Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2013/12/03/2013-28240/criteria-for-the-certification-and-recertification-of-the-waste-isolation-pilot-plants-compliance
Timestamp: 2017-08-18 22:30:25
Document Index: 216860019

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 2', 'art 2', 'art 191', 'art 194', 'art 194', 'art 194', 'art 191', 'art 194', 'art 194', 'art 191', 'art 194', 'art 194', 'art 194', '§\u2009194', '§\u2009194', '§\u2009194', 'art 194', 'art 194', 'art 194', 'art 194', '§\u2009194', '§\u2009194', '§\u2009194', 'art 191', '§\u2009194', '§\u2009194', '§\u2009194']

72612-72620 (9 pages)
FRL-9903-38-OAR
Preamble Acronyms and Abbreviations:
1. Submitting Confidential Business Information (CBI):
2. Tips for Preparing Your Comments:
B. What changes are proposed for Appendix A, Condition 1?
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2013-28240 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2013-28240
With this notice, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA, or the Agency) proposes to approve the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE, or the Department) planned change request to implement the Run-of-Mine Panel Closure System (ROMPCS) at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) and to amend the WIPP Compliance Criteria to allow an EPA-approved panel closure other than the currently-required Option D design. Technical analyses demonstrate that, with the modified panel closure design, WIPP remains in compliance with the release limits set by the “Environmental Standards for the Management and Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel, High-Level and Transuranic (TRU) Radioactive Waste.” The proposed changes do not lessen the requirements for complying with the Compliance Criteria, nor do these changes impact the technical approach that the EPA will employ when considering any future planned changes to the panel closure system. Compliance with environmental or public health regulations other than the EPA's disposal regulations and WIPP Compliance Criteria is not addressed by today's action. Today's notice marks the beginning of a 60-day public comment period on this proposed action.
Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0684, by one of the following methods—
Email: to a-and-r-docket@epa.gov; Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0684.
Mail: Air and Radiation Docket and Information Center, Environmental Protection Agency, Mail Code: 6102T, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Attn: Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0684. The Agency's policy is that all comments received will be included in the public docket without change and may be made available online at www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided, unless the comment includes information claimed to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit information that you consider to be CBI or otherwise protected through www.regulations.gov or email. The www.regulations.gov Web site is an “anonymous access” system, which means the EPA will not know your identity or contact information unless you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an email comment directly to the EPA without going through www.regulations.gov, your email address will be automatically captured and included as part of the comment that is placed in the public docket and made available on the Internet. If you submit an electronic comment, the EPA recommends that you include your name and other contact information in the body of your comment and with any disk or CD-ROM you submit. If the EPA cannot read your comment due to technical difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, the Agency may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid the use of special characters or any form of encryption and be free of any defects or viruses. For additional information about the EPA's public docket, visit the EPA Docket Center homepage at http://www.epa.gov/​epahome/​dockets.htm.
Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Start Printed Page 72613Certain other material, such as copyrighted material, will be publicly available only in hard copy. The EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID No. [EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0684; FRL-9903-38-OAR]. Publicly available docket materials related to this action (e.g., the Technical Support document [TSD]) are available either electronically through www.regulations.gov, on the Agency's WIPP Web site (http://www.epa.gov/​radiation/​wipp) or in hard copy at the Air and Radiation Docket in the EPA Docket Center, (EPA/DC) EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20004. The EPA Docket Center Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone number for the Public Reading Room is (202) 566-1744 and the telephone number for the Air and Radiation Docket is (202) 566-1742. In accordance with the EPA's regulations at 40 CFR part 2 and in accordance with normal EPA docket procedures, if copies of any docket materials are requested, a reasonable fee may be charged for photocopying.
Ray Lee or Jonathan Walsh, Radiation Protection Division, Mail Code 6608J, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, DC 20460; telephone number: 202-343-9463 or 202-343-9238; fax number: 202-343-2305; email address: lee.raymond@epa.gov or walsh.jonathan@epa.gov.
ROMPC, or
ROMPCS6 Run-of-Mine Salt Panel Closure System
Do not submit this information to the EPA through www.regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark all of the information that you claim to be CBI. For CBI information in a disk or CD ROM that you mail to the EPA, mark the outside of the disk or CD ROM as CBI and then identify electronically within the disk or CD ROM the specific information that is claimed as CBI. In addition to one complete version of the comment that includes information claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment that does not contain the information claimed as CBI must be submitted for inclusion in the public docket. Information marked as CBI will not be disclosed except in accordance with procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2.
Congress authorized the development and construction of the WIPP in 1980 “for the express purpose of providing a research and development facility to demonstrate the safe disposal of radioactive wastes resulting from the defense activities and programs of the United States.” [1] Waste which may be Start Printed Page 72614emplaced in the WIPP is limited to TRU radioactive waste generated by defense activities associated with nuclear weapons; no high-level waste or spent nuclear fuel from commercial power plants may be disposed of at the WIPP. TRU waste is defined as materials containing alpha-emitting radioisotopes, with half lives greater than twenty years and atomic numbers above 92, in concentrations greater than 100 nano-curies per gram of waste.[2] Most TRU waste proposed for disposal at the WIPP consists of items that have become contaminated as a result of activities associated with the production of nuclear weapons (or with the clean-up of weapons production facilities), e.g., rags, equipment, tools, protective gear, soil and organic or inorganic sludges. Some TRU waste is mixed with hazardous chemicals. The waste proposed for disposal at the WIPP is currently located at federal facilities across the United States, including locations in California, Idaho, Illinois, New Mexico, Nevada, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee and Washington.
The WIPP Land Withdrawal Act (LWA), initially passed by Congress in 1992 and amended in 1996, provides the EPA authority to oversee and regulate the WIPP. The WIPP LWA delegated to the EPA three main tasks, to be completed sequentially, for reaching an initial compliance certification decision. First, the Agency was required to finalize general regulations which apply to all sites—except Yucca Mountain—for the disposal of highly radioactive waste.[3] These disposal regulations, located at Subparts B and C of 40 CFR part 191, were originally published in the Federal Register in 1985 and amended in 1993.[4] Second, the EPA was to develop criteria, by rulemaking, to implement and interpret the general radioactive waste disposal regulations specifically for the WIPP. In 1996, the Agency issued the WIPP Compliance Criteria, which are found at 40 CFR part 194.[5] The EPA made changes to the Compliance Criteria via rulemaking in July 2004 (69 FR 42571-42583). These new provisions provide equivalent or improved oversight and better prioritization of technical issues in EPA inspections to evaluate waste characterization activities at DOE WIPP waste generator sites, and offer more direct public input into the Agency's decisions about what waste can be disposed of at the WIPP. Third, the EPA was to review the information submitted by the DOE and publish a certification decision.[6] The Agency issued its certification decision on May 18, 1998, as required by Section 8 of the WIPP LWA (63 FR 27354-27406) determining that the WIPP met the standards for radioactive waste disposal. The complete record and basis for the EPA's 1998 certification decision can be found in Air Docket A-93-02. Condition 1, concerning the panel closure system, was appended to 40 CFR part 194 as part of the certification decision.
The Department submitted the design of the WIPP repository in Chapter 3 of the 1996 Compliance Certification Application (CCA). The EPA's certification is based upon this design. The underground waste disposal region at WIPP is divided into panels. A panel is a group of rooms mined into the salt, connected by tunnels called drifts. When all of the rooms of a panel are filled with waste, the DOE intends to seal the drifts with engineered structures called panel closures. The EPA certified the WIPP based on a panel closure design that sealed the drift using a concrete block wall and a poured concrete monolith. The DOE proposes to change this design and close the drift using two steel bulkheads and mined salt. Both panel closure designs are discussed in detail in Section IV of this document.
This action is being taken in response to the DOE's September 2011 Planned Change Request (PCR) to alter the design of the panel closures used at the WIPP. The WIPP underground waste disposal area is divided into ten groups of rooms, or panels. A waste panel is a group of mined rooms connected by drifts that provide both access and ventilation to the rooms. Following completion of waste disposal activities in each panel, the DOE intends to seal these drifts with engineered structures called panel closures. 40 CFR part 194, Criteria for the Certification and Recertification of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant's Compliance with the 40 CFR part 191 Disposal Regulations, did not originally require panel closures for the purpose of long-term compliance with release limits for radionuclides. Panel closures have, however, always been included in the design of the repository, and therefore incorporated into modeling of the WIPP system as a feature of the repository.
Although the Agency determined that the DOE met all of the applicable requirements of the WIPP Compliance Criteria in its compliance certification decision (63 FR 27354-27406; May 18, 1998), the EPA amended the WIPP Compliance Criteria, 40 CFR part 194, and appended four explicit conditions to its certification of compliance to ensure that the measures actually implemented at the WIPP (and thus the circumstances expected to exist there) were consistent with the DOE's Compliance Certification Application (CCA) and with the basis for the EPA's compliance certification. Condition 1 of the certification applies to the panel closure system.[7] In the CCA, the Department presented four options for the design of the panel closure system, but did not specify which would be constructed at the WIPP facility. The Agency based its certification decision on the DOE's use of the most robust design, referred to in the CCA as “Option D”.
The Department submitted a PCR to the EPA on September 28, 2011. Citing Start Printed Page 72616experience and data gained since the CCA, the DOE's PCR states that the Option D panel closure would be extremely difficult and costly to install, and that the highly engineered design is unnecessary for either worker safety or environmental protection during the operational period. The DOE instead proposed a new panel closure design, the Run-of-Mine Salt Panel Closure System (ROMPCS), which consists of mined salt emplaced between steel bulkheads.
The EPA has completed its technical review of the DOE's PCR and supporting documentation. The goal of the Agency's technical review process was to determine whether, with the new design, the WIPP adequately demonstrates compliance with the requirements of 40 CFR part 194 and the release limits of 40 CFR part 191 Subparts B and C. The process the EPA applied to support this proposed action entailed (1) a review of all materials submitted by the DOE, (2) requests for additional information including a full performance assessment, and (3) the independent performance of additional confirmatory calculations by the Agency. This process is fully documented in the EPA's TSD, “Review of the DOE's Planned Change Request to Modify the WIPP Panel Closure System,” (EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0684-0002) and discussed in the following sections. Based on this process, the Agency concludes that the WIPP will remain in compliance with its release limits with the ROMPCS design. The Agency therefore proposes to approve the DOE's PCR to implement the redesigned panel closure at the WIPP, and to modify 40 CFR part 194 Appendix A, Condition 1 to allow a panel closure design other than Option D. Section IV, below, discusses the Agency's consideration of the proposed panel closure modification. Section V describes the Agency's approach to modifying Condition 1.
During the operational period of the repository, the panel closure system was intended to prevent access to closed waste panels, to mitigate the release of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and to protect site workers from a hypothetical methane or hydrogen explosion inside a filled waste panel. These functions are addressed by the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED), and DOE has submitted a separate Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Permit Modification Request (PMR) stating that the new panel closure design will adequately protect workers and the public during the operational period of the WIPP.
Because the Agency based its certification of the WIPP's compliance with the disposal regulations on the accurate representation of the repository in performance assessment, Condition 1 was appended to 40 CFR Part 194 during the certification of the WIPP. No other design feature of the repository is required by the Compliance Criteria in a similarly explicit way.
The Option D panel closure design consists of a 12-foot thick “explosion-isolation wall” constructed of solid concrete blocks filling the drift on the waste disposal side, a short section of open drift called an “isolation zone” and a monolithic concrete barrier on the side of the open drift. Fractured rock in the immediate vicinity of the drift—called the disturbed rock zone, or DRZ—would be removed, and the resulting void space filled by the concrete monolith. In its current PCR, the DOE states that “large scale testing has demonstrated that using SMC [Salado Mass Concrete] cannot meet the design and performance requirements for the panel closures as specified in the CCA.” Even if the Option D monolith could be constructed as planned, the Agency acknowledges that it would be installed at significant cost to the Department, that additional occupational hazards would be incurred by moving and pouring large amounts of concrete in the underground and that disposal operations would be significantly disrupted.
The DOE's new panel closure design, the ROMPCS, consists primarily of run-of-mine (ROM) salt—impure halite that Start Printed Page 72617has been mined in the course of normal repository operations and not subjected to additional processing or grading. The ROMPCS design consists of two standard steel ventilation bulkheads with a minimum of 100 feet of run-of-mine (ROM) salt between them, filling the drift from floor to ceiling. In Panels 1, 2 and 5, where explosion walls have already been constructed, salt will be placed directly against the explosion wall and a standard steel ventilation bulkhead placed on the outer end of the panel closure. The DOE has stated that the ROMPCS will provide adequate protection during the operational period. Upon initial emplacement, the run-of-mine salt will exhibit the properties of a loosely consolidated or unconsolidated material. Over time, as the open areas of the repository close due to salt creep, the panel closures will consolidate and eventually heal to a state resembling intact salt.
The EPA's technical review process is summarized below in Section C. Based on the results of performance assessment, the Agency concludes that the WIPP will continue to comply with the EPA's disposal standards with the ROMPCS. Therefore, the Agency proposes to approve the DOE's PCR and allow the implementation of the ROMPCS design at the WIPP.
As in the past, the Agency's consideration of the panel closure system focused on its inclusion and accurate representation in repository performance assessment, so that the EPA can ultimately certify the WIPP's ability to meet long-term performance standards.
Modeled releases from the repository principally result from the penetration of the repository waste by a hypothetical oil or gas borehole. Specific release mechanisms include cuttings and cavings releases, direct brine releases (DBRs), spallings releases and releases up a borehole to the Culebra dolomite. The increase in calculated releases in the PCS-2012 PA is primarily due to increases in direct brine releases, resulting from changes in pressure and brine saturation in the waste panels (See TSD, EPA-HQ-OAR-2013-0684-0002, Section 3.5). Compared to the Option D PCS design, the ROMPCS is expected to be more permeable to fluids upon installation, and less permeable after it has consolidated. The initial conditions of the WIPP model make a significant amount of brine available in the repository at the time of closure. The higher initial permeability of the ROMPCS allows early-time brine inflows into the waste panels, resulting in generally higher brine saturations and higher rates of gas generation in the modeled waste panel. When the permeability of the panel closures decreases after 200 years, both brine and gas can be retained in the panel, increasing the brine saturations and gas pressures encountered by borehole Start Printed Page 72618penetrations of the repository. Those increases in turn result in increases in mean DBR and spallings releases. Cuttings and cavings are important contributors to total releases, but are not affected by waste panel pressure and brine saturation. Releases through the Culebra are essentially unchanged from those calculated using the Option D design.
The EPA considers this analysis important to its understanding of the disposal system. The Agency concludes that the changes to the panel closure system do not have a significant impact on the long-term performance of the disposal system.
The Option D panel closure is currently required by 40 CFR part 194, Appendix A, Condition 1.
As described in Section III, the EPA certified the WIPP's performance based on the properties of the Option D panel closure. It is the only engineered aspect of the repository design that is explicitly required by rule.
As described above in Section IV, the EPA is proposing to accept a redesigned panel closure. Acceptance of the PCR requires modification of Condition 1. The Agency does not believe that the design must be specified by the condition, because there is no evidence to suggest that the panel closure has a disproportionate ability to impact long-term performance when compared to other design features of the repository. This change does not grant the DOE the ability to alter the panel closure design at will. As with any engineered component of the disposal system, a departure from the current, approved design must be submitted to the Agency as a planned change request as required by § 194.4(b)(3)(i). The EPA would expect any such request to be supported by complete technical documentation, including information concerning “the geology, hydrology, hydrogeology, and geochemistry of the WIPP disposal system” and “WIPP materials of construction, standards applied to design and construction,” as required by § 194.14, Content of certification applications. The Agency would use this information to determine whether or not the WIPP remains in compliance with the disposal standards. As with any other planned change, based on the potential impact to the WIPP's compliance, the EPA will determine whether the change “departs significantly from the most recent compliance application,” and must be addressed by rule in accordance with § 194.65.
In 1998, the EPA certified the WIPP conditionally based on the Option D panel closure design. At that time, the DOE had not specified which design it planned to implement, and limited performance assessment results were available to indicate the impact of the panel closure design on repository performance. In contrast, the Department has now proposed a single panel closure design to be installed in all waste panels. Due to the evolution of the WIPP PA since the CCA, the DOE and the EPA have gained a greater understanding of panel closures' influence on PA results.
The conclusion that the Agency draws from all of these studies is that although the panel closures can influence modeled results to a degree, there is no evidence that modifications to the panel closure or its representation in PA could jeopardize the WIPP's ability to comply with the disposal requirements. Because panel closures do not exercise a disproportionate impact on the WIPP's ability to isolate radionuclides from the accessible environment, the EPA does not believe that it is necessary for the specific design of the panel closure to remain as a condition of certification. Rather, panel closures can be treated in a similar manner as any other engineered feature of the repository. As described in Section IV, the DOE must still submit a PCR if it wishes to alter the design from the approved ROMPCS.
In order to guide its technical process, the EPA held informal public meetings in Carlsbad, New Mexico, on December 5, 2012, and Santa Fe, New Mexico, on December 6, 2012. The purpose of these meetings was to provide the public with background on the DOE's panel closure system planned change request, and to give the public the opportunity to raise any technical issues that the Agency should consider in its decision. At both meetings, many comments were in favor of approving the panel closure planned change request based on its scientific and economic merits. Specifically, commenters expressed confidence in the ability of salt creep to compress the ROMPCS and form an adequate panel closure, and emphasized the greater operational safety when installing the revised design. In Santa Fe, one commenter expressed the view that the lack of a cost analysis for building the Option D panel closures, and the failure to explicitly consider other designs are deficiencies in the PCR. Other commenters asked questions regarding the likelihood of gas generation and explosions in the closed panels. No technical comments were submitted.
Additional public meetings will be held in Carlsbad and Albuquerque in December 2013. Details and summaries of these meetings will be published on the EPA's WIPP Web site at http://www.epa.gov/​radiation/​wipp.
Under Executive Order 12866, (58 FR 51735; October 4, 1993), the Agency must determine whether the regulatory action is “significant” and therefore subject to OMB review and the requirements of the Executive Order. The Order defines “significant regulatory action” as one that is likely to result in a rule that may: (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or state, local, or tribal governments or communities; (2) create Start Printed Page 72619a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned by another Agency; (3) materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user fees or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities or the principles set forth in the Executive Order. Pursuant to the terms of Executive Order 12866, it has been determined that this rule is not a “significant regulatory action.”
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (“RFA”) generally requires any federal agency to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to notice and comment rulemaking requirements unless they certify that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Small entities include small businesses, small not-for-profit enterprises and small governmental jurisdictions. This proposed rule will not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities because it sets forth requirements which apply only to federal agencies. Therefore, this action will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This proposed action does not impose an information collection burden under the provisions of the Paper Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The Compliance Criteria in 40 CFR part 194 requirements are applicable only to the DOE and the EPA and do not establish any form of collection of information from the public.
Executive Order 13132, entitled “Federalism” (64 FR 43255; August 10, 1999), requires the EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure “meaningful and timely input by state and local officials in the development of regulatory policies that have federalism implications.” “Policies that have federalism implications” is defined in the Executive Order to include regulations that have “substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government.” This proposed rule does not have federalism implications. It will not have substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between the national government and the states or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government, as specified in Executive Order 13132. This proposed Start Printed Page 72620action revises a specific condition of the Compliance Criteria in 40 CFR part 194. These criteria are applicable only to the DOE (operator) and the EPA (regulator) of the WIPP disposal facility. Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not apply to this rule. In the spirit of Executive Order 13132, and consistent with the Agency's policy to promote communications between the EPA and state and local governments, the EPA specifically solicits comment on this proposed rule from state and local officials.
Executive Order 13175, entitled “Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments” (65 FR 67249; November 9, 2000), requires the EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure “meaningful and timely input by tribal officials in the development of regulatory policies that have tribal implications.” This proposed rule does not have tribal implications, as specified in Executive Order 13175. This proposed action revises a condition of the Compliance Criteria in 40 CFR part 194. The Compliance Criteria are applicable only to Federal agencies. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this rule. In the spirit of Executive Order 13175, and consistent with the EPA policy to promote consultation and coordination with Indian Tribal Governments, the Agency specifically solicits comment on this proposed rule from Tribal officials.
This proposed rule is not subject to Executive Order 13211, “Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use” (66 FR 28355; May 22, 2001) because it is not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 40 CFR part 194 is proposed to be amended as follows:
Condition 1: § 194.14(b), Disposal system design, panel closure system. The Department shall close filled waste panels in a manner that has been specifically approved by the Agency. Any modification to the approved panel closure design must be submitted by the DOE as a planned change request pursuant to § 194.4(b)(3)(i), and include supporting information required by § 194.14, Content of compliance certification application. The Administrator or Administrator's authorized representative will determine whether the planned change differs significantly from the design included in the most recent compliance certification, and whether the planned change would require modification of the compliance criteria. The EPA's approval of a panel closure change request requires that performance assessment calculations adequately represent the waste panel closure design, and that those calculations demonstrate the WIPP's compliance with the release standards set by 40 CFR part 191, Subpart B in accordance with § 194.34, Results of performance assessments.
2. WIPP Land Withdrawal Act, Pub. L. 102-579, section 2(18), as amended by the 1996 WIPP LWA Amendments, Pub. L. 104-201.
7. Conditions 2 and 3 of the final certification decision apply to activities conducted at waste generator sites that produce TRU waste proposed for disposal at WIPP (§§ 194.22 and 194.24), and Condition 4 of the certification applies to passive institutional controls (PICs), records and physical markers to warn future societies about the location and contents of the disposal system and thus to deter inadvertent intrusion into the WIPP (§ 194.43).
[FR Doc. 2013-28240 Filed 12-2-13; 8:45 am]