US Nuclear Regulatory Commission - No. 08-106 - June 3, 2008
NRC RECEIVES DOES LICENSE APPLICATION TO CONSTRUCT HIGH-LEVEL NUCLEAR WASTE REPOSITORY AT YUCCA MOUNTAIN
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission received an
application today from the U.S. Department of Energy for a license to
construct the nations first geologic repository for high-level nuclear
waste at Yucca Mountain, Nev.
We are ready to get to work on
this challenging review, said NRC Chairman Dale E. Klein. Congress
has given the NRC a strict timetable for reviewing this application,
and I want to assure the American people that we will perform an
independent, rigorous and thorough examination to determine whether the
repository can safely house the nations high-level waste. The NRCs
licensing decision will be based entirely on the technical merits. [Editor] Read on for the rest of the press release [/Editor]
The NRC will now begin a docketing review to determine whether the
application is sufficiently complete to initiate a formal licensing
review. If the application is deemed sufficiently complete, the agency
will formally docket the application and publish a notice of
opportunity to request a hearing before the NRCs Atomic Safety and
Licensing Board. A decision to docket the application for review would
not preclude the NRC from requesting additional information or
documentation from DOE during the review. If the NRC dockets the
application, it will announce at that time the extent to which it will
adopt DOEs Final Environmental Impact Statement for the proposed
repository.
Formal docketing of the application will trigger
a three-year schedule set by Congress for the NRC to determine whether
to authorize construction. Congress has given the NRC an option to
request a one-year extension, and the agency expects to need a fourth
year. The NRC expects to meet this schedule, subject to Congress
providing sufficient resources in a timely manner.
NRCs
review is expected to involve more than 100 staff and contractor
employees with expertise in several scientific disciplines, including
geochemistry, hydrology, climatology, structural geology, volcanology,
seismology, health physics, security, and law, as well as chemical,
mechanical, nuclear, mining, materials and geological engineering.
Staff at NRCs headquarters in Rockville, Md., the Region IV office in
Arlington, Texas, and the NRCs Las Vegas office will participate. The
Center for Nuclear Waste Regulatory Analysis in San Antonio, Texas, a
federally funded research and development center, will provide
technical assistance to the NRC.
The
NRCs Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, under the
direction of Michael F. Weber, will conduct the licensing review.
Within that office, the Division of High-Level Waste Repository Safety
will oversee daily operations for the review.
The ASLB Panel
includes 16 full-time judges with legal and technical expertise, and is
headed by Chief Judge E. Roy Hawkens. The panel expects several boards
of three judges each to be formed to conduct multiple hearings
regarding the Yucca Mountain application. Potential parties to these
hearings indicated earlier this year they intend to file as many as 650
contentions. Many of the hearing proceedings will be conducted at the
NRCs Las Vegas Hearing Facility, with others held at agency
headquarters.
The NRCs Licensing Support Network was
created as an online library to facilitate the hearing process by
providing the public and potential hearing parties early access to
documents related to the application, as well as the application
itself. The network is available through the NRCs Web site and at http://lsnnet.gov/.
More
information about the NRCs role in regulating the disposal of
high-level nuclear waste is available on the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/waste/hlw-disposal.html.
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