NRC preapproval of the new process, than the staff likely intended.

6

. o D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments The new rule language continues to apply BDC to new facilities and new processes at existing facilities. The staff believes that the clarifications that have been made to the draft rule text related to BDC are consistent with the Commission's direction provided in the SRM and will partially address NEl's and industry's concerns in this area. An exception is that, contrary to the NEl comment, the rule continues to require that the design process incorporate defense-in-depth practices in the design of new facilities and processes.

The staff generally agrees with the opproach recommended in NEl's comments submitted on March 26,1999. In summary, NEl's suggested approach requires application of the BDC to new processes at existing facilities if the new processes would require a license amendment under the 10 CFR 70.72 (i.e, "650.59-like") facility change process -- changes under 10 CFR 70.72 that are not new processes (e.g., component-level changes) would not be subject to the BDC. The staff agrees with an NEl comment that the definition of "new processes at existing facilities" is unnecessary in 10 CFR 70.4, because the terrn is adequately described in section 10 CFR 70.64. The staff did not agree with NEl's previous recommendation to, in effect, only apply BDC to new licensees.

The staff believes the BDC are consistent with risk-informed regulation, in that, for new processes or new facilities, NRC would recognize that, because of factors such as limited operating experience, good engineering practice dictates that certain minimum requirements be applied as design and safety principles, generally independent of the risk informed information that will be ultimately obtained and incorporated through the ISA. Note that the draft rule would allow for later incorporation of risk information, obtained through the ISA, that suggests that some BDC do not apply, or that alternative or additional BDC are appropriate for the specific process being analyzed.

The staff has clarified the BDC rulo language in response to NEl's concern that application of BDC to "new processes" should not result in the need for retrofits to existing facilities / processes, even if the new process is housed in an existing building or is adjacent to an existing process. The staff agrees that the BDC are intended to apply only to the new process or new facility, and should not be construed to require retrofitting of existing facilities.

However, every process or facility would need to comply with the performance requirements of 10 CFR 70.61.

The staff does not agree with NEl's recommendation to delete the requirements that, for newly-designed facilities and processes," facility and system design and plant layout must be based ,

on defense-in-depth practices." To clarify this issue, the staff added a footnote to section I 10 CFR 70.64(b) that discusses the relevance and use of the term " defense-in-depth." The staff agrees with NEl's comments regarding preference of engineered controls over ,

administrative controls (to increase reliability). Words similar to those proposed by NEl were )

incorporated, in lieu of the SECY-98-185 language, which expressed preference for " passive <

systems" over " active systems." This language also helps clarify the meaning of " defense-in- I depth."

The staff also does not agree with NEl's recommendation to delete BDC number 10,

" Instrumentation and Control Systems." NEl's comments of March 26 stated that this BDC  ;

1 7

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_ should be incorporated into'the BDC for " Inspection, Testing, and Maintenance" (under a new name," Monitoring, inspection, Testing, and Maintenance"). The staff prefers a separate BDC for instrumentation and control systems, to be consistent with other Commission regulations

(e.g.,10_CFR 60.131), and because the term " monitoring" as used in the NEl-suggested changes connotes " instrumentation," but not necessarily " controls."

\

8

  • O Issue 2b: Preliminary ISA A. Contents of SECY-98-185 In SECY-98-185,10 CFR 70.62(a)(3) of the staff's proposed language required each applicant for a new facility or new process at an existing facility to perform a preliminary ISA and submit the results to NRC before construction of the facility or process. The preliminary ISA was to be submitted, but NRC approval was not required. The preliminary ISA would include facility and process description and design information that demonstrates the applicant's incorporation of criticality monitoring and alarm requirements in 10 CFR 70.24, the BDCs in 10 CFR 70.64, and the performance requirements. The preliminary ISA would also describe any proposed relaxation in the application of the BDC. The statement of considerations explained the preliminary ISA requirements:

Based on [the new process' or new facility's] initial designs, the applicants are expected to perform preliminary ISAs before construction of facilities. If the ISA results show deficiencies in the design, the design should be modified to assure that the items and measures planned to protect against identified accidents are adequate. Or3 the other hand, if the ISA results show that a given item at a given facility is not relied on for safety, or that it does not require full adherence to the baseline criteria, then the facility design may be modified accordingly. The applicant is expected to submit the results of the preliminary ISA, based on the modified design of the facility, to NRC before construction. However, NRC approvalis not necessary for the applicant to proceed with construction. The submittal should include the identification of all cases where a deviation from the baseline criteria is proposed, along with a justification for that decision. The submittal of the preliminary ISA for review by NRC provides an opportunity for applicants to get early feedback on the design of their facilities or processes. It is much more cost-effective to correct problems identified at the design stage than after the facility has been constructed.

B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in the SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"Part 70 should also require licensees / applicants to . . . develop preliminary ISA for new processes and new facilities."

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language NEl provided two separate written comments on preliminary ISA during the period of public interaction on the staff's draft requirements. NEl's second set of comments was a change in position from the first. In addit;on, one existing Part 70 licensee submitted comments in this area through the World Wide Web discussion forum. Each of the comments is described below.

At first, in a December 22,1998, letter, NEl expressed support of performance and submittal (for NRC review, but not approval) of the preliminary ISA. NEl noted that the preliminary ISA is 9

0 i

a concept that is consistent with industry's current practice and the concepts supported by the American Institute of Chemical Engineering (AIChE), under the name " Process Hazards Analysis (PHA)." Therefore, NEl recommended a change to the term, preliminaryprocess hazards analysis (PHA) throughout the proposed Part 70 revisions and suggested a definition l '

of preliminary PHA be included in Section 70.4 of the rule. NEl remarked:

A license applicant would submit a preliminary PHA to the NRC at the conceptual engineering phase of the project. NRC could use the preliminary PHA for informational purposes, acknowledging that the process or facility design may  ;

undergo several refinements and redesigns prior to its eventual construction and J commissioning. Based on the results of the submitted, preliminary PHA, the NRC 1 would communicate to the applicant any concerns (e.g. over the proposed design or engineering methodology, inadequate compliance with current baseline design criteria, etc.) and recommendations for improvement.

in a second written comment provided March 26,1999, NEl commented on the staff's revised rule language that was posted on the World Wide Web on March 1,1999. This version of the j draft rule clarified the function (which remained consistent with that in SECY-98-185) of the preliminary PHA and its relationship to the ISA. The new NEl recommendation was for deletion of the definition preliminaryprocess hazard analysis, and a change in terminology from preliminary process hazard analysis to preliminary process hazard evaluation. NEl further 1 recommended that submittal of the preliminary process hazard analysis to NRC not be l required:

The requirement to prepare a preliminary process hazards evaluation (@70.64(c))

for new facilities or processes appears open-ended. The Rule specifies neither 1 how the preliminary process hazards evaluation is to be used in the licensing l

process nor what response the NRC is to provide to the license applicant upon  ;

receipt and review of the submitted information. Applicants for Part 70 licenses {

have traditionally discussed proposed projects or facility changes with the NRC. j The NRC has always supported this prudent and open exchange of information l and industry will continue this approach in the future. NEl does not see a need to codify in Part 70 the requirement to submit a preliminary process hazards ,

evaluation, especially when no approval of this analysis is required or formal l feedback from the NRC is mandated. NEl recommends, therefore, that paragraphs (4) and (5) of draft 970.74 [ sic; 70.64 is the intended reference) be deleted. [ note: 10 CFR 70.64(c)(4)-(S) in SECY-98-185 concemed submittal of the preliminary ISA to NRC and noted that its NRC approval was not required].

The only other comment related to preliminary ISA was submitted by a Part 70 licensee on the World Wide Web site discussion forum. The comment was that although performance of a prefirninary process hazards analysis appears to be a reasonable requirement, providing it to NRC before construction is an exercise that appears to have no function in the licensing process, and forcing early and sufficient pre-licensing communication through regulation is inappropriate.

10

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I D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments in the staff's proposed rule language, any requirements regarding the preliminary PHA (or preliminary 1SA) have been removed. The staff reviewed the existing provisions in Part 70 to I see how they relate to the new revisions that will be added to Part 70 Subpart H. Relevant existing provisions are in 10 CFR 70.21(f) and 70.23(c)(2). Section 70.21(f) requires: 1 An application for a license to possess and use special nuclear material for processing and fuel fabrication, scrap recovery, or conversion of uranium hexafluoride, or for the conduct of any other activity which the Commission has determined pursuant to subpart A of part 51 of this chapter will significantly affect the quality of the environment shall be filed at least 9 months prior to  !

commencement of construction of the plant or facility in which the activity will be )

conducted, and shall be accompanied by an Environmental Report required )

under subpart A of part 51 of this chapter.

Similarly,10 CFR 70.23(a)(7), and (by reference) 10 CFR Part 51, require that:

Where the proposed activity is processing and fuel fabrication, scrap recovery, conversion of uranium hexafluoride, uranium enrichment facility construction and i operation, or any other activity which the Commission determines will significantly affect the quality of the environment, the Director of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards or his designee, before commencement of construction of the plant or facility in which the activity will be conducted, on the basis of l information filed and evaluations made pursuant to subpart A of part 51 of this chapter, has concluded, after weighing the environmental, economic, technical, '

and other benefits against environmental costs and considering available alternatives, that the action called for is the issuance of the proposed license, with any appropriate conditions to protect environmental values. Commencement of construction prior to this conclusion is grounds for denial to possess and use special nuclear material in the plant or facility. As used in this paragraph, the term ' commencement of construction' means any clearing of land, excavation, or j other substantial action that would adversely affect the environment of a site.

The term does not mean site exploration, roads necessary for site exploration, borings to determine foundation conditions, or other preconstruction monitoring or testing to establish background information related to the suitability of the site or the protection of environmental values.

l These two provisions capture many facilities for which the BDC and preliminary ISA l requirements were intended; however, the provisions may not apply to certain new processes at i existing facilities. The staff believes that for new facilities (i.e., new constructions), the license ,

application and ISA Summary will be submitted pursuant to 10 CFR 70.65 before construction )

begins. Note that one of the primary purposes of the preliminary ISA, as stated in SECY j 185, was that it ". . . provides an opportunity for applicants to get early feedback [from NRC) on the design of their facilities or processes. It is much more cost-effective to correct problems identified at the design stage than after the facility has been constructed." Because the ISA (the complete hazard analysis) will be completed and the ISA summary submitted before l

l 11 i 1

F, a e construction, NRC will have an opportunity to comment on the design adequacy before construction begins.

In general, the staff agrees with the approach recommended in NEl's comments submitted on March 26,1999. However, the staff further believes that, absent a submittal, it is unnecessary to require performance of the preliminary PHA in the Part 70 licensing regulations. The staff believes that the preliminary ISA could be a valuable pre-licensing tool, but absent submittal or approval by NRC, the staff agrees with the comment submitted on the Website that the prelianinary ISA does not perform a function in the licensing process.

The staff agrees with NEl that past pre-licensing communications between NRC and prospective applicants for new licenses or new processes have been adequate. A regulatory requirement to formalize this communication is, therefore, not necessary at this time. Although the staff encourages performance of the preliminary PHA because it should provide valuable information about the safety of the facility design; the decision to perform it and use it in pre-licensing communications with NRC (for example, to avoid later facility retrofits to satisfy NRC licensing requirements) is largely a business decision that the staff recommends be left to the applicant. If this is done, staff recommends that it be done early in the process (i.e., at the 30 percent conceptual design stage).

12

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loue 3: Decommissiorl ina ISA A. Contents of SECY-98-185 in SECY-98-185, the staff proposed the following requirement as 10 CFR 70.62(b):

"If the decommissioning of a facility involves potentially hazardous activities such as chemical treatment of wastes, each licensee shall perform an ISA of the decommissioning process, correct any unacceptable vulnerabilities identified in the ISA, and submit the results to NRC for approval before beginning such decommissioning activities."

B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in the SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"The Commission may support the proposed requirement for the coriduct of a decommissioning ISA if it can be justified on a health and safety or cost-benefit basis. However, the Commission is concerned that this requirement appears somewhat redundant with that require'dby NRC's 1997 decommissioning rule (Part 20) that applies to Part 70 as well as other licensees."

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language One comment was received on this issue during the period of public interaction on the staff's draft requirements. The NEl, in a December 22,1998, letter, commented:

NEl believes that a separate decommissioning ISA is not warranted.

Decommissioning should be viewed as simply one, albeit the last, phase of operation of a licensed facility. As such, the facility's existing ISA program can be used to assess the potential hazards of activities and procedures proposed for use in the decommissioning phase. Any required changes to the ISA and facility operations to protect the health and safety of workers and the public during decommissioning can be implemented within the framework of the existing ISA program. The ISA would be updated, as required, and changes to the ISA summary would be submitted to the NRC as currently practiced. There is, therefore, no need for a separate decommissioning ISA in the Part 70 rule.

The decommissioning plan submitted to the NRC in accordance with the schedule and requirements of 70.38(g) willinclude an ISA evaluation of the hazards posed by activities or procedures proposed for use in the decommissioning and recommendations for implementation of items relied on for safety and assurances to be placed on such controls.

The example cited in the draft language for %70.62(b) "...potentially hazardous activities such as chemical treatment of wastes..." -- may be inappropriate as the NRC-OSHA MOU does not grant NRC jurisdiction over management of purely chemical wastes.

NEl recommends that $70.62(b) be deleted from the proposed Part 70 revisions.

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. D. StsN response _to SRM and disposition of comments

In accordance with the SRM direction, the staff reviewed the roquirements for decommissioning

~ in Part 20 as well as the existing requirements for decommissioning in 10 CFR 70.25 and

'70.38.. In addition, the staff considered the comments provided by NEl.

The staff did not identify redundancy of the ISA provisions with the decommissioning 1

requirements of Part 20. However, the staff notes that 10 CFR 70.38(g)(4)(iii) requires that the decommissioning plan (DP) include,". . . a description of methods used to ensure protection of workers and the environment against radiation hazards during decommissioning." Because the DP is submitted for NRC approval before initiation of " procedures and activities necessary to

' carry out decommissioning of the site or separate building or outdoor area," the staff believes -

that there is a measure of redundancy between 10 CFR,70.38 and the draft requirements in .

SECY-98-185 regarding submittal of decommissioning ISA results.

The staff agrees with NEl that the facility's existing ISA program can be used to asse'ss the potential hazards of activities and procedures proposed for use in the decommissioning phase.

In this respect, the ISA should provide valuable information with respect to developing the DP's

". . . description of methods used to ensure protection of workers and the environment against radiation hazards during decommissioning." The DP_ will be the vehicle for regulatory approval of the licensee's practices for protection of health and safety during decommissioning.

Although the staff encourages the use of the ISA to aid in development of the DP, the staff believes that an explicit regulatory requirement to use the ISA in this manner is not warranted.

Changes to 10 CFR 70.38 have not been considered in this rulemaking.

In the attached proposed Part 70 rule language, the requirements to perform an ISA with regards to decommissioning, and submit the results to NRC, have been deleted. The focus of Subpart H is limited to protection from accidents that are of sufficient credibility and consequence such that controls preventing or mitigating them have to be considered during operations. The staff believes that activities related to decommissioning are adequately regulated by existing requirements in Part 20 and 10 CFR 70.25 and 70.38. The applicability section - {70.60 - has been modified to indicate that requirements for decommissioning are addressed by those provisions. The addition of this sentence eliminates any potential redundancy in the regulations regarding decommissioning. Finally, because the staff's recommendation is to delete the requirement, the staff has not attempted to justify performance of a decommissioning ISA on a cost-benefit or health and safety basis. .

14

e a issue 4: Backfit A. Contents of SECY 98-185 As part of its petition for rulemaking, NEl requested an immediately effective backfit for 10 CFR Part 70. In SECY 98-185, the staff recommended that the Commission defer a decision on backfit until after the safety basis, including the results of the Integrated Safety Analysis (ISA),

are incorporated in the license, and the staff has gained sufficient experience with the ISA ,

requirements. After completing the initial ISA, and the staff has gained experience with the ISA requirements, a baseline determination of risk could be established, as needed for a backfit analysis. This approach was initially approved by the Commission in their Staff Requirements Memorandum (SRM) dated August 22,1997, in response to SECY 97-137.

B. Commission Direction in staff requirements memorandum (SRM) to SECY 98-185 i

The Commission, in the SRM to SECY 98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"The Commission supports a requirement that any new backfit pass a cost-benefit test, without the ' substantial' increase in safety test. The Commission believes that modest increases in safety at minimal or inconsequential cost could be justified on a cost benefit basis."

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language in NEl's 1997 Petition for Rulemaking, NEl requested that the Commission include a backfit provision in the revisions to 10 CFR Part 70. The Petition for Rulemaking outlined the need for the backfit to be immediately effective and that, in order for the backfit to be implemented, it must substantially increase overall protection of the public health and safety and its cost must be justified by the increased protection it affords.

In a July 7,1998 document, " Nuclear Energy Institute White Paper on Part 70 Regulation,"

provided to staff, NEl explained its basis for requesting that a backfit provision be made "immediately effective." In its paper, NEl stated that "it is critical that the backfit provision apply immediately upon the effective date of the rule change." NEl argues that the staff's basis for deferring a backfit regulation in SECY-97-137 (i.e., licensee's do not have a "well-defined" licensing bases) was faulty. NEl believes that NRC possesses an ample basis to have licensed the Part 70 facilities in the past and to have permitted their continued operation. NEl stated that j the NRC staff should be able to determine whether a proposed new requirement would

" substantia!!y increase" protection of the public health or safety or common defense and security, and whether the costs of such new requirements are justified. NEl also stated that if a licensee concludes that plant or program modification are needed based on the results of the ISA, the licensee will make those changes and no backfit issue arises; however, if the staff believes additional changes are necessary, those changes should be* considered under the backfit rule. NEl does caveat these statements by adding that backfit analysis is "not required" if the staff concludes that the changes are required to implement applicable requirements, however, "this is very different from the staff's position that the backfit rule itself should not apply to plant changes based on the initial ISA's." This seems to indicate that although the ISA will be performed to comply with NRC regulations, if the licensee disagrees with any changes that the staff believes are necessary, as a result of the ISA, to comply with the regulations, then those changes would be subject to backfit. NEl completes its discussion regarding immediately effective backfit by addressing the delayed implementation of backfit in 10 CFR Part 76, for 15

n e

'which it states a number of costly plant, program, and procedural changes were required by the staff without performing a rigorous backfit analysis. NEl asserts that if a backfit analysis.had been performed, a number of the modifications may have been found to be unnecessary.

Finally, concerning the staff's proposal to use a qualitative backfit, NEl states that this is riot consistent with NUREG/BR-0058 Rev. 2 " Regulatory Analysis' Guidance of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commissiorf which makes it clear that quantitative analyses are much preferred over qualitative ones even if the values and impacts can not be expressed in " monetary terms."

NEl states that "the Commission should specify that backfit analyses performed under Part 70 will use quantitative analyses to the maximum extent possible."

By letter dated February,12,1999, NEl reiterated their concems on backfit as a result of NRC staff's discussion of backfit in SECY-98-185. The concems were the same as those in the White Paper and supported through reference to the White Paper.

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments The staff continues to believe that backfit should not be considered until after experience is gained in implementing the revised rule and until a well documented safety basis is established.

At that time, if a backfit requirement were to be implemented, it would be consistent with the SECY-98-185 SRM direction and not require a " substantial" increase in safety test, i.e., modest increases in safety at a minimal or inconsequential cost would be permissible under backfit. .

Backfit, as defined in $50.109(a)(1), is "the modification of or addition to systems, structures, components or design of a facility; or the procedures or organization required to design construct or operate a facility; any of which may result from a new or amended provision in the Commission rules or the imposition of a regulatory staff position interpreting the Commission rules that is either new or different from a previous NRC staff position." A similar definition for backfit is found in 10 CFR Part 76.10 CFR Part 72 is also similar, however, it does not limit backfit to new or amended Commission rules or a new or different interpretation of a staff position.

In its July 7,1998, backfit white paper, NEl argues for the implementation of a quantitative j backfit analysis versus the staff's intent to use a qualitative backfit analysis, if a backfit '

requirement were to be implemented. NEl argues that the use of a quantitative backfit analysis .

is consistent with NUREG/BR-0058 Rev. 2 which states quantitative analysis is much preferred over qualitative ones even if the values and impacts cannot be expressed in " monetary terms."

The staff believes that a quantitative determination of incremental risk may require a Probabilistic Risk Assessment, to which the industry has strongly opposed in the past.

' Furthermore, it is not clear how a determination of incremental risk, as needed for backfit analysis, would be accomplished without an already determined baseline for the determination of risk. Currently, if backfit provisions were to be imp ~iemented, the staff intends to use the newly required ISAs to help develop the baseline; but without some level of PRA in the ISA, for  ;

Lwhich historical data may not be sufficient for these facilities, it would be difficult to quantify any i backfit analysis.

NEl's interpretation of backfit also appears to be in conflict with the staff's. Although both 1 parties agree that, if backfit were to be implemented, it would apply to changes in the regulations or interpretations of those regulations, there does seem to be some difference in opinion as to_when backfit would apply to interpretations of the ISA results. Although NEl ,

agrees that backfit would not apply to implementation of the regula'tions, the general nature of j I

16 l I

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- Part 70 will' inevitably lead to differences of opinion about whether an action is necessary to Implement the regulations.' For example, NEl states that if the licensee concludes that plant or program modification are needed, it will make those changes and no backfit issue arises, but if the staff believes additional cisanges are necessary, the staff should be required to consider such changes under the backfit rule. NRC staff believes that if, in its judgement, additional modifications are necessary to satisfy the performance requirements of the rule, it is a issue related to implementing the regulations, and that NRC should be responsible for interpreting the c. -

implementation of the regulations, not the licensee, in the past, differences of opinion related to implementation of the regulations have usually been successfully resolved through discussion at the staff level after the licensee has identified and justified their concem that an NRC request may be beyond what is required by the regulations. If the~ differences cannot be resolved at the staff level, as in the past, it will be elevated to higher levels of NRC and licensee management for resolution. If backfit is developed in Part 70 similar to the requirements in

$50.109(a)(4)(i), the burden to show that an issue is related to implementing the regulations is placed upon the' staff and thus the staff's implementation of Part 70 could result in the need for significantly larger resources if licensees attempt to argue regulatory interpretations based on the generality of the regulations in Part 70.

The current basis for licensing a Part 70 facility is the general regulations in 10 CFR Part 70, the licensee's application, and license cond.itions. Although the staff believes existing, operating facilities to be safe, there is not sufficient confidence in the margin of safety because of the absence of a well-defined, risk-informed safety basis. The staff has developed proposed revisions to 10 CFR Part 70 which require development of an ISA. The staff believes, and industry appears to agree, that development of an ISA would help define a risk-informed safety basis; however, industry believes that the current safety basis is sufficient to implement backfit.

Staff view is that the current safety basis would not correspond to the performance requirements of the rule. In addition, staff believes that experience with ISAs, developed using

. the performance requirements of the rule, is necessary to ensure that the ISAs are sufficient to provide the appropriate safety basis. Therefore, the staff believes that backfit should be

' deferred until the safety basis corresponding to the revised rule is established.

Deferring backfit is also consistent with staff's implementation of Part 76 regulations where ,

backfit was delayed until after certification was completed. The commitments in the Gaseous  !

Diffusion Plant Compliance Plans were never subject to the backfit provision. Although NEl argues that a number of the modifications for GDPs may have been found to be unnecessary if backfit were' applied, the staff required most of these modifications to bring the GDPs into i compliance with existing DOE regulations prior to certification. Despite NEl's opinion, the staff believes that the backfit process would have likely shown that these modifications were issues related to implementing the regulations and not backfit issues; however, the regulatory burden to show that each issue was related to implementing the regulations, instead of a backfit issue,  !

would likely have been significant. Only after certification was completed, and experience was  ;

gained in implementing the Part 76 requirements, were backfit regulations implemented.

The above discussion clearly indicates that Part 70 regulations are much different than regulations to which backfit currently applies. As such, the staff continues to believe that backfit ,

should only be considered after experience is gained in the implementation of the revisions to l Part 70. Given the differences of opinion on this subject, the staff, however, plans to request  ;

public comment on its intent to defer the decision on a quMtative backfit provision in Part 70 in the Federal Register notice.  !

17

I s e r

Issue 5: Reportina Reauirements A. Contents of SECY-98-185

{

in SECY-98-185,10 CFR 70.74, and Appendix C, the staff proposed a graded approach for reporting licensee events. The rule specified three reporting classes and required specified events to be reported in 1,4 and 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> from time of discovery. The approach was based on whether actual consequences had occurred, or whether a potential for such consequences existed. Serious events that had occurred were to be reported in 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br />. Four-hour reporting j was required for inte'rmediate consequence events that had occurred; events that could j potentially lead to consequences of concern; and events where controls could not be  !

reestablished in 4 hours4.62963e-5 days <br />0.00111 hours <br />6.613757e-6 weeks <br />1.522e-6 months <br />. If the controls could be reestablished in 4 hours4.62963e-5 days <br />0.00111 hours <br />6.613757e-6 weeks <br />1.522e-6 months <br />, the event was to be reported within 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />. j B. Commission direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in the SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows: i "The rule should contain criteria for protection against the occurrence of certain J consequences and require reporting of certain significant events to NRC because of their potential to impact worker or public health and safety."

I C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language '

NEl comments expressed five concerns with the rule language contained in SECY-98-185, as follows: 1) reporting requirements for fuel cycle facilities are already adequately addressed in the existing rule -- a new rule chapter is unnecessary; 2) the new 1-hour reporting timeframe for certain events is too restrictive; 3) a licensee should not be required to report all personnel hazardous chemical exposures; 4) a licensee should not be required to conduct continuous radiological monitoring in t.he unrestricted or controlled areas of its facility; and 5) emergency reporting of " potential deviations" from safe operating practices or 'potentially unsafe conditions" should not be required, since the language is too subjective. NEl provided I additional comments on the staff's revised draft proposed rule language. These comments l were to eliminate duplication with other reporting requirements in Part 70 and to limit the l reporting to two classes - serious events to be reported in 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> and significant events to be i reported in 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br />.

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments in response to the Commission direction and the comments received, the staff revised the reporting requirements in 10 CFR 70.74 and Appendix A, to: 1) require reporting of certain significant events to NRC because of their potential to impact worker or public health and safety, consistent with the performance requirements in 10 CFR 70.61; 2) limit reporting to two classes (i.e., serious events to be reported in 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> and significant events to be reported in 24

))

. hours ; 3 clarify that continuous radilo og i lca mon i tor i ngi nht e unrestr i cte d or controll d e areas of its facility is not required; 4) clarify that only reporting of chemical exposures consistent with the performance requirements in 10 CFR 70.61 is required, not all chemical exposures; and 5) eliminate subjective language.

18

e .w lasue 6: Performance R-homents Related to Chem!ce! and Red!e!aalcal Safety A. Contents of SECY-98-185-In SECY-98-185,10 CFR 70.60(b), the staff proposed inclusion of specific consequences

. against which licensees must provide adequate protection. These consequences, applicable to workers and members of the public, were categorized according to their level of severity (high' and intermediate). Because accidents at fuel cycle facilities could result in human exposure to both radiological and chemical hazards, the staff proposed criteria that address both types of consequences. The staff-proposed rule in SECY-98-185 stated that the occurrence of any high-consequence event must be " highly unlikely,"_ while the occurrence of any intermediate-consequence event must be "unlikely;" based on the draft Standard Review Plan definitions of the terms " highly unlikely" and "unlikely." This guidance is based on a combination of qualitative and quantitative indicators, but does not require a probabilistic risk assessment. The specific requirements are summarized in Table 6-1.

The chemical consequence criteria in SECY-98-185 were based on anticipated adverse health effects to humans from acute chemical exposures that were developed (or under development),

by the National Advisory Committee for Acute Guideline Levels for Hazardous Substances (Acute Exposure Guideline Limits (AEGLs)) and the American industrial Hygiene Association (Emergency Response Planning Guidelines (ERPGs)). SECY-98-185 proposed two

. appendices for Part 70 that listed the applicable concentrations for the EPRG or AEGL

standards. The chemical risk standards were not limited to chemicals produced from radioactive materials.

TABLE 6-1 Radiological and Chemical Consequence Criteria Worker Public Consequence Radiological Chemical Radiological Chemical High > 1 Sv (100 rem) > AEGL 3 (ERPG-3) > 0.25 Sv (25 rem) > AEGL or Nucisar Criticality (ERPG 2)

Intermediate < 1 Sv (100 rom) < AEGL-3 (ERPG-3) < 0.25 Sv (25 rem) <AEGL 2 (ERPG-2)

> 0.25 Sv (25 rem) > AEGL-2 (ERPG-2) > 0.05 SV (5 rem) > AEGL 1 (ERPG 1)

8. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in the SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

l The rule should contain criteria for protection against the occurrence of certain consequences . . . because of their potential to impact worker or public health

' and safety. However, the Commission does not support the proposed rule with regard to chemical safety and consequence criteria. This issue warrants further discussion with affected agencies and industry to fully understand their respective authorities and the degree to which those authorities are 19

4 .

implemented. The NRC should maintain its primary focus on its nuclear and radiological safety mandate.' Consideration should be given to clarifying the basis for use of chemical safety and chemical consequence criteria in the rule, particularly within the context of Memoranda of Understanding with OSHA and other govemment agencies.

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language NEl provided several written comments on these issues during the period of public interaction

. on the staff's draft requirements. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Occupational _ Safety and Health Organization (OSHA) commented in response to a staff letter providing them tha draft rule revisions. In addition, there were comments in the area of nuclear criticality posted on the World Wide Web discussion forum and in letters from both a member of the public and the American Nuclear Society. The wording for the performance requirements was a major topic of discussion at the three public meetings. The received written comments are described below.-

In a November 4,1998, letter, NEl commented that SECY-98-185 was deficient because it:

. . . will provide NRC regulatory jurisdiction over all ' chemical hazards resulting from the processing of licensed' radioactive material. The breadth of this jurisdiction exceeds that described in SECY-98-185 and in the 1988 NRC/ OSHA Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). Proposed language in Part 70 can be construed to extend NRC regulation to any chemical hazard at a licensed fuel fabrication facility. NEl's principal objection to the draft Part 70 language is its

, failure to clearly separate the regulatory responsibilities of the NRC ar.d OSHA as established in the MOU. As written, the draft rule will result in redundant, overlapping regulatory oversight that will not improve public or worker health and safety.

NEl recommended that NRC Jurisdiction be limited, by the rule text, consistent with the MOU.

Specifically, NRC would regulate: (1) Special Nuclear Material (SNM), (2) radioactive compounds (e.g. UF.), and (3) chemical compounds produced from radioactive materials during the processing of SNM (e.g. HF). NEl's November 4 letter also proposed several .

language changes including: a modification to the definition " hazardous chemicals"; addition of l a definition for " hazardous chemicals produced from radioactive materials"; and deletion of the specific ERPG/AEGL values in Appendix B and C.

In a February 12,1999, letter, NEl provided additional comments on the chemical safety risk standards, in response to staff revised rule language. NEl remarked, " the staff's proposed changes to the rule, for all intents and purposes, have resolved our concems in the area of chemical safety. They constitute a major step forward in addressing our concerns that the rule be more " risk based" as opposed to " consequence' based."

' in a response to an earlier NRC letter, OSHA commented on the staff's draft Part 70 revisions in a February 1,1999 letter. OSHA noted that any regulation of chemical hazards or requirement to perform a hazards analysis is potentially preemptive of OSHA regulatory I authority under the prevailing statute (i.e., the Occupational Safety and Health Act). The degree to which preemption would apply is largely dependent upon U.S. Circuit Court interpretations, which have exhibited regional variation. OSHA noted that this issue is 20  !

i I

r e .

independent of the division of responsibilities in the 1988 NRC-OSHA MOU, so, as the staff understands OSHA's opinion, implementing the MOU in the Part 70 rule may not be appropriate. In a March 2,1999, letter, NEl provided its opinion on OSHA's jurisdictional letter, stating NEl believes "that the Staff's suggested changes to the chemical hazards portions of the draft rule are appropriate and would not preempt any legitimate OSHA authority over non-radiological conditions at licensed Part 70 facilities. We again encourage you to incorporate the suggested modifications into the proposed rule." Also, at a February 25,1999 meeting of NRC and OSHA staff, some clarifications and further information was provided at that meeting that resulted in some changes to the rule language to more clearly specify the scope of NRC involvement. However, these changes do not fully resolve the basic preemption issue. The problems identified with the rule are not unique, i.e., the preemption issue is generic and may already exist for any NRC-licensed facilities where there are requirements to analyze hazards. At the February 25 meeting, OSHA confirmed that the rule language is consistent with the October 21,1988 MOU; indicated that they have no suggested changes to the MOU; and indicated that they are not opposed to the proposed rule.

The staff sent a similar letter to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to solicit their views on the draft rule language. While OSHA has jurisdiction of workplace chemical safety, EPA regulates off-site (public) chemical safety. On May 24,1999, EPA replied, noting that

" EPA believes that the proposed revisions to NRC licensing regulations are consistent with the accident prevention portion of EPA's risk management program regulations and the general duty clause of the Clean Air Act." However, EPA requested that the rule contain an " explicit acknowledgment that [ EPA) authority extends to applicable NRC-regulated facilities," that the preamble explain the relationship of the NRC and EPA rules similar to the explanation of OSHA rules (viz., the discussion on the NRC-OSHA MOU), and that NRC avoid any regulatory action that might inadvertently inhibit or restrict EPA's authority under 40 CFR Part 68.

In a December 17,1998, letter, NEl commented on the nuclear criticality performance requirements. NEl recommended that the proposed revisions of 10 CFR 70 be clarified to reduce their ambiguity and the possibility of interpreting them to be ' consequence-based' rather than ' risk-based' regulations. While acknowledging that a nuclear criticality accident is an operating hazard whose risk must be adequately managed, NEl believed criticality should not be explicitly identified to be a "high consequence event" regardless of the resulting radiation doses. A letter from a member of the public, several submittals on the World Wide Web discussion forum, and by a December 1,1998, letter from the Nuclear Criticality Safety Division of the American Nuclear Society advocated approaches that generally agreed with NEl's. In addition, NEl recommended that the rule permit industry to continue implementation of the double contingency principle as it has done without imposition of a probabilistic methodology, and Part 70 should be consistent with industry standards (American National Standards Institute, American Nuclear Society Standards Committee, Subcommittee ANS-8) that uphold the basic definition of the double contingency principle as adequate and sufficient.

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments The staff believes that the clarifications to the draft rule text related to chemical risks, criticality, and the use of risk-informed language in establishing the performance requirements, are consistent with the Commission's direction provided in the SRM and address NEl's and industry's concerns in this area.

21

4 .

The staff clarified the performance requirements section by:

(1) consolidating the options that permit reducing the likelihood (prevention) or consequences (mitigation)in limiting the risk of accidents; (2) separating, for clarity, the information on applicability into 70.60, and the requirements for a three element safety program (process safety information, integrated safety analysis, and management measures) into @70.62; ,

(3) providing a separate performance requirement for criticality using wording that -

. j matches the industry standards and stresses prevention of criticality, rather than  :

including criticality within the subsection for high consequence events; (4) adopting qualitative language related to chemical risks, and permit quantitative standards (ERPG/AEGL) for them to be adopted or developed by the applicant specific to its processes; (5) defining " hazardous chemicals produced from licensed materials" such that the scope of the regulation is more clearly limited to the NRC's areas of responsibility l consistent with the 1988 NRC-OSHA MOU; (6) clearly stating the function of the ISA and the process for identifying items relied on for safety; and (7) clarifying the use of the term " controlled area" that defines the location of evaluation against the performance requirements for impacts to members of the public.

The revised rule language retains the basic consequence and probability scheme for limiting the risk of accidents. The numerical consequences were not changed from those in SECY 185, as shown above in Table 6-1; however, the reference to the ERPG and AEGL values was deleted from the rule in favor of qualitative language for chemical effects (the ERPG and AEGL techniques are listed in the standard review plan (SRP) as examples of acceptable approaches). Consequently, SECY-98-185 Appendices A and B, the chemical-by-chemicallists of ERPG and AEGL values, was deleted in agreement with the NEl comment. Tne SECY 185 version's reliance on qualitative language related to the probability component of the risk

(" highly unlikely" and "unlikely") is retained. The applicant will be allowed to define his use of those terms, specific to that facility or process, in the application (i.e., in the ISA summary), and guidance is provided in the SRP.

The evaluation location for the accident standard for members of the public was specified in SECY-98-185 using the term " controlled site boundary" (meaning a physical barrier surrounding the facility). This became an issue during the public interaction period on the draft rule. Many commentors believed that NRC should incorporate the term, " controlled area" consistent with its use in 10 CFR Part 20. In response to this comment, the staff adopted the term " controlled area"in the performance requirements specified for the members of the public. The location at which compliance with the standard is evaluated is identified to be any point at or beyond the .

boundary of the " controlled area." l Section 70.61(f) requires licensees to identify a controlled area consistent with the use of that term in Part 20, and provides clarification regarding the activities that may occur inside the controlled area. The function of this term is to delimit an area over which the licensee exercises l control of activities to meet regulatory requirements. Controlincludes the power to exclude individuals, if necessary. The size of the controlled area is not specified in the regulation because it will be dependent upon the particular activities that are conducted at the site and  !

their relationship to the licensed activities. Within the controlled area will be a restricted area l (as defined in 20.1003) access to which is controlled by the licensee for purposes of radiation safety. Anyone not receiving an occupationaldose (per Part 20) in the controlled area will be 22 t

e e )

i subject to the dose limits for members of the public in 10 CFR 20.1301. However, the staff acknowledges that certain licensees may have ongoing activities on their site (i.e., within the

. controlled area) that are not related to the licensed activities. For example, a non-nuclear facility may be adjacent to the nuclear facility but both are within the controlled area (which may be defined similar to the site boundary). Protection of the individuals at the non-nuclear facility I must consider that +he nature of many potential accidents at a fuel cycle facility is such that they may not have substantive progression time during which to take action to exclude individuals from the controlled area. Therefore, for purposes of the ISA accident evaluation, the rule includes two options for these individuals. In the first option, the ISA evaluates the risk at their location (as opposed to any point at or beyond the controlled area boundary) and determines that it meets the performance requirements for members of the public. In the second option, performance requirements for workers can be applied t9 individuals in the controlled area if the provisions of Section 70.61(f)(2) are satisfied. These conditions ensure that the individuals are aware of the risks to them from the potential accidents at the nuclear facility and have received appropriate training and access to information (e.g., the ISA). This parallels and is consistent with the use of the term, " Exclusion area", by Parts 50 and 100, which state, " Activities unrelated to operation of the reactor may be permitted in an exclusion area under appropriate limitations, provided that no significant hazards to the public health and safety will result."

' The staff believes that the ISA should not be used to evaluate compliance with the accident standards for individuals who make infrequent visits to the controlled area and restricted area (e.g., visitors). Use of the ISA to determine the risks to these individuals would need to

. consider second-order effects such as the probability of the individual being present at the time that the unlikely (or highly unlikely) accident occurred. This level of detail is unnecessary to accomplish the purpose of this rule (viz., to document and maintain the safety basis of the facility design and operations). Application of the Part 20 regulations provide adequate protection for these individuals, in addition, the provisions to protect workers during accidents (i.e., the performance requirements) provide a degree of protection to these individuals.

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Issue 7: Standard Review Plan Modifications

' A. Contents of SECY-98-185 ]

.J A draft standard review plan (SRP) was included in SECY-98-185. The purpose of the draft standard review plan is to provide guidance to the staff reviewers in the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards who perform safety and environmental impact reviews of applications to construct or modify and operate fuel cycle facilities.- The SRP facilitates the ~

quality, uniformity, stability,'and predictability of staff reviews. The SRP also makes information about the licensing acceptance criteria widely available to interested members of the public and I the regulated industry.

B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 '

The Commission, in the SRM'to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"The staff should critically review the Standard Review Plan in its entirety to ensure that, by providing specific acceptance criteria and program attributes to demonstrate compliance with the performance-based rule, it does not inadvertently prevent licensees or applicants from suggesting alternative means of demonstrating compliance."

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language in their November 25,1998, letter to NRC, the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) provided the following: ,

.. NEl is concemed that new prescriptive, programmatic criteria introduced in the SRP without any specific basis in 10 CFR Part 70 will become de facto regulatory requirements. Although we recognize the SRP is only intended to be a staff guidance document to ensure consistency in license application reviews, the SRP acceptance criteria can over time become minimum standards (' lowest rung on the acceptance ladder'). The prescriptiveness of the draft SRP language is of particular concern.

Though possibly not intended, it often appears to prejudge the need to implement new programs and practices before an integrated Safety Analysis (ISA) establishes their need. In accordance with a risk-informed, performance-based regulatory approach, the SRP should reflect the philosophy that the licensee will propose appropriate programmatic activities based upon the risk significance identified in the ISA, and that the reviewer should expect a sound justification for each proposal from the licensee.

NEl provided other comments regarding quality assurance criteria, training and qualifications, fire safety, decommissioning, human-systems interface, organization and administration, emergency management, configuration management, maintenance, and criticality safety.

In letters dated December 17,1998, and January 21,1999, NEl provided criticality safety comments and an annotated mark-up of SRP Chapter 5," Nuclear Criticality Safety."

in a letter dated April 12,1999, NEl provided comments on decommissioning and an annotated markup of Chapter 10, " Decommissioning". In that letter, it states "...SRP. Chapter 10 should be limited to a discussion of decommissioning funding plans, record retention requirements for new license applications, and waste / contamination plans."

24

e . l NEl also provided comments in the form of an annotated markup of SRP Chapter 6," Chemical Process Safety," in a letter dated March 2,1999.

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments j The staff has stated from the outset, that the SRP is expected to be used during reviews as  ;

guidance. As stated on page 2 of the June 1998 draft SRP,"The ' Acceptance Criteria' I delineated in this SRP are intended to communicate the underlying objectives but not to represent the only means of satisfying that objective. If approaches different from the SRP are -

chosen, the applicant should identify the portions of its application that differ from the design j approaches and acceptance criteria of the SRP and evaluate how the proposed alternatives provide an acceptable method of complying with the Commission's regulations." This approach is not different from the approach presented in NEl's November 25,1998, comments stated in l C above. The intent is that the acceptance criteria is only one specific approach, which if j followed, is intended ensure acceptance by the reviewer in most, if not all, situations. However, l

because the proposed regulations allow a graded approach based upon the significance of the process being evaluated, the applicant may propose approaches different from that proposed in the acceptance criteria; these differing approaches may result in smaller programs or no program to meet the category under review. The applicant is only required to identify that they

]

are using a different approach from that presented in the SRP and based upon the applicant's evaluation, provide an explanation for the alternative approach used. This is consistent with NEl's statement "that the reviewer should expect a sound justification for each proposal from  !

the licensee."

NEl has mentioned some concern that NRC's statements in the introduction of the SRP may be overlooked in the future and acceptance criteria may still become "de facto" requirements. As -

such, the acceptance criteria of each section will include a s't atement "the reviewed item should be considered acceptable if the applicant has met the following acceptance criteria or has  ;

identified and justified an alternative in the application."

l The staff has revised the SRP to be consistent with the rule language and has incorporated many of the comments received on the SRP, especially in the chemical safety and criticality safety chapters.  ;

l l

25

r 4 e issue 8: Use of ISA Methodoloales in the Licensina of New Technoloales I A. Contents of SECY-98-185 in SECY-98-185, the ISA to be performed was described as a systematic analysis to identify plant and external hazards and their potential for initiating accidents; the potential accident sequences and their likelihood and consequences; and the items that are relied on for safety.

Specific ISA methodologies that could be used were described in NUREG-1513, " Integrated Safety Analysis" guidance document. Flexibility was permitted in the ISA methodology chosen i so that it would be appropriate to the process and technology being analyzed. j B. Commission Direction in SRM to SECY-98-185 The Commission, in the SRM to SECY-98-185, directed the staff as follows:

"Also, in soliciting public comments, the staff should request input on how applicable ISA methodologies should be employed in the licensing of new technologies for use within new or existing facilities."

C. Comments received during public interaction on draft rule language No comments were specifically received addressing this issue, nor were there any concerns expressed on the application of iSA methodologies to new technologies..

D. Staff response to SRM and disposition of comments The ISA methodology described in this rule and SRP have not changed from that described in SECY-98-185. The ISA guidance document (NUREG-1513) also has not changed. The staff continues to believe that sufficient flexibility is permitted in the ISA methodology chosen to be able to accommodate a wide range of technologies. However, to better address the Commission concern, the draft Federal Reaister notice associated with this proposed rule specifically requests comments on this matter.

l 26

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