low-activity radioactive materials

18
Update on Low Level Radioactive Waste Alternate Disposal Options Joseph J. Weismann, CHP Radiation Program Manager US Ecology, Inc.

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Update on Low Level Radioactive Waste Alternate Disposal O ptions Joseph J. Weismann, CHP Radiation Program Manager US Ecology, Inc . Low-Activity Radioactive Materials. Regulated under the Atomic Energy Act Low concentrations of source, byproduct and special nuclear material - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Update on Low Level Radioactive Waste Alternate Disposal Options

Joseph J. Weismann, CHP

Radiation Program Manager US Ecology, Inc.

Page 2: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Regulated under the Atomic Energy Act◦ Low concentrations of source, byproduct and special

nuclear material ◦ Accelerator produced material◦ Generally exempted materials, products & devices

(e.g. smoke detectors, luminous dials, etc.) Not Regulated under the Atomic Energy Act

◦ Naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) except radium & certain other discrete sources

◦ Technologically-enhanced NORM (TENORM)◦ Pre-UMTRCA uranium and thorium ore processing

waste (FUSRAP)

Low-Activity Radioactive Materials

Page 3: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Waste Specific: NRC Decommissioning Plan approval NRC General Exemption NRC/Agreement State license condition/amendment NRC/Agreement State approval letter NRC/Agreement State specific exemption*

Disposal Facility-Specific: State law or regulation RCRA permit condition/amendment

*Policy Note: A 10 CFR 20.2002 alternate disposal authorization is not an exemption. However, NRC policy is to issue an exemption concurrently.

Types of Regulatory Authorizations

Page 4: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Select RCRA Subtitle-C Sites are viable options for LARW

Characteristics similar to Part 61 LLRW sites (‘hybrid’ sites)◦ Remote location with limited population◦ Meet performance assessment criteria◦ Desert environment with low annual rainfall◦ Deep depth to groundwater

Not all RCRA sites meet these criteria

Appropriate RCRA Sites

Page 5: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

RCRA Hazardous Waste Cell Design

Page 6: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Site-specific radiological performance assessment (RESRAD)

Operating Procedures Emergency Response Plan Rad Training, Occupational Monitoring, and

Personnel Dosimetry Environmental Monitoring Closure/Post-closure Financial Assurance

‘Hybrid’ RCRA Site RP Program Elements

Page 7: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

“Hybrid” RCRA Site:Grand View, ID (US Ecology)

• Avg 700,000 tons disposed over last 5 years• ~50% radioactive

material• Majority FUSRAP &

EPA CERCLA waste • NRC/AS exempt

waste volumes increasing

Page 8: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Licensed Material Disposal Review Process for Idaho

Generator Requests Alternate Disposal

Authorization & Exemption

NRC/AS Conducts Technical Review

USE Submits Safety Assessment to ID

IDEQ ReviewsRequests More Info

Concurs

Rejects

NRC/AS Approves

Rejects

Page 9: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

USEI Radioactive Material Waste Acceptance Criteria

General: NORM up to 1,500 pCi/g Source material <0.05% by weight Accelerator produced material <10 mrem/hr Generally exempt items & devices

With Specific Exemption: Source, Byproduct & SNM <3,000 pCi/g, and NRC/Agreement State exemption based on “less

than a few millirem” projected dose per Safety Analysis

Page 10: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Andrews, TX Site Robstown, TX Site

“Hybrid” Texas RCRA Sites: Andrews (WCS) and Robstown (US Ecology)

Page 11: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

• All NORM isotopes except radium <150 pCi/gm or less

• Radium <30 pCi/g• Uranium & thorium <0.05% by weight• Exempt byproduct material with state approval• Specific Licensed Material: “300-day rule”• Mixed hazardous & radioactive material acceptable

* Applies to both Andrews (WCS) & Robstown (US Ecology) sites

Texas RCRA Subtitle C Disposal Radioactive Waste Criteria*

Page 12: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Permittee evaluates waste per TAC Rejects

Submits concurrence request to TCEQ:• Reference applicable exemption rule• Physical description- composition, weight,

etc.• Isotope concentrations• Generator & waste location• Must be exempt in state of origin

TCEQ Reviews

Texas Exempt RAM Disposal Review Process

RejectsRequests information

TCEQ Issues Written Concurrence For Disposal

Page 13: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Safety Light Corporation, Bloomsburg PA NRC/PADEP licensed, EPA Superfund Site Cleanup conducted by USACE ~1,600 cy of soil & debris 50 pCi/g 137Cs, 180 pCi/g 90Sr, 50 pCi/g 226Ra

Case Study: Agreement State Specific Exemption

PADEP exemption granted in Nov 2008

Shipments made via IMC to ID RCRA Site

Page 14: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

BASF (Former Englehard Chemical Co.), Plainville, MA

Formerly licensed by AEA (term. in 1963) 123 tons of Natural, Depleted, and Low

Enriched Uranium (~4%) Approval letter granted by MDPH (Feb 2010) Idaho concurrence Disposed at Idaho RCRA site

Case Study:Agreement State SNM Approval Letter

Page 15: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

PG&E, Humboldt Bay NPP Undergoing decommissioning ~200,000 ft3 of soil & debris from Units 1&2 5 pCi/g 137Cs, 5 pCi/g 60Co, 1 pCi/g 14C, more

Case Study: 10CFR30.11 Specific Exemption

NRC issued EA with FONSI and exemption in Nov 2010

Shipments ongoing to ID RCRA Site

Page 16: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Former Molycorp source material processing operation in Washington, PA: NRC licensed

~100,000 cy of soil and slag from production of ferro-alloys (Nb amd Mo)

232Th ~50 pCi/g, 238U ~15 pCi/g, 226Ra ~5 pCi/g

Case Study: 10 CFR 40.13 General Exemption

Classified as unimportant quantity of source material (<.05% by weight)

Disposed at Idaho RCRA site

Page 17: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

“The Committee should work with the staff to consider and provide advice on what NRC can do to assist in providing greater disposal options for low-level radioactive waste, e.g. use of appropriate Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Subtitle C hazardous waste facilities.”

U.S. NRC Staff Requirements Memo - 1/16/07

Recent NRC Commission Policy Supports Use of Select RCRA Sites

Page 18: Low-Activity  Radioactive  Materials

Questions ??