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Making Molehills out of Mountains A common sense approach to the Metals Moratorium

Making Molehills out of Mountains A common sense approach to the Metals Moratorium. George Goode Manager Environmental Protection Division August 19, 2009. Brief History of the Metals Moratorium.

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Making Molehills out of Mountains A common sense approach to the Metals Moratorium

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  1. Making Molehills out of MountainsA common sense approach to the Metals Moratorium George Goode Manager Environmental Protection Division August 19, 2009

  2. Brief History of the Metals Moratorium • January 2000: Secretary of Energy Richardson issued a moratorium on release of volumetrically-contaminated metals pending a decision by NRC to establish national standards. • July 2000: DOE Metal Suspension suspends the unrestricted release for recycling of scrap metals from radiation areas within DOE facilities • The suspension applies to the release of metal from “radiological areas” as defined by 10CFR835 • Originally expected to be resolved within one year • Policy remains in effect currently • Technical, political, and stakeholder issues have confounded resolution to date

  3. Results • Initially: Confusion and establishment of inconsistent programs • Metals within radiological areas subject to different set of rules than all other materials (wood, plastic, concrete, etc still release under 5400.5) • Financial: Turned an asset (scrap metal) into a liability • Regulatory: Solid waste regulations, storm water runoff concerns, speculative accumulation issues, disposal uncertainty • On the Ground: Mountains of ‘moratorium metal’ taking up valuable space • BNL (2008): 13,500 ft3 (disposed at a cost of $130,000) • SLAC (2007): 27,000 ft3 • Some sites disposing, others accumulating

  4. Path Forward • Around the Complex: • DOE is beginning to evaluate site programs • Documenting best practices • Goal to develop consistency across the complex • Sharing lessons learned • Developing stakeholder confidence to enable policy reform • DOE 5400.5 (DOE 458.1) and/or DOE G 441.xx ‘Authorized Release’ process? • At BNL: • Approach similar to the program developed for the Hazardous Waste Moratorium of the 1990’s • Documented program • Combination of Process Knowledge and Surveys • Common sense approach: applies only to the subset of radiological areas where the real potential for contamination or activation exists • Contamination, High Contamination, Airborne, and Radiation Areas where the potential exists for Activation

  5. Moratorium Metals Handling Flowchart Item(s) exposed to a beam or other source of particles CAPABLE OF CAUSING ACTIVATION (Radiation Areas w/ activation check required)? Item(s) within an area where CONTAMINATION EXISTED due to the presence of unencapsulated or unconfined Radioactive Material (Contamination/High Contam./Airborne Rad Areas)? Metal items are within a ‘Radiological Area’ Yes No No Process Knowledge confirmed by HP Survey Yes Yes Moratorium Metal Free-Release Survey by Radcon Background levels Reuse on-site for intended purpose Reuse within DOE Disposal (Subtitle D Landfill) No Rad Waste >Background levels Clean Scrap Metal (unrestricted use)

  6. Path Forward • Considerable momentum building around the DOE Complex • Raised by Lab Directors with Secretary Chu • HS-22 evaluating site approaches, documenting best practices • NNSA (R. Meehan, NA-50) visiting NNSA sites to evaluate programs, identify opportunities, document best practices • SC starting to become engaged in process to develop solution • Sites should designate a lead and engage in this process NOW Mountains Molehills

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