[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 211 (Thursday, November 1, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 61912-61913]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-21604]
[[Page 61912]]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
Revised Notice of Intent To Prepare a Generic Environmental
Impact Statement for Uranium Milling Facilities
AGENCY: United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).
ACTION: Revised Notice of Intent (NOI).
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SUMMARY: This notice revises a notice published on September 27, 2007,
in the Federal Register (72 FR 54947), which announced, in part, that
the scoping period for the NRC's Generic Environmental Impact Statement
(GEIS) for uranium recovery facilities was extended to October 31,
2007. The purpose of this revised notice is to further extend the
scoping comment period to November 30, 2007.
DATES: The NRC has received a letter dated October 16, 2007, from the
National Mining Association (NMA) in which the NMA requested an
extension of the date for submitting comments on the scope of the GEIS.
In response, the NRC has determined that the public scoping period for
the GEIS is extended to November 30, 2007. This is the 3rd extension of
the comment period, which originally was to end on September 4, 2007.
However, due to several requests, the period first was extended to
October 8, 2007, and then again until October 31, 2007. With this
current extension, the comment period will be approximately 130 days
and greatly exceeds the typical length of NRC scoping comment periods.
Thus NRC does not intend to provide any further extensions of the
comment period. Written comments submitted by mail should be postmarked
by that date to ensure consideration. Comments mailed after that date
will be considered to the extent possible.
ADDRESSES: Members of the public and interested parties are invited,
and encouraged to submit comments to the Chief, Rulemaking, Directives
and Editing Branch, Mail Stop T-6D59, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001. Also, the NRC encourages
comments to be submitted electronically to [email protected]. Please refer
to the ``Uranium Recovery GEIS'' when submitting comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information on the NRC
NEPA process, or the environmental review process related to this GEIS,
please contact: James Park, Project Manager, Division of Waste
Management and Environmental Protection (DWMEP), Mail Stop T-8F5, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC, 20555-0001, by phone at
1 (800) 368-5642, extension 6935, or by e-mail at [email protected]. For
general or technical information associated with the safety and
licensing of uranium milling facilities, please contact: William Von
Till, Branch Chief, Uranium Recovery Branch, DWMEP, Mail Stop T-8F5,
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, by phone
at 1 (800) 368-5642, extension 0598, or by e-mail at [email protected].
Information and documents associated with the GEIS are available
for public review through the NRC electronic reading room: http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. Documents may also be obtained from
the NRC Public Document Room at U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Headquarters, 11555 Rockville Pike (first floor), Rockville, MD 20852-
2738.
GEIS related documents will also be found at the following public
libraries:
Albuquerque Main Library, 501 Copper NW., Albuquerque, New Mexico
87102, 505-768-5141.
Mother Whiteside Memorial Library, 525 West High Street, Grants, New
Mexico 87020, 505-287-4793.
Octavia Fellin Public Library, 115 W. Hill Avenue, Gallup, New Mexico
87301, 505-863-1291.
Natrona County Public Library, 307 East Second Street, Casper, Wyoming
82601, 307-237-4935.
Fremont County Public Library, 275 North 2nd Street, Lander, Wyoming
82520, 307-332-5194.
Carbon County Public Library, 215 W Buffalo Street, Rawlins, Wyoming
82301, 307-328-2618.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1.0 Background
The NRC is expecting numerous license applications for in-situ
leach (ISL) uranium milling facilities in the coming 2-3 years. This
GEIS is intended to address the common issues associated with
environmental reviews of such milling facilities located in the western
United States. Due to environmental issues common to ISL milling
facilities, the NRC staff will be addressing these common issues
generically to aid in a more efficient environmental review for each
separate license application, if and when these applications are
submitted.
ISL milling facilities recover uranium from low grade ores that may
not be economically recoverable by other methods. In this process, a
leaching agent, such as oxygen with sodium bicarbonate, is added to
native ground water for injection through wells into the subsurface ore
body to dissolve the uranium. The leach solution, containing the
dissolved uranium, is pumped back to the surface and sent to the
processing plant, where ion exchange is used to separate the uranium
from the solution. The underground leaching of the uranium also frees
other metals and minerals from the host rock. Operators of ISL
facilities are required to restore the ground water affected by the
leaching operations. The milling process concentrates the recovered
uranium into the product known as ``yellowcake''
(U3O8). This yellowcake is then shipped to
uranium conversion facilities for further processing in the overall
uranium fuel cycle.
One alternative to ISL milling is the conventional uranium milling
process that extracts uranium from mined ore. At conventional mills,
the ore arrives via truck and is crushed, ground, and leached. In most
cases, sulfuric acid is the leaching agent, but alkaline leaching can
also be done. The leaching agent not only extracts uranium from the ore
but also several other constituents (e.g., vanadium, selenium, iron,
lead, and arsenic). Conventional mills extract 90 to 95 percent of the
uranium from the ore. These mills are typically in areas of low
population density, and they typically process ores from mines within
50 kilometers (30 miles). Conventional mills may also produce
significant quantities of waste materials, known as mill tailings, from
the ore processing. These tailings are contained in impoundments which
can be as large as 250 to 300 acres in extent. It is estimated that
roughly 95 percent of the incoming ore ends as mill tailings. These
mill tailings contain most of the radioactive progeny of uranium and
may be a significant source of radon and radon progeny releases to the
environment.
The GEIS will focus on the construction, operation, and
decommissioning of ISL mills and also assesses alternative methods of
uranium recovery. It is noted that the hardrock mining associated with
conventional uranium milling is regulated by other entities (e.g., the
U.S. Bureau of Land Management, and various state agencies).
For more information on the uranium fuel cycle, please see
Regulating Nuclear Fuel, NUREG/BR-0280, Rev. 1, (which can be found
online at: http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/nuregs/brochures/br0280/).
2.0 Alternatives To Be Evaluated
No action--The no-action alternative would be to not build nor
license potential uranium milling facilities.
[[Page 61913]]
Under this alternative the NRC would not approve future license
applications. This alternative serves as a baseline for comparison of
the potential environmental impacts.
Proposed action--The proposed action is the construction,
operation, and decommissioning of an ISL uranium mill. Implementation
of the proposed action would require the issuance of an NRC license
under the provisions of 10 CFR part 40.
Alternatives--The conventional milling process is one alternative.
Other alternatives not listed in this notice may be identified through
the scoping process.
3.0 Environmental Impact Areas To Be Analyzed
The following resource areas have been tentatively identified for
analysis in the GEIS:
--Public and Occupational Health: addressing the potential public and
occupational consequences from construction, routine operation,
transportation, and credible accident scenarios (including natural
events), and decommissioning;
--Waste Management: addressing the types of wastes expected to be
generated, handled, stored or subject to re-use or disposal;
--Land Use: addressing land use plans, policies and controls;
--Transportation: addressing the transportation modes, routes,
quantities, and risk estimates;
--Geology and Soils: addressing the physical geography, topography,
geology and soil characteristics;
--Water Resources: addressing the surface and ground water hydrology,
water use and quality, and the potential for degradation;
--Ecology: addressing wetlands, aquatic, terrestrial, economically and
recreationally important species, and threatened and endangered
species;
--Air Quality: addressing meteorological conditions, ambient
background, pollutant sources, and the potential for degradation;
--Noise: addressing ambient noises, sources, and sensitive receptors;
--Historical and Cultural Resources: addressing historical,
archaeological, and traditional cultural resources;
--Visual and Scenic Resources: Addressing landscape characteristics,
man-made features and viewshed;
--Socioeconomics: Addressing the demography, economic base, labor pool,
housing, transportation, utilities, public services/facilities,
education, recreation, and cultural resources;
--Environmental Justice: Addressing the potential disproportionately
high and adverse impacts to minority and low-income populations; and
--Cumulative Effects: Addressing the impacts from past, present, and
reasonably foreseeable actions at and near the site.
The examples under each resource areas are not intended to be all
inclusive, nor is this list an indication that environmental impacts
will occur. The list is presented to facilitate comments on the scope
of the GEIS. Additions to, or deletions from, this list may occur as a
result of the public scoping process.
4.0 Tiering
Tiering refers to the coverage of general matters in broader
environmental impact statements with subsequent narrower statements or
environmental analyses incorporating by reference the general
discussions and concentrating solely on the issues specific to the
narrower statement (40 CFR 1508.28). The NRC intends to use the GEIS to
address common issues associated with environmental reviews of ISL
uranium milling facilities located in the western United States and
then develop site-specific environmental assessments or site-specific
environmental impact statements which will tier off the common issues
identified and evaluated in the GEIS.
5.0 Scoping Comments
Scoping is an early and open process designed to determine the
range of actions, alternatives, and potential impacts to be considered
in the GEIS, and to identify the significant issues related to the
proposed action. Scoping is intended to solicit input from the public
and other agencies so that the analysis can be more clearly focused on
issues of genuine concern.
Written comments should be mailed to the address listed above in
the ADDRESSES section. Scoping comments may also be submitted
electronically via email to [email protected]. Please refer to the
``Uranium Recovery GEIS'' when submitting comments. The NRC staff will
prepare a scoping summary report, in which it will summarize public
comments. The NRC will make the scoping summary report and project-
related materials, along with other relevant information on the GEIS,
available at an NRC Web site, http://www.nrc.gov/materials/fuel-cycle-fac/licensing/geis.html so that the public can keep abreast of the
current schedule and progress on the development of the GEIS.
6.0 The NEPA Process
The GEIS will be prepared according to NEPA and NRC's NEPA
implementing regulations contained in 10 CFR part 51.
After the scoping process is complete, the NRC will prepare a draft
GEIS. The draft GEIS is scheduled to be published by April 2008. A
public comment period on the draft GEIS is planned, and public meetings
to receive comments will be held approximately 3 weeks after
publication of the draft GEIS.
Availability of the draft GEIS, the dates of the public comment
period on the draft GEIS, and information about the public comment
meetings will be announced in the Federal Register, on NRC's Web page,
and in the local news media. The final GEIS is expected to be published
in January 2009 and will address, as appropriate, the public comments
received on the draft GEIS.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 29th day of October, 2007.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Larry W. Camper,
Director, Division of Waste Management and Environmental Protection,
Office of Federal and State Materials and Environmental Management
Programs.
[FR Doc. E7-21604 Filed 10-31-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P