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SUBJECT CATEGORY: AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
DOCUMENT SUMMARY: The U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is considering a revision to the fire protection regulations in 10 CFR part 50, appendix R, paragraph III.G.2 to allow the use of manual actions by nuclear power plant operators to achieve hot shutdown conditions in the event of fires in certain areas provided the actions are evaluated against specific criteria and determined to be acceptable. Currently, licensees who rely on operator manual actions which have not been reviewed and approved by the NRC are generally considered to be in noncompliance with NRC regulations. However, the NRC believes that manual actions relied upon by licensees are safe and effective when performed under appropriate conditions. Accordingly, until the fire protection regulations are revised, the NRC is planning to issue an interim enforcement policy to exercise enforcement discretion if licensees' manual actions meet the NRC's interim acceptance criteria. The NRC is seeking comments from interested parties on the adequacy and clarity of draft interim acceptance criteria which will be utilized by the interim enforcement discretion policy.
SUMMARY: Post-fire safe shutdown; criteria for determining feasibility of manual actions,
The Commission has decided to resolve this issue generically through rulemaking because rulemaking provides the most efficient and effective process to align regulatory requirements and safety objectives. In SECY030100, dated June 17, 2003, the staff proposed and on September 12, 2003, the Commission approved developing an interim enforcement policy which would be in effect while the rulemaking was being undertaken to codify final acceptance criteria for operator manual actions. This policy would exercise discretion in that the NRC would refrain from taking enforcement action for those licensees who rely on operator manual actions, provided these licensees have demonstrated and documented the acceptability of their operator manual actions in accordance with interim acceptance criteria developed by the staff. The Commission approved the staff's recommendation to engage stakeholders in at least one public meeting to discuss the interim manual action acceptability criteria and how they would be used in interim enforcement policy. (See Commission Memorandum dated September 12, 2003, ADAMS Accession No. ML032550222).
The NRC staff has developed draft interim acceptance criteria for manual actions. These draft criteria are provided below. They are an extension of the ``Inspection Criteria for Fire Protection Manual Actions'' issued by the NRC in March 2003 in Inspection Procedure 71111.05. This inspection procedure is available on the NRC public Web site (http://www.nrc.gov.) The NRC held a public meeting on November 12, 2003, at NRC headquarters in Rockville, Maryland to allow members of the public to comment on the preliminary draft criteria below. Additional written comments on these criteria may be submitted to the NRC during the 30 day comment period.
During the rulemaking process to codify the final acceptance
criteria for manual actions, additional public notices will be issued
and additional public comments will be solicited to further ensure that public stakeholder input is considered.
Draft Interim Criteria for Determining the Acceptability of Manual Actions To Achieve PostFire Safe Shutdown
Licensees who have relied on operator manual actions to comply with
Paragraph III.G.2 of Appendix R may be allowed enforcement discretion
if the area where the fire occurs has fire detectors and an automatic
fire suppression system installed in the fire area and if the manual
actions relied upon are consistent with all of the following acceptance criteria \1\:
\1\ The criteria are not listed in any particular order. 1. Available Indications
Diagnostic indication, if credited to support operator manual actions, shall be capable of:
[sbull] Confirming that the action is necessary;
[sbull] Being unaffected by the postulated fire;
[sbull] Providing a means for the operator to detect whether
spurious operation of safetyrelated equipment has occurred; and
[sbull] Verifying that the operator manual action accomplished the intended objective.
Environmental conditions encountered while accessing and performing
operator manual actions shall be demonstrated to be consistent with the
following human factor considerations for visibility and habitability:
[sbull] Emergency lighting shall be provided as required in
Appendix R, Section III.J, or by the licensee's approved fire
protection program, [e.g., lit with 8hr batterybacked emergency
lighting], and sufficient lighting shall be provided for paths to and from locations requiring any actions.
[sbull] Radiation shall not exceed 10 CFR Part 20, Section 20.1201, limits.
[sbull] Temperature and humidity conditions shall be evaluated to
ensure that temperature and humidity do not adversely affect the
capability to perform the operator manual action (See, e.g., NUREG/CR
5680, Vol. 2, ``The Impact of Environmental Conditions on Human
Performance'') or the licensee shall provide an acceptable rationale
for why temperature/humidity do not adversely affect performing the manual actions.
[sbull] Fire effects shall be evaluated to ensure that smoke and
toxic gases from the fire do not adversely affect the capability to
access the required equipment or to perform the operator manual action. 3. Staffing and Training
There shall be a sufficient number of plant operators, under all
staffing levels, to perform all of the required actions in the times
required for a given fire scenario. The use of operators to perform actions shall be independent
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from any collateral fire brigade or control room duties they may need
to perform as a result of the fire. Operators required to perform the
manual actions shall be qualified and continuously available to perform
the actions required to achieve and maintain safe shutdown. A training
program on the use of operator manual actions and associated procedures
during a postulated fire shall demonstrate that operators can successfully achieve these objectives.
To achieve and maintain safe shutdown, adequate communications capability shall be demonstrated for operator manual actions that must be coordinated with other plant operations, with this communications capability continuously available.
Any special equipment required to support operator manual actions, including keys, selfcontained breathing apparatus (SCBA), and personnel protective equipment, shall be readily available, easily accessible and demonstrated to be effective.
Procedural guidance on the use of required operator manual actions shall be readily available, easily accessible and demonstrated to be effective.
All locations where operator manual actions are performed shall be assessed as accessible without hazards to personnel, with controls needed to assure availability of any special equipment, such as keys or ladders, being demonstrated.
The capability to successfully accomplish required operator manual actions within the time allowable using the required procedures and equipment shall be demonstrated using the same personnel/crews who will be required to perform the actions during the fire; documentation of the demonstration shall be provided.
The degree of complexity and total number of operator manual actions required to effect safe shutdown shall be limited such that their successful accomplishment under realistically severe conditions is assured for a given fire scenario. The need to perform operator manual actions in different locations shall be considered when sequential actions are required. Analyses of the postulated fire time line shall demonstrate that there is sufficient time to travel to each action location and perform the action required to support the associated shutdown function(s) such that an unrecoverable condition does not occur.
Possible failure modes and damage that may occur to equipment used during a fire shall be considered to the extent that the equipment's subsequent use could be prevented, or at least made difficult. Credit for using equipment whose operability may have been adversely affected by the fire due to smoke, heat, water, combustion products or spurious actuation effects shall account for such possibilities (e.g., over torquing an MOV due to a spurious signal, as discussed in Information Notice 9218).
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 20th day of November, 2003.
For The Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Catherine Haney,
Program Director, Policy and Rulemaking Program, Division of Regulatory
Improvement Programs, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation. [FR Doc. 0329560 Filed 112503; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 759001P
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Richard Dudley, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, Washington DC 205550001, telephone (301) 4151116, email rfd@nrc.gov or Ray Gallucci, telephone (301) 4151255, email rhg@nrc.gov.
14 CFR Part 39 40 CFR Part 52 14 CFR Part 71 33 CFR Part 165 50 CFR Part 679 47 CFR Part 73 26 CFR Part 1 40 CFR Part 180 33 CFR Part 117 50 CFR Part 17 44 CFR Part 67 50 CFR Part 648 14 CFR Part 97 33 CFR Part 100 40 CFR Part 63 50 CFR Part 622 44 CFR Part 65 50 CFR Part 660 26 CFR Part 301 39 CFR Part 111 40 CFR Part 300 6 CFR Part 5 40 CFR Part 271 47 CFR Part 64 40 CFR Parts 52 and 81 50 CFR Part 665 44 CFR Part 64 10 CFR Part 50 49 CFR Part 571 47 CFR Part 76