10 CFR Part 52, Licenses,
Certifications and Approvals for Nuclear Power Plants
Extension without change of a currently approved collection
No
Regular
08/27/2020
Requested
Previously Approved
36 Months From Approved
01/31/2021
1,428
1,075
335,891
243,854
1,909
2,485
The licensing processes in 10 CFR part
52 provide for issuance of ESPs, SDAs, MLs, CPs, and COLs for
commercial nuclear power reactors. The applicants submit updated
reports, applications for renewals, exemption requests and maintain
records of changes to the facility and records of detailed design
related information. These licensing procedures are options to the
two-step licensing process in 10 CFR part 50, which provides for a
CP and an OL. The part 52 licensing process places procedural
requirements in part 52 and technical requirements in part 50. Part
52 reduces the overall paperwork burden borne by applicants for CPs
and OLs because part 52 only requires a single application and
provides options for referencing standardized designs. The
information in 10 CFR part 52 is needed by the agency to assess the
adequacy and suitability of an applicant's site, plant design,
construction, training and experience, plans and procedures for the
protection of public health and safety. Regulatory Guide 1.206
provides guidance for applicants for combined licenses for nuclear
power plants. Section C.2.1 of Regulatory Guide 1.206 deals with
pre-application activities for respondents who intend to submit
applications for combined licenses for nuclear power plants.
Pre-application activities encompass all the communications,
correspondence, meetings, document submittals/reviews, and other
interactions that occur between the NRC staff and a prospective
applicant before the tendering of an application under 10 CFR part
52. Participation in pre-application activities is voluntary.
Potential applicants who engage in pre-application activities
benefit from an early NRC staff assessment of the completeness and
level of detail of the information that the applicant proposes to
submit and staff identification of potential deficiencies in the
application. Pre-application activities are expected to increase
the efficiency of the staff’s review of those applications once
they are submitted. Subpart B of 10 CFR part 52 establishes the
process for obtaining design certifications. The addition of
appendix F to 10 CFR part 52 allows interested parties to reference
the Advanced Power Reactor 1400 (APR1400) standard design in an
application for a combined license.
The estimated annual burden for
Part 52 will increase by 92,037 hours from 243,854 hours to 335,891
hours. Each year, the NRC solicits information from potential new
reactor applicants using a Regulatory Issue Summary (OMB Clearance
#3150-0228, “Voluntary Reporting of Planned New Reactor
Applications.”). The information provided assists the NRC in
determining resource and budget needs as well as aligning the
proper allocation and utilization of resources to support applicant
submittals, future construction-related activities, and other
anticipated licensing and design certification rulemaking actions.
The NRC staff used the information provided by potential applicants
to develop estimates for this clearance package. The increase in
estimated reporting burden is a result of information we have
received from potential new reactor applicants regarding the
projected number of anticipated applications and other licensing
actions under Part 52. The burden for reporting increased from
220,414 hours to 318,716 (an increase of 98,302 hours). The largest
changes in reporting burden result from a change in the number of
anticipated applications and the number of COLs under construction.
Notable changes in reporting burden were: • More COL applications
are anticipated under Subpart C compared to the prior clearance
period (2 new COL and 4 under construction compared to 2 new; COLs
and 3 under construction), resulting in an increase of 21,222
hours. • One SDA application is anticipated over the next three
years, resulting in an increase of 31,680 hours • The inclusion of
the burden to conduct of pre-application activities, resulting in
an increase of 50,000 hours. • A decrease in Subpart A ESP results
in a decrease of 2,020 hours • Fewer applications under Design
Certification Rule results in a decrease of 2,580 hours
Recordkeeping burden decreased from 23,440 hours to 17,175 hours (a
decrease of 6,265 hours). Some records require ongoing maintenance
(such as 52.63(b)(2), requiring licensees who reference a standard
DC to maintain records of all changes to the facility. During this
clearance cycle, industry has anticipated a reduction in
application submissions that reference a standard DC, additionally,
completion of work prior to this cycle has also contributed to the
decrease in the number of recordkeepers required under 52.63.(b)(2)
from 14 to 3 annually. This results in a decrease of 16,500 hours
of recordkeeping burden. The inclusion of preapplication activities
partially offsets this decrease by adding 10,000 hours of
recordkeeping burden annually. In addition, burden associated with
the APR1400 design certification has been added to Part 52 (37
hours recordkeeping). The burden for this DC is currently contained
in temporary clearance 3150-0236. Following approval of this
renewal, clearance 3150 0236 will be discontinued. Finally, the
estimated burden cost per hour increased from $265/hr. to
$278/hr.
$12,217,266
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
Demetrius Murray 301
415-7646
No
On behalf of this Federal agency, I certify that
the collection of information encompassed by this request complies
with 5 CFR 1320.9 and the related provisions of 5 CFR
1320.8(b)(3).
The following is a summary of the topics, regarding
the proposed collection of information, that the certification
covers:
(i) Why the information is being collected;
(ii) Use of information;
(iii) Burden estimate;
(iv) Nature of response (voluntary, required for a
benefit, or mandatory);
(v) Nature and extent of confidentiality; and
(vi) Need to display currently valid OMB control
number;
If you are unable to certify compliance with any of
these provisions, identify the item by leaving the box unchecked
and explain the reason in the Supporting Statement.