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FINAL OMB SUPPORTING STATEMENT
FOR
10 CFR PART 54
REQUIREMENTS FOR RENEWAL OF OPERATING LICENSES FOR
NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS
3150-0155
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Revision
DESCRIPTION OF THE INFORMATION COLLECTION
Part 54 of 10 CFR establishes nuclear power plant operating license renewal requirements. Information collection requirements in 10 CFR Part 54 describe (a) application procedures,
(b) information an applicant must submit for U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) review so that the NRC can determine whether the information meets requirements, and
(c) recordkeeping requirements.
The regulatory philosophy underlying 10 CFR Part 54 is founded on two key principles. The first principle of license renewal is that, with the possible exception of the detrimental effects of aging on the functionality of certain systems, structures, and components (SSCs), and possibly a few other issues related to safety only during the period of extended operation, the regulatory process is adequate to ensure that the licensing bases of all currently operating plants provide and maintain an acceptable level of safety so that operation will not be inimical to public health and safety or the common defense and security. This regulatory process, modified for the period of extended operation to include the management of the detrimental effects of aging on the functionality of certain SSCs, ensures that the licensing bases will provide and maintain an acceptable level of safety. Part 54 of 10 CFR focuses the Commission’s review on this one safety issue but provides leeway for the Commission to consider, on a case-by-case basis, other issues unique to extended operation. The second and equally important principle is that each plant's current licensing basis must be maintained during the renewal term, in part through a program of age-related degradation management for certain SSCs as defined in 10 CFR Part 54.
To determine the actions needed to constitute aging management programs, renewal applicants must perform an integrated plant assessment. In this assessment, SSCs within the scope of license renewal are identified and screened to determine which SSCs require actions to manage the detrimental effects of age-related degradation. The required aging management actions are then identified, described, and justified. The applicant is required to report in its application the screening methods used, the list of structures and components requiring aging management for extended operation resulting from the screening, and the aging management actions that have been or will be taken, together with their bases. As a basis for approval or denial of a renewed license, the NRC will review the application to determine the adequacy of licensee actions taken and to be taken. The inspection, surveillance, testing, and maintenance actions involved in the aging management program include the requirement for recordkeeping and availability of those records to the NRC for review or audit as part of the NRC's regulatory oversight programs.
In addition, renewed operating licenses routinely contain a requirement for the licensee to submit a commitment completion review letter to the NRC. License renewal applicants must submit final safety analysis report supplements and these supplements describe certain future inspection activities to be completed before entering the unit’s period of extended operation. NRC issues renewed licenses based on completion of these commitments. As part of the license renewal process, NRC inspects licensees to verify implementation of these activities. Renewed operating licenses routinely contain a one-time reporting requirement for the licensee to notify NRC in writing when the commitments are completed. The only licensees subject to this requirement are those that (a) have renewed licenses prior to the clearance period or may receive a renewed license during the clearance period, and (b) will complete implementation of the inspection activities and notify NRC accordingly.
A. JUSTIFICATION
1. Need for and Practical Utility of the Collection of Information
Title 10, Part 54, establishes operating license renewal requirements for nuclear power plants and describes the information that licensees must submit to the NRC when applying for a license renewal. The application must contain technical information on how the licensee will manage the detrimental effects of age-related degradation on certain plant SSCs so as to continue the plant’s safe operation during the renewal term. The NRC needs this information to determine whether the licensee’s actions will be effective in assuring the plant’s continued safe operation.
The commitment completion letter required to be submitted by each renewed license serves as notification to the NRC that the licensee has completed the inspection activities described in the final safety analysis report supplement. The NRC needs this notification so that it can inspect the licensee to verify complete implementation of these activities.
Holders of renewed licenses must retain in an auditable and retrievable form, for the term of the renewed operating license, all information and documentation required to document compliance with 10 CFR Part 54. The NRC needs access to this information for continuing effective regulatory oversight.
Section 54.13 states information completeness and accuracy requirements. Specifically, Paragraph (b) requires each applicant to notify the Commission of information identified by the applicant as having, for the regulated activity, significant implication for public health and safety or the common defense and security. Such notification must be made within two working days of identifying the information. The NRC needs this information so that it may take appropriate actions, as required, to protect the public’s health and safety. Applicants will report this information as necessary to comply with the regulation.
Section 54.15 permits the NRC, in accordance with 10 CFR 50.12, to grant exemptions from 10 CFR Part 54 requirements. The Commission, upon application by any interested person or upon its own initiative, may grant the exemptions. The NRC requires the information so that it can determine whether an exemption is warranted.
Section 54.17 states requirements for renewal application filing:
Paragraph (a) requires the filing to be in accordance with Subpart A of 10 CFR Part 2 and 10 CFR 50.4 and 50.30. This section establishes the procedural aspects for the filing whereas 10 CFR 54.19, 54.21, 54.22 and 54.23 addresses information to be included in the application, as described below.
Paragraph (g) requires the license renewal applicant to agree in writing that it will not permit any individual access to Restricted Data or classified National Security Information until an investigation has been approved for such access under the provisions of 10 CFR Parts 25 and/or 95. This information is necessary to assist the Commission in determining that permitting such persons access to Restricted Data or classified National Security Information will not endanger the common defense and security. OMB Clearance Nos. 3150-0046, 3150-0050, 3206-0007, 3150-0026, 3150-0049, 3150-0051 cover information collection for 10 CFR Part 25, and OMB Clearance No. 3150-0047 covers information collection for 10 CFR Part 95. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Section 54.19 states the general information required in the application:
Paragraph (a) requires license renewal applicants to provide the information specified in 10 CFR 50.33(a) through (e), (h), and (i); the application may incorporate this information by reference. The NRC needs this information to establish the continued validity, during the renewal term, of general information applicable during the original license. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Paragraph (b) requires each renewal application to include conforming changes to the standard indemnity agreement in 10 CFR 140.92, Appendix B. This information is necessary to account for the expiration term of the proposed renewed license. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Section 54.21 states requirements for the application’s technical information:
Paragraph (a) requires an integrated plant assessment to identify and list those systems, structures, and components (SSCs) subject to an aging management review. The integrated plant assessment must describe and justify the methods used to identify those SSCs. The NRC needs this information to be able to conclude that additional aging management attention is directed to SSCs that require it because they are important and can undergo age-related degradation during the renewal term. The integrated plant assessment must also demonstrate the adequacy of actions taken or to be taken to manage the detrimental effects of aging. The NRC needs this information to be satisfied that the actions will be effective in assuring the continued safe operation of the plant. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Paragraph (b) requires the application to contain current licensing basis changes which occur during NRC review of the application. Each year following submittal of the license renewal application and at least three months before scheduled completion of the NRC review, the applicant must submit an amendment to the renewal application that identifies any change to the facility’s current licensing basis that materially affects the contents of the license renewal application, including the final safety analysis report (FSAR) supplement. The NRC needs this information to determine the acceptability of these changes from the pertinent safety standpoints. An applicant will report this information as necessary while NRC completes its review of the application.
Paragraph (c) requires the application to contain an evaluation of time-limited aging analyses (TLAAs) for SSCs. The applicant must list the TLAAs that conform to the definition in 10 CFR 54.3 and demonstrate that the analyses remain valid for the period of extended operation, the analyses have been projected to the end of the period of extended operation, or the effects of aging on the intended function(s) will be adequately managed for the period of extended operation. The NRC needs this information to determine whether those SSCs meet the requirements for license renewal. This section also requires a list of all plant-specific exemptions granted pursuant to 10 CFR 50.12 and in effect that are based on TLAAs as defined in 10 CFR 54.3. The applicant must provide an evaluation that justifies the continuation of these exemptions for the period of extended operation. The NRC needs this information to justify whether to continue these exemptions. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Paragraph (d) requires the application to include an FSAR supplement for the facility which must contain a summary description of the programs and activities for managing the effects of aging and the evaluation of TLAAs for the period of extended operation as determined by 10 CFR 54.21(a) and (c), respectively. The NRC needs this information to determine whether the licensee's actions for managing the effects of aging provide reasonable assurance that the facility's operations during the period of extended operation can be conducted without endangering public health and safety. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Section 54.22 requires the application to include any technical specification changes or additions necessary to manage the effects of aging during the period of extended operation. The justification for these changes or additions must also be contained in the application. The NRC needs this information to determine the acceptability of these changes from pertinent safety standpoints. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Section 54.23 states the environmental information required in the application. This information is required to be a supplement to the environmental report that complies with 10 CFR Part 51, “Environmental Protection Regulations for Domestic Licensing and Related Regulatory Functions,” Subpart A, “National Environmental Policy Act – Regulations Implementing Section 102(2).” The NRC requires this information to determine the acceptability of the environmental consequences of the facility’s continued operation during the renewal term. OMB Clearance No. 3150-0021 covers the burden for this environmental information collection. An applicant will report this information once per renewal application submission.
Section 54.33 states license renewal conditions. Specifically, paragraph (c) requires each renewal application to include those conditions to protect the environment that were imposed pursuant to 10 CFR 50.36(b) and that are part of the facility’s current licensing basis at the time the NRC issues the renewed license. The NRC requires this information to protect the environment during the term of the renewed license. OMB Clearance No. 3150‑0011 covers information collection for 10 CFR 50.36(b), and OMB Clearance No. 3150-0021 covers the burden for this environmental information collection as it relates to license renewal.
Section 54.37 states additional records and record keeping requirements:
Paragraph (a) requires holders of renewed licenses to retain in an auditable and retrievable form, for the term of the renewed operating license, all information and documentation required to document compliance with 10 CFR Part 54. The NRC needs access to this information for continuing effective regulatory oversight.
Paragraph (b) requires licensees, after the NRC issues the renewed license, to include in the FSAR update required by 10 CFR 50.71(e), any newly identified SSCs that would have been subject to an aging management review or evaluation of TLAAs in accordance with 10 CFR 54.21. This FSAR update must describe how the effects of aging will be managed such that the intended function(s) will be effectively maintained during the period of extended operation. The FSAR update contains information on all of the changes made by the licensee to the plant since submission of the original FSAR or, as appropriate, since submission of the last FSAR. The NRC needs access to this information for continuing effective regulatory oversight. Renewed license holders will report this information as necessary to comply with the regulation.
2. Agency Use of the Information
The NRC will use the information in its regulatory oversight to determine whether continued operation of nuclear power plants during their renewal terms will provide reasonable assurance of the adequate protection of public health and safety and the common defense and security. License renewal applicants and holders of renewed nuclear power plant operating licenses will use the information as a basis for establishing and conducting their aging management programs.
3. Reduction of Burden Through Information Technology
There are no legal obstacles to reducing the burden associated with this information collection. The NRC encourages respondents to use information technology when it would be beneficial to them. NRC issued a regulation on October 10, 2003 (68 FR 58791), consistent with the Government Paperwork Elimination Act, which allows its licensees, vendors, applicants, and members of the public the option to make submissions electronically via CD-ROM, e-mail, special Web-based interface, or other means. It is estimated that approximately 80% of the potential responses are filed electronically.
4. Effort to Identify Duplication and Use Similar Information
No sources of similar information are available. There is no duplication of requirements. NRC has in place an ongoing program to examine all information collections with the goal of eliminating all duplication and/or unnecessary information collections.
5. Effort to Reduce Small Business Burden
The requirements in 10 CFR Part 54 apply to licensees who are seeking to extend their current operating licenses for nuclear power plants. These licensees are large entities, such as electric utilities, who do not meet the definition of a small business.
6. Consequences to Federal Program or Policy Activities if the Collection is Not Conducted or is Conducted Less Frequently
The records generated as part of this information collection would be partly provided at the time of application for renewal and made partly available on a continual basis during the period of extended operation. An applicant is only required to report the information if it seeks to apply for license renewal. If the NRC grants a renewed operating license, the recordkeeping requirements are necessary because less frequent collection would increase the risk that programs for managing the effects of aging would not be sufficiently current to assure maintenance of the current licensing basis during the period of extended operation.
7. Circumstances Which Justify Variation from OMB Guidelines
There are two 10 CFR Part 54 information collection requirements which vary from OMB guidelines:
(1) Per 10 CFR 54.13(b), within two working days licensees must report to the NRC information having a significant implication for public health and safety or the common defense and security. This reporting period is necessary so that NRC is promptly informed on such matters. However, after renewing the license of 66 units at 39 sites, the NRC has never received a response to this information collection requirement and, therefore, estimates that future responses, if any, will be reported infrequently.
(2) Per 10 CFR 54.37, a licensee must keep records throughout the term of a renewed license. This retention period is necessary to make sure data are available for establishing equipment aging trends for managing the detrimental effects of aging on the functionality of certain SSCs, and to maintain an acceptable level of public health and safety.
8. Consultations Outside the NRC
Opportunity for public comment on the information collection requirements for this clearance package was published in the Federal Register on July 7, 2011. No comments were received.
9. Payment of Gift to Respondents
Not applicable.
10. Confidentiality of Information
Confidential and proprietary information is protected in accordance with NRC regulations at 10 CFR 9.17(a) and 10 CFR 2.390(b).
11. Justification for Sensitive Questions
Not applicable.
12. Estimated Industry Burden and Burden Hour Cost
During the present submission’s clearance period, respondents will incur burdens for submitting one-time reports and for keeping records. NRC estimates that the paperwork burden may vary widely among nuclear power plant licensees. All nuclear plants are somewhat different and the programs employed by individual plants, while similar, are not identical. NRC’s assumptions, methodology, and results for estimating the paperwork burdens follow.
One-Time Reporting Burden
There are two one-time reporting burdens:
(1) The first one-time reporting burden covers all licensee efforts associated with preparing a license renewal application and submitting amendments to the application during the review process. This burden begins when the licensee collects information to prepare the application and ends when the NRC makes a final decision as to granting the renewed license(s). To calculate the annualized one-time reporting burden, NRC considered the total burden for a single license renewal application, the duration over which an applicant would accrue this burden, and the total number of applications expected to incur portions of their total burden during the clearance period.
First, NRC estimates that each one-time response as a license renewal application will incur approximately 84,150 hours of total burden. This figure is partly based on information received from NRC’s consultations with four licensees.
License renewal projects are resource intensive and applicants can prepare applications over a several-year period. Due to these factors, the accrual of burden over time is an important consideration in estimating the total annualized burden for the clearance period. During any given clearance period, some respondents may begin or finish accruing the burden. However, because of the total duration no respondent will accrue the entire burden during a single three-year clearance period.
NRC estimates that an applicant will accrue this one-time reporting burden over a 54-month period. The bulk of the reporting burden will be associated with the preparation and submission of the application to the NRC for review. NRC estimates a smaller amount of time (less than 5 percent of the total burden hours) to submit required amendments during the review process. Applicants submit these amendments, required under 10 CFR 54.21(b), to identify any changes to the facility’s current licensing basis each year during the review process, and at least three months before the scheduled completion of NRC’s review.
To show the total burden accrual on a monthly basis, NRC estimated that preparation of the application takes 32 months, whereas the review process takes 22 months. The direct basis for the first duration is on information from NRC’s outside consultations; the basis for the second duration is NRC’s standard 22‑month review schedule. NRC publicly communicates this schedule in a fact sheet, “Backgrounder on Reactor License Renewal.” This document describes the license renewal process and states, “License renewal is expected to take about 30 months, including the time to conduct an adjudicatory hearing, if necessary, or 22 months without a hearing. In some cases the process is completed on a plant-specific schedule agreed upon with the applicant.” The circumstances concerning each license renewal application review are unique, especially with regard to whether the application is subject to the NRC's hearing process under Part 2, "Rules of Practice for Domestic Licensing Proceedings and Issuance of Orders," of 10 CFR. When NRC prepared this supporting statement, it had approved the license renewal of 66 nuclear power plants, which covers approximately 60 percent of the nation's current fleet of operating commercial nuclear power reactors. Of these submitted applications, eight have been subject to hearings. Further, Part 2 of 10 CFR does not impose information collection burden upon licensees. On this basis, NRC considers the standard 22 month application review schedule an appropriate duration for the second phase. As such, the NRC used this period in estimating the reporting burden for the clearance period. The referenced fact sheet is accessible by Accession No. ML050680253 in NRC’s Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) on the NRC's Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html.
NRC approximated how a respondent will accrue the entire one-time burden for each license renewal application response: 81,150 hours to prepare and submit the application over 32 months, or approximately 2,536 hours/month. In addition, licensees will submit two amendments during the 22-month review period, each requiring an average of 1,500 hours to complete (3,000 hours total burden to submit amendments).1
Finally, to calculate the annualized one-time reporting burden, NRC determined which license renewal application responses would incur portions of their burden during the clearance period. NRC bases license renewal planning on receipt of three new applications per fiscal year; therefore, NRC estimates that it will receive a new license renewal application response about every other month. This planning assumption has been valid beginning with the previous clearance.
The total burden during the entire clearance period (December 2011 through December 2014) is 757,350 hours which results in an annualized one-time reporting burden of 252,450 hours/year (757,350 hours ÷ 3 years).
Calculating this burden by considering each response as a one-time burden expenditure, which NRC did in previous submissions, results in the same burden of 252,450 hours/year (3 applications/year x 84,150 hours/application). Therefore, in this submission, using the estimate that NRC will receive three new license renewal application responses per year, the annualized burden is accurately calculated by counting each response as a one-time burden expenditure. Using this method Table 1 at the end of this section summarizes the results for this one-time reporting burden.
(2) NRC also requires licensees to prepare and submit commitment completion review letters as required by each renewed license. These respondents are different from those preparing and submitting license renewal applications because NRC has already granted their renewed licenses. In certain situations, NRC allows licensees to submit one application for renewing the operating licenses of several reactor units. However, NRC issues a separate renewed operating license to each reactor unit and each such license contains the requirement to submit a commitment completion review letter. To estimate the number of these letters that it will receive during the clearance period, NRC estimates that a licensee will submit the required letter one year before entering a unit’s period of extended operation. NRC then considered these dates for those units that have already received renewed licenses, for those renewals already under review, and for those renewals expected to be submitted based on licensee intent letters. Through this analysis, NRC determined that it will receive 11 one-time responses as commitment completion review letters during the clearance period. Annualizing these responses over the clearance period results in approximately 4 responses per year (11 responses ÷ 3 years = 4 responses/year). NRC estimates that each letter will incur a one-time burden of 10 hours.
Finally, NRC estimates that respondents will incur both of these one-time reporting burdens by professional staff at the rate of $259/hour. A complete summary of the calculations for one-time reporting burden and cost is provided in Table 1.
Recordkeeping Burden
The annual recordkeeping burden covers all licensee efforts associated with retaining, as required by 10 CFR 54.37, information to document compliance with 10 CFR Part 54. This burden begins when NRC grants a renewed license and continues throughout the period of extended operation until the renewed license expires. During the clearance period, the total number of recordkeepers per year will increase as NRC receives more applications and issues more renewed licenses. To estimate the number of recordkeepers, NRC considered each reactor site with renewed operating license(s). Licensees typically submit combined license renewal applications for multiple unit sites so NRC issues the renewed licenses at the same time. Also, NRC estimates that the recordkeeping burden for a multiple unit site is approximately equivalent to the burden for a single unit site.
Next, NRC considered the issuance dates for those sites that have already received renewed licenses, the projected issuance dates for license renewals currently under review, and the renewal applications expected to be submitted based on licensee intent letters. Through this analysis, NRC estimates that there will be 46 recordkeepers per year prior to entering the clearance period; however, during each year of the clearance the number of yearly recordkeepers will increase to 50 in year one, 52 in year two, and 57 in year three. Therefore, during the clearance period, an average of 53 respondents per year will keep records.
Licensees from the outside consultations generally agreed with NRC’s recordkeeping burden estimate of 1,000 hours per year. In addition, NRC estimates that this burden will be completed exclusively by professional staff at the rate of $259/hour. The NRC used the above figures to determine the total burden and cost for recordkeeping. A summary is in Table 2.
13. Estimate of Other Additional Costs
The quantity of records to be maintained is roughly proportional to the recordkeeping burden. Based on the number of pages maintained for a typical clearance, the records storage cost has been determined to be equal to 0.0004 times the recordkeeping burden cost. Therefore, the storage cost for this clearance is estimated to be $5,490 (53,000 hours x $259/hour x 0.0004).
14. Estimated Annualized Cost to the Federal Government
The estimated annualized cost to the NRC for 10 CFR Part 54 information collections covers the review of information in each submitted license renewal application. Based on NRC’s budget, each application review will cost the Federal government a total of approximately 17,613 hours. Of this amount, 15,979 hours are for professional staff activities like oversight, project management, technical reviews, audits, and legal counsel, and the other 1,634 hours are for clerical support. The NRC will incur professional staff costs at the rate of $259/hour and clerical staff costs at the rate of $47/hour. Therefore, the resulting labor cost is $4,215,359 per application (15,979 hours x $259/hour + 1,634 hours x $47/hour). Additionally, each application will cost the Federal government $785,000 for contractor support and $46,757 in travel expenses. Therefore, the total cost for review of a single license renewal application is $5,047,116 ($4,215,359 + $785,000 + $46,757).
As described in Item 12 above, NRC expects to begin review of three license renewal applications per year during the clearance period. Therefore, the resultant estimated annualized cost to the Federal government is $15,141,348 per year ($5,047,163/application x 3 applications/year). NRC will incur these costs over 22‑month review periods which directly align with those periods when applicants incur costs to support NRC’s review. Due to the direct alignment with the applicant burdens during this period, the total annualized cost to the Federal government is also accurately calculated by counting each license renewal application review as a one-time cost. These costs are fully recovered through fee assessments to NRC licensees pursuant to 10 CFR Parts 170 and 171.
15. Reasons for Changes in Burden or Cost
The overall burden estimate decreased by 239,450 from 544,940 hours (504,900 hours reporting plus 40 hours to prepare and submit commitment completion review letters as required by each renewed license plus 40,000 hours recordkeeping) to 305,490 hours (252,450 hours reporting plus 40 hours to prepare and submit commitment completion review letters as required by each renewed license plus 53,000 hours recordkeeping).
Reporting Burden
The reporting burden decreased due to one reason:
The effort required per application per year is unchanged at 84,150 hours reporting. However, the number of expected new applications decreased. Presently, the agency has approved the license renewal of 66 nuclear power plants, which covers approximately 60 percent of the nation's current fleet of operating commercial nuclear power reactors. Given the remaining number of licensees expected to submit license renewal applications, the agency has reduced the number of new applications expected per fiscal year from six in the previous clearance period (6 x 84,150 = 504,900 hours + plus 40 hours to prepare and submit commitment completion review letters) to three during this clearance period (3 x 84,150 = 252,450 hours + 40 hours to prepare and submit commitment completion review letters), resulting in a reduction of 252,450 hours reporting.
Recordkeeping Burden
Although the recordkeeping burden (1,000 hours per application) estimate did not change in this submission, the number of recordkeepers increased from 40 recordkeepers to 53 recordkeepers. This is an increase by an additional 13 recordkeepers for this clearance period. The recordkeeping burden also increased by 13,000 hours. This is an increase from 40,000 hours in the previous submission to 53,000 hours for this clearance period. Each year, as additional licensees apply for and NRC grants renewed licenses, the number of recordkeepers increases. After receiving a renewed license, a licensee must fulfill its recordkeeping responsibilities. This estimate is based on issuance dates for those sites that have already received renewed licenses, the projected issuance dates for license renewals currently under review, and the renewal applications expected to be submitted based on licensee intent letters. These additional 13 recordkeepers also increase the total burden.
Finally, the total cost increased as a result of the increases in burden hours and as a result of the increase in the fee rate from $258/hour to $259/hour.
16. Publication for Statistical Use
This information will not be published for statistical use.
17. Reason for Not Displaying the Expiration Date
The requirements are in regulations published in the Code of Federal Regulations. Amending this annual publication to display information that could become obsolete would be unduly burdensome and too difficult to keep current.
18. Exceptions to the Certification Statement
There are no exceptions.
B. COLLECTION OF INFORMATION EMPLOYING STATISTICAL METHODS
Statistical methods are not used in this collection of information.
TABLE 1
ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN
Section |
Number of Respondents |
Responses per Respondent |
Total Responses |
Burden per Response (Hours) |
Total Annual Burden (Hours) |
Cost at $259/ hour ($) |
License Renewal Application (54.13, 54.15, 54.17, 54.19, 54.21, 54.22)
|
3 |
1 |
3 |
84,150 |
252,450 |
65,384,550 |
Environmental Information for License Renewal (54.23, 54.33) †
|
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Commitment Completion Letter
|
4 |
1 |
4 |
10 |
40 |
10,360 |
Total
|
7 |
|
7 |
|
252,490 |
65,394,910 |
† OMB Clearance No. 3150-0021 covers license renewal environmental information collection burdens.
TABLE 2
ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING REQUIREMENTS
Section |
Number of Recordkeepers |
Burden per Recordkeeper (Hours) |
Total Annual Burden (Hours) |
Cost at $259/ hour ($) |
Retention of Records in an Auditable and Retrievable Form and Final Safety Analysis Report Updates (54.37)
|
53 |
1000 |
53,000 |
13,727,000 |
TOTAL ANNUAL BURDEN / COST: 305,490 hours (252,490 hours reporting plus 53,000 hours recordkeeping) / $79,121,910
TOTAL ANNUAL RESPONDENTS: 60 (7 responses + 53 recordkeepers)
TOTAL ANNUAL RESPONSES: 7 (3 Part 54 license renewal applications + 4 commitment completion letters)
1 These time estimates do not include licensee time to respond to NRC requests for additional information. These requests are necessary so that the NRC can obtain all relevant information needed to make a decision on a licensing action request that is fully informed, technically correct, and legally defensible. NRC requests additional information when the applicant does not include the necessary information in its initial submission, or if the necessary information is not in any other docketed correspondence or cannot reasonably be inferred from the information available to the staff. NRC requests for additional information are exempt from the Paperwork Reduction Act because they are nonstandardized follow-up questions designed to clarify responses to a previously approved collection.
File Type | application/msword |
File Modified | 2012-04-09 |
File Created | 2012-04-09 |