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Overview of Waste Disposition Activities Fall 2017 LLW Forum Meeting

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1 Overview of Waste Disposition Activities Fall 2017 LLW Forum Meeting
Doug Tonkay Director of Waste Disposal & Betsy Forinash Director of the National TRU Program Office of Environmental Management October 16, 2017

2 Overview The Current EM Organization Structure
Low-Level Radioactive Waste (LLW) Policy & Goals Waste Highlights Status on Greater-Than-Class C (GTCC) LLW and GTCC-like Waste Disposal Update on Transuranic (TRU) Waste Shipments to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP)

3 EM-1 Assistant Secretary
EM-2 Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Savannah River National Laboratory Organization Chart 8/01/2017 EM-2.1 Chief of Staff DCOS Special Projects Office - International Program - Correspondence Center EM-4 Regulatory and Policy Affairs APDAS EM-3 Field Operations APDAS EM-5 Corporate Services Acting, APDAS EM-4.1 Infrastructure Management and Disposition Policy Director 4.11 Infrastructure and D&D 4.12 Subsurface Closure EM-3.1 Safety, Security, and Quality Assurance DAS ADAS 3.11 Field Operations Oversight/CNS Field Sites Carlsbad Idaho Los Alamos Oak Ridge Office of River Protection Portsmouth & Paducah Richland Savannah River Site EM Consolidated Business Center EMCBC Field Sites - Moab - ETEC - SPRU - West Valley - LBNL - Brookhaven - EM-NV - EM NNSA Sites (NNSS, LLNL, SNL) HQ Field Liaisons EM-5.1 Resource Management Acting, DAS ADAS 5.11 Budget and Planning 5.111 Budget 5.112 Program Planning 5.12 Information Systems 5.13 Workforce Management 3.111 Safety Management 3.112 Operational Safety 3.113 Standards and Quality Assurance (Robe 3.114 Safeguards, Security, and Emergency Preparedness EM-4.2 Waste and Materials Management DAS 4.21 National TRU Program 4.22 Waste Disposal 4.23 Nuclear Materials 4.24 Packaging & Transportation EM-5.2 Acquisition & Project Management DAS ADAS 5.21 Acquisition and Contract Management 5.22 Project Management EM-3.2 Technology Development Director EM-4.3 Regulatory Intergovernmental and Stakeholder Engagement Director 4.31 Regulatory Compliance 4.32 Intergovernmental and Stakeholder Programs EM-3.3 Chief Engineer Chief Engineer 3.31 Major Constructions and Modifications 3.32 Operations and Processes EM-5.3 Communications Acting Director 5.31 External Affairs 5.32 Communications Services

4 LLW Policy & Goals DOE Order defines policy and allows DOE sites to use on-site and off-site disposal paths, as well as commercial treatment and disposal facilities. DOE closely monitors potential changes in the commercial market – treatment and disposal waste volumes are considerably lower since legacy wastes are largely gone. Low-level Waste Disposal Facility Federal Review group (LFRG) Goals: Confirm that the disposal of LLW at DOE facilities is conducted in a manner that is protective of public health and safety and the environment, by providing regulatory oversight. Ensure consistency in approach and application with the design, construction, operation, and closure of LLW disposal facilities. Ensure compliance with DOE requirements.

5 Waste Highlights In February 2017, the Idaho site marked the completion of a 15-year effort to retrieve 65,000 cubic meters of TRU waste at the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Project for eventual off-site shipment. Los Alamos National Laboratory have completed two-thirds of treatment of the remediated nitrate salt drums. The estimated completion date for treatment is November 2017.  In July 2017, workers completed the construction of the 33-million gallon Saltstone Disposal Unit 6 at Savannah River Site. In September 2017, demolition began on the vitrification facility at West Valley Demonstration Project.

6 Complex-wide LLW/MLLW Disposal Rates by Disposal Location

7 Status on GTCC LLRW & GTCC-Like Waste Disposal
In February 2016, DOE published the Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Disposal of Greater-Than-Class C (GTCC) Low-Level Radioactive Waste and GTCC-Like Waste GTCC LLW has radionuclide concentrations that exceed the limits for Class C LLW. GTCC LLW currently does not have a defined disposal path. GTCC-like waste is DOE owned or generated LLW or TRU waste with characteristics similar to GTCC LLW, and with no identified disposal path. Preferred alternative: land disposal at generic commercial facilities and/or WIPP geologic repository. The Final EIS has the potential to enable disposal of the entire GTCC LLW and GTCC-like waste inventory of approximately 12,000 cubic meters (m3). Presently there is no preference among the three land disposal technologies (intermediate- depth borehole, enhanced near-surface trench, and above-grade vault) at generic commercial facilities. In accordance with the Energy Policy Act of 2005, before the Secretary of Energy makes a final decision on the disposal alternative(s) to be implemented, a Report to Congress must be submitted. The Report to Congress has been drafted and is in concurrence.

8 Status on GTCC LLW & GTCC-Like Waste Disposal Cont.
Issue Record of Decision Await Congressional Action Submit Report to Congress The Report to Congress will: Describe alternatives under consideration Identify waste volume, concentration, and other relevant characteristics Identify the Federal and non-Federal options for disposal Describe actions to ensure safe disposal of identified radioactive wastes Describe projected costs Identify options for ensuring that the beneficiaries of the activities resulting from the generation of GTCC LLW bear all reasonable costs of disposing of such wastes Identify statutory authority required for disposal of GTCC LLW

9 Overview of Waste Disposition Activities Spring 2017 LLW Forum Meeting
Update on TRU Waste Shipments to WIPP WIPP shipments resumed in April 2017 Overview of Waste Disposition Activities Spring 2017 LLW Forum Meeting Doug Tonkay Director of Waste Disposal Office of Environmental Management April 25, 2017

10 Update on TRU Waste Shipments to WIPP cont.
Current emplacement rates support 3-4 shipments per week. Emplacement and shipping rates will increase progressively with operational experience, lessened contamination, and equipment upgrades. Panel 7 expected to take 3-4 years to fill. Significant efficiencies are expected with new ventilation system and movement into Panel 8.

11 Update on TRU Waste Shipments to WIPP cont.
Sites currently shipping (shipments received through 9/20/17): Idaho National Laboratory (40) Savannah River Site (9) Waste Control Specialists (11) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (3) Los Alamos National Laboratory expected to ship later this year. Sites estimated to ship in the next few years: Argonne National Laboratory Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Sandia National Laboratory

12 Shipping and Emplacement Considerations
Bolting stops emplacement Contamination in Panel 7 WIPP Emplacement Rate Budget VOCs Maintenance Ground Control RADCON Toppers DOT Security Some waste must go on top of other containers Waste Handling Systems Must mix other waste with high VOC waste Shipping limits on weight, vent times, etc. Resource Levels Determined by Funding May limit receipt of other waste

13 WIPP Future and Path Forward

14 Questions?


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