Taxpayers and Ratepayers United, et al.; Environmental Impacts of Severe Reactor and Spent Fuel Pool Accidents

Federal Register, Volume 76 Issue 218 (Thursday, November 10, 2011)

Federal Register Volume 76, Number 218 (Thursday, November 10, 2011)

Proposed Rules

Pages 70067-70069

From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office www.gpo.gov

FR Doc No: 2011-29158

Page 70067

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

10 CFR Part 51

Docket Nos. PRM-51-14, et al.; NRC-2011-0189

Taxpayers and Ratepayers United, et al.; Environmental Impacts of Severe Reactor and Spent Fuel Pool Accidents

AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

ACTION: Petitions for rulemaking; notice of receipt.

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SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC or the Commission) has received 15 petitions for rulemaking (PRMs), each dated August 10, August 11, or August 12, 2011, from the multiple petitioners listed in Section I, Procedural Processing, of this document. The petitioners request that the NRC rescind its regulations that allow generic conclusions about the environmental impacts of severe reactor and spent fuel pool accidents and its regulations that preclude considerations of those issues in individual licensing proceedings. The petitioners also request the NRC to suspend multiple ongoing licensing proceedings while the NRC considers these petitions and the environmental issues raised in the Fukushima Task Force Report. The NRC is not instituting a public comment period for these PRMs at this time.

ADDRESSES: You can access publicly available documents related to the 15 petitions for rulemaking, using the following methods:

NRC's Public Document Room (PDR): The public may examine and have copies made, for a fee, publicly available documents at the NRC's PDR, Room O1-F21, One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.

NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS): Publicly available documents created or received at the NRC are available online in the NRC Library at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. From this page, the public can gain entry into ADAMS, which provides text and image files of the NRC's public documents. If you do not have access to ADAMS or if there are problems in accessing the documents located in ADAMS, contact the NRC's PDR reference staff at 1 (800) 397-4209, (301) 415-4737, or by email to pdr.resource@nrc.gov. For the ADAMS accession numbers for the documents related to the 15 PRMs, see Section I, Procedural Processing, of this document.

Federal Rulemaking Web Site: Supporting materials related to the 15 petitions for rulemaking can be found at http://www.regulations.gov by searching on Docket ID NRC-2011-0189. Address questions about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher; telephone: (301) 492-

3668; email: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cindy Bladey, Chief, Rules, Announcements, and Directives Branch, Division of Administrative Services, Office of Administration, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, telephone: (301) 492-3667, email: Cindy.Bladey@nrc.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

  1. Procedural Processing

    The petitions for rulemaking were docketed by the NRC on September 20, 2011, and have been assigned the Docket Numbers identified in the following table. The following table also identifies the ADAMS accession numbers for each PRM. In addition, the following table provides the specific licensing proceedings that each petitioner requests the NRC to suspend.

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    Licensing proceeding

    Petitioner Docket Nos. ADAMS Accession No. affected

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    Gene Stilp, on behalf of Taxpayers PRM-51-14................. ML112430559.......... Bell Bend.

    and Ratepayers United.

    Diane Curran, on behalf of San PRM-51-15................. ML11236A322.......... Diablo Canyon.

    Luis Obispo Mothers for Peace.

    Diane Curran, on behalf of PRM-51-16................. ML11223A291.......... Watts Bar.

    Southern Alliance for Clean

    Energy.

    Mindy Goldstein, on behalf of PRM-51-17................. ML11223A043.......... Vogtle.

    Center for a Sustainable Coast,

    Georgia Women's Action for New

    Directions f/k/a/ Atlanta Women's

    Action for New Directions, and

    Southern Alliance for Clean

    Energy.

    Mindy Goldstein, on behalf of PRM-51-18................. ML11223A044.......... Turkey Point.

    Southern Alliance for Clean

    Energy, National Parks

    Conservation Association, Dan

    Kipnis, and Mark Oncavage.

    Deborah Brancato, on behalf of PRM-51-19................. ML11229A712.......... Indian Point.

    Riverkeeper, Inc. & Hudson River

    Sloop Clearwater, Inc.

    Paul Gunter, on behalf of Beyond PRM-51-20................. ML11223A371.......... Seabrook.

    Nuclear, Seacoast Anti-Pollution

    League and Sierra Club of New

    Hampshire.

    Michael Mariotte, on behalf of PRM-51-21................. ML11223A344.......... Calvert Cliffs.

    Nuclear Information and Resource

    Service, Beyond Nuclear, Public

    Citizen, and SOMDCARES.

    Raymond Shadis, on behalf of PRM-51-22................. ML11223A465 (PRM).... Seabrook.

    Friends of the Coast and New ML11223A443 (Motion

    England Coalition. to Admit)..

    ML11223A444

    (Contention)..

    ML11223A446

    (Declaration)..

    Robert V. Eye, on behalf of PRM-51-23................. ML11223A472.......... South Texas.

    Intervenors in South Texas

    Project Nuclear Operating Co.,

    Application for Units 3 and 4

    Combined Operating License.

    Robert V. Eye, on behalf of PRM-51-24................. ML11223A477.......... Comanche Peak.

    Intervenors in Luminant

    Generation Company, LCC,

    Application for Comanche Peak

    Nuclear Power Plant Combined

    License.

    Page 70068

    Mary Olson, on behalf of the PRM-51-25................. ML11224A074.......... Levy.

    Ecology Party of Florida, Nuclear

    Information and Resource Service

    Southeast Office, and the Green

    Party of Florida.

    Terry Lodge, on behalf of Beyond PRM-51-26................. ML112450527.......... Davis-Besse.

    Nuclear, Citizens Environment

    Alliance of Southwestern Ontario,

    Don't Waste Michigan, and the

    Green Party of Ohio.

    Terry Lodge, on behalf of Beyond PRM-51-27................. ML112450528.......... Fermi.

    Nuclear, Citizens for

    Alternatives to Chemical

    Contamination, Citizens

    Environmental Alliance of

    Southwestern Ontario, Don't Waste

    Michigan, Sierra Club, Keith

    Gunter, Edward McArdle, Henry

    Newman, Derek Coronado, Sandra

    Bihn, Harold L. Stokes, Michael

    J. Keegan, Richard Coronado,

    George Steinman, Marilyn R.

    Timmer, Leonard Mandeville, Frank

    Mantei, Marcee Meyers, and

    Shirley Steinman.

    Barry White, on behalf of Citizens PRM-51-28................. ML11224A232.......... Turkey Point.

    Allied for Safe Energy, Inc.

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    Each submission separately cites the ``Recommendations for Enhancing Reactor Safety in the 21st Century: The Near-Term Task Force Review of Insights from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Accident'' (Fukushima Task Force Report, ADAMS Accession No. ML111861807), dated July 12, 2011, as rationale for the petitions for rulemaking. The Commission has recently directed staff to engage promptly with stakeholders to review and assess the recommendations of the Fukushima Task Force Report for the purpose of providing the Commission with fully-informed options and recommendations. See U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ``Near-Term Report and Recommendations for Agency Actions Following the Events in Japan,'' Staff Requirements Memorandum SECY-11-0093, August 19, 2011 (ADAMS Accession No. ML112310021) and U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ``Engagement of Stakeholders Regarding the Events in Japan,'' Staff Requirements Memorandum COMWDM-11-0001/COMWCO-11-0001, August 22, 2011 (ADAMS Accession No. ML112340693). The NRC will consider the issues raised by these PRMs through the process the Commission has established for addressing the recommendations from the Fukushima Task Force Report, and is not providing a separate opportunity for public comment on the PRMs at this time.

    On September 9, 2011, the Commission issued a Memorandum and Order, Union Electric Company D/B/A/Ameren Missouri et al. (Callaway Plant, Unit, et al.), CLI-11-05, ---- NRC ---- (Sept. 9, 2011) (slip op. at 41) which declined the petitioners' request to suspend any of the licensing or rulemaking proceedings pending resolution of these rulemaking petitions.

  2. Petitioners

    Each petitioner is an intervener group that has filed PRMs and contentions to suspend licensing proceedings while the NRC considers the environmental impacts of each licensing proceeding and the environmental implications in the Fukushima Task Force Report.

  3. Petitions

    All 15 PRMs cite the Fukushima Task Force Report dated July 12, 2011, currently under review by the Commission, as rationale for the petitions for rulemaking. The Fukushima Task Force was a group of NRC staff experts specifically selected to review the Fukushima Dai-ichi Accident and make recommendations applicable to power reactors in the United States.

    In addition to the Fukushima Task Force Report, each petitioner cites the Declaration of Dr. Arjun Makhijani (the Declaration, ADAMS Accession No. ML11223A446) as rationale for their contentions and PRMs. Dr. Makhijani is the President of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER) in Takoma Park, Maryland. The IEER provides scientific information and analyses to advocacy groups and policy makers on a wide range of technical topics such as energy and environmental issues. Dr. Makhijani declares that the Fukushima Task Force Report ``provides further support for his opinions that the Fukushima accident presents new and significant information regarding the risks to public health and safety and the environment posed by the operation of nuclear reactors and that the integration of this new information into the NRC's licensing process could affect the outcome of safety and environmental analyses for reactor licensing and relicensing decisions and the NRC's evaluation of the fitness of new reactor designs for certification.'' See page 2 in the Declaration.

    The petitioners assert that the Fukushima Task Force Report and the Declaration demonstrate that the ``Fukushima accident has significant regulatory implications with respect to both severe reactor accidents and spent fuel pool accidents, because the Task Force Report recommends that mitigative measures for both of these types of accidents, which are not currently included in the design basis for nuclear reactors, should be added to the design basis and subject to mandatory safety regulation.''

    Primarily, the petitioners request that the NRC rescind all regulations in Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) part 51 (including 51.45, 51.53, and 51.95 and Appendix B to 10 CFR part 51) that ``reach generic conclusions about the environmental impacts of severe reactor and/or spent fuel pool accidents and therefore prohibit consideration of those impacts'' in reactor licensing proceedings.

    Specifically, the petitioners request rescission of ``any NRC regulations that would prevent the NRC from complying with its obligation under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).'' The petitioners also request rescission of NRC regulations that would impede consideration of ``the environmental implications of new and significant information discussed in the Fukushima Task Force Report regarding the regulatory implications of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear accident'' in the licensing proceedings.

    In support of their requests to suspend licensing proceedings, the petitioners quoted Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens Council, 490 U.S. 332, 350 (1989) which states that ``NEPA requires that agencies consider the environmental impacts of their actions before they are taken, in order to ensure that `important effects of the licensing decision will not be overlooked or underestimated only to be discovered after resources have been committed or

    Page 70069

    the die otherwise cast.' '' The petitioners assert that the ``NRC's obligation to comply with NEPA in this respect is independent of and in addition to the NRC's responsibilities under the Atomic Energy Act, and must be enforced to the `fullest extent possible.' '' Thus, the petitioners argue that the ``NRC has a non-discretionary duty to suspend'' the subject licensing proceedings ``while it considers the environmental impacts of that decision, including the environmental implications of the Task Force Report with respect to severe reactor and spent fuel pool accidents.''

  4. Conclusion

    The Commission is currently reviewing the Fukushima Task Force Report, including the issues presented in the 15 petitions for rulemaking. The petitioners specifically cite the Fukushima Task Force Report as rationale for the PRMs. The NRC will consider the issues raised by these PRMs through the process the Commission has established for addressing the recommendations from the Fukushima Task Force Report and is not providing a separate opportunity for public comment on the PRMs at this time.

    Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 2nd day of November 2011.

    For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

    Andrew L. Bates,

    Acting Secretary of the Commission.

    FR Doc. 2011-29158 Filed 11-9-11; 8:45 am

    BILLING CODE 7590-01-P

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