Document: NUREG-0800
Document ID: 03aed7b8-74fc-467b-b928-b25d9eb89a13
Document Type: srp
Title: PHYSICAL SECURITY — REVIEW OF PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEM
Source: NUREG-0800
Source URL: https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1301/ML13010A109.pdf
Revision Date: 2023-06
Chapter: 13
Section ID: 13.6.2
CFR Part: 
CFR Title: 

Content:
ory requirement is exact enough to establish the specifics for how it must be met (e.g., explicit configuration, specific times or quantities of weight, specific dimensions, exact type of material for constructions). The design descriptions must provide a sufficient level of detail on the proposed physical security systems within the standard design for the Commission to determine that all applicable regulatory requirements will be met. The applicant must also describe in detail how the physical security systems will be designed, constructed, and installed to meet intended security functions and demonstrate that these systems and structures can be verified through ITA, including construction and installation verification acceptance testing. The information below provides the specific SRP acceptance criteria for the design of security systems. The acceptance criteria are established based on regulatory requirements and are 13.6.2-14 Draft Revision 2 – September 2013 listed in the order that they appear in 10 CFR 73.55. The staff should only apply the acceptance criteria below that are applicable to the design of the physical security systems within the scope of the DC (i.e., as applicable based on the design descriptions and associated requirements identified in Tables No. 13.6.2.1 and No.13.6.2 2): 1. 10 CFR 73.55(b)(3)(i) is satisfied when the applicant adequately describes how the design of physical security systems provides the capabilities to detect, assess, interdict, and neutralize threats up to and including the DBT of radiological sabotage. To meet the performance regulatory requirements, the applicant determines and proposes how it will provide or design a physical protection system (i.e., detection, assessment, communications, and security response) that will protect a nuclear power plant and its nuclear operations against the DBT of radiological sabotage resulting from significant core damage or loss of spent fuel pool cooling. The requirement of 10 CFR