[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 55 (Monday, March 23, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 15476-15502]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06377]
[[Page 15475]]
Vol. 80
Monday,
No. 55
March 23, 2015
Part IV
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
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10 CFR Parts 170 and 171
Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee Recovery for Fiscal Year 2015; Proposed
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 55 / Monday, March 23, 2015 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 15476]]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
10 CFR Parts 170 and 171
[NRC-2014-0200]
RIN 3150-AJ44
Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee Recovery for Fiscal Year 2015
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is proposing to
amend the licensing, inspection, and annual fees charged to its
applicants and licensees. The proposed amendments are necessary to
implement the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA-90), as
amended, which requires the NRC to recover through fees approximately
90 percent of its budget authority in Fiscal Year (FY) 2015, not
including amounts appropriated for Waste Incidental to Reprocessing
(WIR), the Nuclear Waste Fund (NWF), generic homeland security
activities, and Inspector General (IG) services for the Defense Nuclear
Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB). These fees represent the cost of the
NRC's services provided to applicants and licensees.
DATES: Submit comments by April 22, 2015. Comments received after this
date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but the Commission
is able to ensure consideration only for comments received before this
date. Because OBRA-90, as amended, requires that the NRC collect the FY
2015 fees by September 30, 2015, the NRC will not grant any requests
for an extension of the comment period.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods
(unless this document describes a different method for submitting
comments on a specific subject):
Federal rulemaking Web site: Go to http://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID NRC-2014-0200. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher; telephone: 301-415-
3463; email: [email protected]. For technical questions contact
the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this proposed rule.
Email comments to: [email protected]. If you do
not receive an automatic email reply confirming receipt, then contact
us at 301-415-1677.
Fax comments to: Secretary, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission at 301-415-1101.
Mail comments to: Secretary, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, ATTN: Rulemakings and
Adjudications Staff.
Hand deliver comments to: 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland 20852, between 7:30 a.m. and 4:15 p.m. (Eastern Time) Federal
workdays; telephone: 301-415-1677.
For additional direction on obtaining information and submitting
comments, see ``Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments'' in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Arlette Howard, Office of the Chief
Financial Officer, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC
20555-0001, telephone: 301-415-1481, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments
II. Background
III. Discussion
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
VI. Regulatory Analysis
VII. Backfitting and Issue Finality
VIII. Plain Writing
IX. National Environmental Policy Act
X. Paperwork Reduction Act
Public Protection Notification
XI. Voluntary Consensus Standards
XII. Availability of Guidance
XIII. Availability of Documents
I. Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments
A. Obtaining Information
Please refer to Docket ID NRC-2014-0200 when contacting the NRC
about the availability of information for this action. You may obtain
publicly-available information related to this action by any of the
following methods:
Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to http://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID NRC-2014-0200.
NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publicly-available documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. To begin the search, select ``ADAMS Public Documents'' and
then select ``Begin Web-based ADAMS Search.'' For problems with ADAMS,
please contact the NRC's Public Document Room (PDR) reference staff at
1-800-397-4209, 301-415-4737, or by email to [email protected]. The
ADAMS accession number for each document referenced in this document
(if that document is available in ADAMS) is provided the first time
that a document is referenced. For the convenience of the reader, the
ADAMS accession numbers are provided in a table in the ``Availability
of Documents'' section of this document.
NRC's PDR: You may examine and purchase copies of public
documents at the NRC's PDR, Room O1-F21, One White Flint North, 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
B. Submitting Comments
Please include Docket ID NRC-2014-0200 in the subject line of your
comment submission, in order to ensure that the NRC is able to make
your comment submission available to the public in this docket.
The NRC cautions you not to include identifying or contact
information that you do not want to be publicly disclosed in your
comment submission. The NRC will post all comment submissions at http://www.regulations.gov as well as enter the comment submissions into
ADAMS, and the NRC does not routinely edit comment submissions to
remove identifying or contact information.
If you are requesting or aggregating comments from other persons
for submission to the NRC, then you should inform those persons not to
include identifying or contact information that they do not want to be
publicly disclosed in their comment submission. Your request should
state that the NRC does not routinely edit comment submissions to
remove such information before making the comment submissions available
to the public or entering the comment into ADAMS.
II. Background
Over the past 40 years the NRC (and earlier, as the Atomic Energy
Commission, the NRC's predecessor agency) has assessed and continues to
assess fees to applicants and licensees to recover the cost of its
regulatory program. The NRC's cost recovery principles for fee
regulation are governed by two major laws: (1) The Independent Offices
Appropriations Act of 1952 (IOAA) (31 U.S.C. 483 (a)); and (2) OBRA-90
(42 U.S.C. 2214), as amended. The NRC is required each year, under
OBRA-90, as amended, to recover approximately 90 percent of its budget
authority, not including amounts appropriated for WIR, amounts
appropriated for generic homeland security activities, and IG services
for the DNFSB, through fees to the NRC licensees and applicants.
In addition to the requirements of OBRA-90, as amended, the NRC is
also
[[Page 15477]]
required to comply with the requirements of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996. This Act encourages small
businesses to participate in the regulatory process, and requires
agencies to develop more accessible sources of information on
regulatory and reporting requirements for small businesses and create a
small entity compliance guide. The NRC, in order to ensure equitable
fee distribution among all licensees, develops a fee methodology
specifically for small entities that consisted of a small entity
definition and the Small Business Administration's most common
receipts-based size standards as described under the North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) identifying industry codes. The
NAICS is the standard used by Federal statistical agencies to classify
business establishments for the purposes of collecting, analyzing, and
publishing statistical data related to the U.S. business economy. The
purpose of this fee methodology is to lessen the financial impact on
small entities through the establishment of a maximum fee at a reduced
rate for qualifying licensees.
For FY 2015, the NRC staff performed a biennial review using the
same fee methodology developed in FY 2009 that applies a fixed
percentage of 39 percent to the prior 2-year weighted average of
materials users' fees. This methodology disproportionately impacted
NRC's small licensees fees by increasing fees by an approximate 43
percent on average compared to other materials licensees not eligible
for small entity fee status whose fees increased by 38 percent or less
for FY 2015; therefore, the NRC staff limited the increase to 21
percent based on historical applications of the fee methodology.
Consequently, the change resulted in a fee of $3,400 for an upper-tier
small entity and $700 for a lower-tier small entity for FY 2015. The
NRC staff believes these fees are reasonable and provide relief to
small entities while at the same time recovering from those licensees
some of the NRC's costs for activities that benefit them. The next
biennial review will be conducted in FY 2017.
Additionally, this proposed rule is based on the NRC's FY 2015
Congressional Budget Justification figures with adjustments made for
the current estimate. In order to ensure timely publication of this
rule, adjustments have not been made for the appropriation received on
December 16, 2014. All figures in the final rule will be updated based
on the NRC's appropriation (an estimate has been included in this
proposed rule). Because the enacted appropriation is less than the
President's budget, the final rule will reflect that, overall, the NRC
will collect a lower amount of fees than is reflected in this proposed
rule.
III. Discussion
In compliance with OBRA-90, as amended, and the Atomic Energy Act
of 1954 (AEA), the NRC proposes to amend its fee schedules for parts
170 and 171 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) to
recover approximately 90 percent of its FY 2015 budget authority, less
the amounts appropriated for WIR, the NWF, generic homeland security
activities, and IG services for the DNFSB. The 10 CFR part 170 user
fees, under the authority of the IOAA, recover the NRC's costs of
providing specific regulatory benefits to identifiable applicants and
licensees. For example, the NRC assesses these fees to cover the costs
of inspections, applications for new licenses and license renewals, and
requests for license amendments. The 10 CFR part 171 annual fees, on
the other hand, recover generic regulatory costs that are not otherwise
recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees.
FY 2015 Proposed Fee Collection
In order to allow sufficient time for the NRC to issue the FY 2015
final fee rule during FY 2015, as required by OBRA-90, the NRC is
issuing the proposed fee rule based on the President's budget. The FY
2015 final fee rule will be based on the enacted budget. The enacted
budget represents a $44.2 million reduction from the President's
budget, which will reduce the hourly rate and the amount of annual fees
the NRC is required to collect.
The FY 2015 proposed fee rule is based on the President's budget
request of $1,059.5 million, modified to reflect comparability
adjustments and reallocation of resources. Comparability adjustments
are shifts of the same work and the associated resources within or
between programs, business, or product lines. Reallocation of resources
occurs when resources are used differently than originally budgeted,
for reasons such as changes in agency priorities or workload changes.
For example, FY 2015 resources decreased in the New Reactors and Fuel
Facilities Business Lines due to projected workload decreases, while
resources allocated to the Operating Reactors Business Line increased
to support efforts to reduce the inventory of pending licensing
actions. The 2015 proposed fee rule is based on the anticipated
distribution of funds for agency needs at the time of its development.
The final rule will be adjusted to reflect the NRC's FY 2015 reduced
appropriation of $1,015.3 million.
Table 1.1 contains a sample of the anticipated impact of this
calculation. Based on OBRA-90, as amended, the NRC is required to
recover $935.3 million through 10 CFR part 170 licensing and
inspections fees and 10 CFR part 171 annual fees for the FY 2015
proposed fee rule. This amount excludes non-fee items for WIR
activities totaling $1.4 million, IG services for the DNFSB totaling
$0.9 million, and generic homeland security activities totaling $18.1
million. The required fee recovery amount is $4.5 million more than the
amount recovered in FY 2014, an increase of 0.5 percent. After
accounting for billing adjustments, this amount is decreased by $9.0
million as a result of net billing adjustments (sum of unpaid current
year invoices (estimated) minus payments for prior year invoices). This
leaves approximately $926.2 million in FY 2015 to be billed as fees to
licensees for 10 CFR part 170 licensing and inspection fees and 10 CFR
part 171 annual fees. This amount represents an increase of $9.5
million in fees assessed to licensees over the FY 2014 final fee rule
published on June 30, 2014 (79 FR 37124).
Table I summarizes the proposed budget and fee recovery amounts for
the FY 2015 proposed fee rule. The FY 2014 amounts are provided for
comparison purposes. (Individual values may not sum to totals due to
rounding.)
[[Page 15478]]
Table I--Budget and Fee Recovery Amounts
[Dollars in millions]
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FY 2014 Final FY 2015 Estimated FY
rule Proposed rule 2015 final
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Total Budget Authority.......................................... $1,055.9 $1,059.5 $1,015.3
Less Non-Fee Items.............................................. -21.8 -20.3 -$20.3
Balance..................................................... $1,034.1 $1,039.2 $995.0
Fee Recovery Rate............................................... 90% 90% 90%
Total Amount to be Recovered:................................... $930.7 $935.3 $895.5
10 CFR Part 171 Billing Adjustments:
Unpaid Current Year Invoices (estimated)................ 0.5 0.6 0.6
Less Current Year from Collections (Terminated-- -2.2 0 0
Operating Reactors)....................................
Less Payments Received in Current Year for Previous Year -12.3 -9.6 -9.6
Invoices (estimated)...................................
Subtotal............................................ -14.0 -9.0 -9.0
Amount to be Recovered through 10 CFR Parts 170 and 171 Fees.... $916.7 $926.2 $886.5
Less Estimated 10 CFR Part 170 Fees......................... -332.5 -324.3 -$324.3
Less Prior Year Unbilled 10 CFR Part 170 Fees............... -0 -0 -0
10 CFR Part 171 Fee Collections Required........................ $584.2 $601.9 $562.2
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Table I.I--Estimated Final FY 2015 Fees
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Percent change
Class/Category of licenses FY 2014 Final FY 2015 Percent change Estimated FY Percent change from FY 2015
Proposed from FY 2014 2015 final from FY 2014 proposed
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Operating Power Reactors................................ $4,999,000 $5,087,000 1.8 $4,750,000 -5.0 -6.6
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning.............. 224,000 237,000 5.8 234,000 4.5 -1.3
Research and Test Reactors (Nonpower Reactors).......... 84,500 88,500 4.7 84,700 0.2 -4.3
High Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility..................... 7,175,000 9,424,000 31.3 8,198,000 14.3 -13.0
Low Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility...................... 2,469,000 3,243,000 31.3 2,821,000 14.3 -13.0
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion Facility................ 1,466,000 1,925,000 31.3 1,675,000 14.3 -13.0
Conventional Mills...................................... 33,800 40,700 20.4 35,300 4.4 -13.3
Typical Materials Users:
Radiographers (Category 3O)......................... 29,800 26,900 -9.7 25,700 -13.8 -4.5
Well Loggers (Category 5A).......................... 13,600 14,900 9.6 14,300 5.1 -4.0
Gauge Users (Category 3P)........................... 6,800 8,200 20.6 7,900 16.2 -3.7
Broad Scope Medical (Category 7B)................... 35,700 38,500 7.8 37,300 4.5 -3.1
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Hourly Rate
The NRC's hourly rate is used in assessing full cost fees, or the
total cost of services provided by the NRC, for specific services
provided, as well as flat fees for certain application reviews. The NRC
is proposing to decrease the current hourly rate of $279 to $277 in FY
2015 (with an estimated $268 hourly rate in the final rule). The hourly
rate decrease is due to the increase in estimated direct hours worked
per mission-direct FTE during the year. The hourly rate is inversely
related to the mission-direct FTE rate. Thus, as the FTE rate
increases, the hourly rate decreases. This rate would be applicable to
all activities for which fees are assessed under Sec. Sec. 170.21 and
170.31. The FY 2015 proposed hourly rate is 0.07 percent lower than the
FY 2014 hourly rate of $279.
The NRC's hourly rate is derived by dividing the sum of recoverable
budgeted resources for: (1) Mission-direct program salaries and
benefits; (2) mission-indirect program support; and (3) agency office
support and the IG, all of which are agency overhead or indirect costs
by mission-direct FTE hours. The mission-direct FTE hours are the
product of the mission-direct FTE multiplied by the hours per direct
FTE. The only budgeted resources excluded from the hourly rate are
those for contract activities related to mission-direct and fee-relief
activities.
In FY 2015, the NRC used 1,420 hours per direct FTE to calculate
the hourly fee rate, which is higher than the FY 2014 estimate of 1,375
hours per direct FTE and represents increased productivity. These hours
exclude all indirect activities such as training and general
administration. The staff used 1,420 hours in the FY 2015 budget
formulation cycle (which began in March 2013). The NRC generated this
figure by reviewing and analyzing the most currently available time and
labor data from FY 2010 through FY 2012 to determine if the direct
hours per FTE for FY 2015 budget formulation should be revised.
Table II shows the results of the hourly rate calculation
methodology. The FY 2014 amounts are provided for comparison purposes.
(Individual values may not sum to totals due to rounding.)
[[Page 15479]]
Table II--Hourly Rate Calculation
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FY 2014 Final FY 2015 Estimated FY
rule Proposed rule 2015 final
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Mission-Direct Program Salaries & Benefits...................... $359.2 $368.4 $365.6
Mission-Indirect Program Support................................ $21.0 $67.8 $67.8
Agency Corporate Support, and the IG............................ $486.0 $455.6 $422.3
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Subtotal.................................................... $866.2 $891.8 $855.7
Less Offsetting Receipts........................................ -$0.0 -$0.0 $.04
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Total Budget Included in Hourly Rate (Millions of $866.2 $891.7 $855.6
Dollars)...............................................
Mission-Direct FTE (Whole numbers).............................. 2,254 2,267 2,249
Professional Hourly Rate (Total Budget Included in Hourly Rate $279 $277 $268
divided by Mission-Direct FTE Hours) (Whole Numbers)...........
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As shown in Table II, dividing the FY 2015 $891.7 million budget
amount included in the hourly rate by total mission-direct FTE hours
(2,267 FTE times 1,420 hours) results in an hourly rate of $277. The
hourly rate is rounded to the nearest whole dollar.
Flat Application Fee Changes
The NRC is proposing to amend the current flat application fees in
Sec. Sec. 170.21 and 170.31 to reflect the revised hourly rate of
$277. These flat fees are calculated by multiplying the average
professional staff hours needed to process the licensing actions by the
proposed professional hourly rate for FY 2015. The agency estimates the
average professional staff hours needed to process licensing actions
every other year as part of its biennial review of fees performed in
compliance with the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990. The NRC
performed this review as part of this FY 2015 proposed fee rulemaking.
The lower hourly rate of $277 is the primary reason for the decrease in
application fees.
In general, the increase in application fees is due to the
increased number of hours required to perform specific activities based
on the biennial review. Application fees for 11 fee categories (2.D.,
3.C., 3.H., 3.M., 3.P., 3.R.2., 3.S., 4.B., 5.A., 7.A., and 7.C. under
Sec. 170.31) increase as a result of the average time to process these
types of license applications. The decrease in fees for 7 fee
categories (2.C., 2.E., 2.F., 3.B., 3.I., 3.N., and 3.O. under Sec.
170.31) is due to a decrease in average time to process these types of
applications. Also, the application fees increase for 3 import and
export fee categories (K.4., K.5., and 15.D. under Sec. 170.31) and
decrease for 4 import and export fee categories (15.G., 15.H., 15.K.,
and 15.L. under Sec. 170.31).
The amounts of the materials licensing flat fees are rounded so
that the fees would be convenient to the user and the effects of
rounding would be minimal. Fees under $1,000 are rounded to the nearest
$10, fees that are greater than $1,000 but less than $100,000 are
rounded to the nearest $100, and fees that are greater than $100,000
are rounded to the nearest $1,000.
The proposed licensing flat fees are applicable for fee categories
K.1. through K.5. of Sec. 170.21, and fee categories 1.C. through
1.D., 2.B. through 2.F., 3.A. through 3.S., 4.B. through 9.D., 10.B.,
15.A. through 15.L., 15.R., and 16 of Sec. 170.31. Applications filed
on or after the effective date of the FY 2015 final fee rule would be
subject to the revised fees in the final rule.
Application of Fee-Relief and Low-Level Waste (LLW) Surcharge
The NRC proposes to credit a total of $10.6 million to licensees'
annual fees for both fee-relief activities and LLW surcharge based on
their share of the fee recoverable budget authority. For this
rulemaking, the NRC also proposes to establish rebaselined annual fees
by changing the number of licensees in accordance with SECY-05-0164,
``Annual Fee Calculation Method,'' September 15, 2005 (ADAMS Accession
No. ML052580332). The rebaselining method analyzes the budget in detail
and allocates the budgeted costs to various classes or subclasses of
licensees. Stated otherwise, rebaselining is the annual reallocation of
NRC resources based on changes in the NRC's budget. The NRC established
the rebaselined methodology for calculating annual fees through notice
and comment rulemaking in the FY 1999 fee rule (64 FR 31448; June 10,
1999), determining that base annual fees will be re-established
(rebaselined) every third year, or more frequently if there is a
substantial change in the total NRC budget or in the magnitude of the
budget allocated to a specific class of licenses. The FY 2014 fee
rulemaking used this same rebaselining methodology.
Moreover, the NRC would use its fee-relief surplus to decrease all
licensees' annual fees, based on their percentage share of the budget.
The NRC would apply the 10 percent of its budget that is excluded from
fee recovery under OBRA-90, as amended (fee relief), to offset the
total budget allocated for activities that do not directly benefit
current NRC licensees. The budget for these fee-relief activities is
totaled and then reduced by the amount of the NRC's fee relief. Any
difference between the fee-relief and the budgeted amount of these
activities results in a fee-relief adjustment (increase or decrease) to
all licensees' annual fees, based on their percentage share of the
budget, which is consistent with the existing fee methodology.
In the Staff Requirements Memorandum for SECY-14-0082,
``Jurisdiction for Military Radium and U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission Oversight of U.S. Department of Defense Remediation of
Radioactive Material'' (ADAMS Accession No. ML14356A070), the
Commission approved the staff's recommendation to finalize and
implement a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the U.S. Department
of Defense (DOD) for remediation of DOD unlicensed sites containing
radioactive materials subject to the NRC's regulatory authority. The
MOU is slated to be finalized in FY 2015. As part of this effort, the
Commission approved the establishment of a new fee relief category for
the regulatory activities for the monitoring of DOD unlicensed sites
under the MOU. Consistent with this direction, the NRC proposes to
include a new activity under fee relief activities, within 10 CFR part
170 licensing and inspection fees or 10 CFR part 171 annual fees. These
program activities capture site-specific oversight activities performed
under the MOU and any ongoing non-site specific MOU-related program
activities. These activities will
[[Page 15480]]
therefore be funded by the agency's 10-percent appropriation.
In comparison to FY 2014, resources for Scholarships and
Fellowships decreased by $14.8 million in the FY 2015 President's
budget. The $15 million requirement for University Grants will be
allocated consistent with the FY 2015 appropriation in the FY 2015
final fee rule. Additionally, the budgetary resources in FY 2015 would
slightly increase due to a reduction in decommissioning billings under
10 CFR part 170, which would lower the offset under decommissioning
activities for total fee-relief resources.
Table III summarizes the fee-relief activities for FY 2015. The FY
2014 amounts are provided for comparison purposes. (Individual values
may not sum to totals due to rounding.)
Table III--Fee-Relief Activities
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2014 FY 2015
Fee-relief activities Budgeted costs Budgeted costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Activities not attributable to an
existing NRC licensee or class of
licensee:
a. International activities......... $11.2 $10.0
b. Agreement State oversight........ 12.6 12.4
c. Scholarships and Fellowships..... 18.9 4.1
d. Medical Isotope Production....... 3.1 5.0
2. Activities not assessed under 10 CFR
part 170 licensing and inspection fees
or 10 CFR part 171 annual fees based on
existing law or Commission policy:
a. Fee exemption for nonprofit 11.9 10.6
educational institutions...........
b. Costs not recovered from small 8.4 9.2
entities under 10 CFR 71.16(c).....
c. Regulatory support to Agreement 17.9 19.0
States.............................
d. Generic decommissioning/ 17.1 17.7
reclamation (not related to the
power reactor and spent fuel
storage fee classes)...............
e. In Situ leach rulemaking and 1.0 1.3
unregistered general licensees.....
f. Potential Department of Defense 0.0 0.0
remediation program MOU activities.
-------------------------------
Total fee-relief activities..... 102.1 89.3
Less 10 percent of the NRC's total FY -103.4 103.9
budget (less non-fee items)............
Fee-Relief Adjustment to be Allocated to -1.3 -14.6
All Licensees' Annual Fees.............
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table IV shows how the NRC would allocate the $14.6 million fee-
relief assessment adjustment to each license fee class. As explained
previously, the NRC would allocate this fee-relief adjustment to each
license fee class based on their percentage of the budget for their fee
class compared to the NRC's total budget. The fee-relief surplus
adjustment is subtracted from the required annual fee recovery for each
fee class.
Separately, the NRC has continued to allocate the LLW surcharge
based on the volume of LLW disposal of three classes of licenses:
operating reactors, fuel facilities, and materials users. Because LLW
activities support NRC licensees and Agreement States, the costs of
these activities are recovered through annual fees.
Table IV also shows the allocation of the LLW surcharge activity.
For FY 2015, the total budget allocated for LLW activity is $4 million.
(Individual values may not sum to totals due to rounding.)
Table IV--Allocation of Fee-Relief Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY 2015
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LLW Surcharge Fee-relief adjustment Total
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Percent $ Percent $ $
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating Power Reactors........ 32 1.3 86.0 -12.6 -11.3
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor 0 0 3.7 -0.5 -0.5
Decommissioning................
Research and Test Reactors...... 0 0 0.3 0.0 0.0
Fuel Facilities................. 54 2.2 5.2 -0.8 1.4
Materials Users................. 14 0.6 3.1 -0.5 0.1
Transportation.................. 0 0 0.5 -0.1 -0.1
Rare Earth Facilities........... 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Uranium Recovery................ 0 0 1.2 -0.2 -0.2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................... 100 4.0 100 -14.6 -10.6
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Revised Annual Fees
The NRC is required to establish rebaselined annual fees, which
includes updating the number of NRC licensees in the FY 2015 fee
calculations. Therefore, the NRC proposes to revise its annual fees in
Sec. Sec. 171.15 and 171.16 for FY 2015 to recover approximately 90
percent of the NRC's FY 2015 budget authority, less non-fee amounts and
the estimated amount to be recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees. The
total estimated 10 CFR part 170 collections for this proposed rule
total are $324.3 million, a decrease of $8.3 million from the FY 2014
fee rule, primarily within the fuel facilities and spent fuel storage
fee classes. These decreases are later explained in detail within each
fee class. The total amount to be recovered through annual fees from
current licensees for this proposed rule is $601.9 million, an increase
of $17.8
[[Page 15481]]
million from the FY 2014 final rule. The FY 2015 Final Fee Rule will
reflect an estimated annual fee collection of $562.2 million. The
required annual fee collection in FY 2014 was $584.2 million.
In the agency's FY 2006 final fee rule (71 FR 30721; May 30, 2006),
the Commission determined that the agency should proceed with a
presumption in favor of rebaselining when calculating annual fees each
year. Rebaselining involves a detailed analysis of the NRC's budget,
with the NRC allocating budgeted resources to fee classes and
categories of licensees. The Commission expects that for most years
there will be budgetary and other changes that warrant the use of the
rebaselining method.
For FY 2015, the NRC's total fee recoverable budget, as mandated by
law, is $935.3 million, an increase of $4.5 million compared to FY
2014. The FY 2015 budget was allocated to the appropriate fee class
based on budgeted activities. As compared with the FY 2014 annual fees,
the FY 2015 rebaselined fees increase for most fee classes--operating
reactors, spent fuel storage and reactor decommissioning, fuel
facilities, research and test reactors, some materials users, DOE
transportation activities, and most uranium recovery licensees.
The factors affecting all annual fees include the distribution of
budgeted costs to the different classes of licenses (based on the
specific activities the NRC will perform in FY 2015), the estimated 10
CFR part 170 collections for the various classes of licenses, and
allocation of the fee-relief surplus adjustment to all fee classes. The
percentage of the NRC's budget not subject to fee recovery remains at
10 percent for FY 2015, the same as FY 2014.
Table V shows the rebaselined fees for FY 2015 for a representative
list of categories of licensees. The FY 2014 amounts are provided for
comparison purposes. (Individual values may not sum to totals due to
rounding.)
Table V--Rebaselined Annual Fees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015 Estimated FY
Class/category of licenses FY 2014 Final Proposed 2015 final
annual fee annual fee fee
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating Power Reactors........................................ $4,999,000 $5,087,000 $4,750,000
+ Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning.................... 224,000 237,000 234,000
Total, Combined Fee............................................. 5,223,000 5,324,000 4,984,000
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning...................... 224,000 237,000 234,000
Research and Test Reactors (Nonpower Reactors).................. 84,500 88,500 84,700
High Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility............................. 7,175,000 9,424,000 8,198,000
Low Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility.............................. 2,469,000 3,243,000 2,821,000
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion Facility........................ 1,466,000 1,925,000 1,675,000
Conventional Mills.............................................. 33,800 40,700 35,300
Typical Materials Users:
Radiographers (Category 3O)................................. 29,800 26,900 25,700
Well Loggers (Category 5A).................................. 13,600 14,900 14,300
Gauge Users (Category 3P)................................... 6,800 8,200 7,900
Broad Scope Medical (Category 7B)........................... 35,700 38,500 37,300
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The work papers (ADAMS Accession No. ML15021A198) that support this
proposed rule show in detail the allocation of the NRC's budgeted
resources for each class of licenses and how the fees are calculated.
The work papers are available as indicated in Section XIII,
``Availability of Documents,'' of this document.
Paragraphs a. through h. of this section describe budgetary
resources allocated to each class of licenses and the calculations of
the rebaselined fees. Individual values in the tables presented in this
section may not sum to totals due to rounding.
a. Fuel Facilities
The FY 2015 budgeted costs to be recovered in the annual fees
assessment to the fuel facility class of licenses (which includes
licensees in fee categories 1.A.(1)(a), 1.A.(1)(b), 1.A.(2)(a),
1.A.(2)(b), 1.A.(2)(c), 1.E., and 2.A.(1) under Sec. 171.16) are
approximately $38.6 million. This value is based on the full cost of
budgeted resources associated with all activities that support this fee
class, which is reduced by estimated 10 CFR part 170 collections and
adjusted for allocated generic transportation resources and fee-relief.
In FY 2015, the LLW surcharge for fuel facilities is added to the
allocated fee-relief adjustment (see Table IV, ``Application of Fee-
Relief Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY 2015,'' in Section II,
``Discussion,'' of this document). The summary calculations used to
derive this value are presented in Table VI for FY 2015, with FY 2014
values shown for comparison. (Individual values may not sum to totals
due to rounding.)
Table VI--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Fuel Facilities
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources................ $47.2 $48.2
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts. -16.7 -11.3
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources........... 30.5 36.9
Allocated generic transportation........ 0.6 0.8
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge..... 1.1 1.4
Billing adjustments..................... -0.6 -0.05
[[Page 15482]]
Reclassification of licensee current -2.2 0
year fee billing received:.............
-------------------------------
Total remaining required annual fee 29.5 38.6
recovery...........................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In FY 2015, the fuel facilities annual fee increased in part due to
a slight rise in budgetary resources. The primary cause for the FY 2015
increase was reduced 10 CFR part 170 billings from construction delays.
The NRC allocates the total remaining annual fee recovery amount to the
individual fuel facility licensees, based on the effort/fee
determination matrix developed for the FY 1999 final fee rule (64 FR
31447; June 10, 1999). In the matrix included in the publicly-available
NRC work papers, licensees are grouped into categories according to
their licensed activities (i.e., nuclear material enrichment,
processing operations, and material form) and the level, scope, depth
of coverage, and rigor of generic regulatory programmatic effort
applicable to each category from a safety and safeguards perspective.
This methodology can be applied to determine fees for new licensees,
current licensees, licensees in unique license situations, and
certificate holders.
This methodology is adaptable to changes in the number of licensees
or certificate holders, licensed or certified material and/or
activities, and total programmatic resources to be recovered through
annual fees. When a license or certificate is modified, it may result
in a change of category for a particular fuel facility licensee, as a
result of the methodology used in the fuel facility effort/fee matrix.
Consequently, this change may also have an effect on the fees assessed
to other fuel facility licensees and certificate holders. For example,
if a fuel facility licensee amends its license/certificate to reflect
cessation of licensed activities (e.g., decommissioning or license
termination), then that licensee will not be subject to 10 CFR part 171
costs applicable to the fee class, and the budgeted generic costs for
the safety and/or safeguards components that continue to be associated
with the license will have to be spread among the remaining fuel
facility licensees/certificate holders.
The methodology is applied as follows. First, a fee category is
assigned, based on the nuclear material possessed or used, and/or the
activity or activities authorized by license or certificate. Although a
licensee/certificate holder may elect not to fully use a license/
certificate, the license/certificate is still used as the source for
determining authorized nuclear material possession and use/activity.
Second, the category and license/certificate information are used to
determine where the licensee/certificate holder fits into the matrix.
The matrix depicts the categorization of licensees/certificate holders
by authorized material types and use/activities.
Each year, the NRC's fuel facility project managers and regulatory
analysts determine the level of effort associated with regulating each
of these facilities. This is done by assigning, for each fuel facility,
separate effort factors for the safety and safeguards activities
associated with each type of regulatory activity. The matrix includes
10 types of regulatory activities, including enrichment and scrap/
waste-related activities (see the work papers for the complete list).
Effort factors are assigned as follows: 1 (low regulatory effort), 5
(moderate regulatory effort), and 10 (high regulatory effort). The NRC
then totals separate effort factors for safety and safeguards
activities for each fee category.
The effort factors for the various fuel facility fee categories are
summarized in Table VII. The value of the effort factors shown, as well
as the percent of the total effort factor for all fuel facilities,
reflects the total regulatory effort for each fee category (not per
facility). This results in spreading of costs to other fee categories.
Table VII--Effort Factors for Fuel Facilities, FY 2015
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effort factors (percent of
Number of total)
Facility type (fee category) facilities -------------------------------
Safety Safeguards
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
High-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(a))......................... 2 89 (43.8) 97 (54.5)
Low-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(b)).......................... 3 70 (34.5) 26 (14.6)
Limited Operations (1.A.(2)(a))................................. 1 2 (1.0) 7 (3.9)
Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Demonstration (1.A.(2)(b))............ 1 3 (1.5) 15 (8.4)
Hot Cell (1.A.(2)(c))........................................... 1 6 (3.0) 3 (1.7)
Uranium Enrichment (1.E.)....................................... 1 21 (10.3) 23 (12.9)
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion (2.A.(1))....................... 1 12 (5.9) 7 (3.9)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For FY 2015, the total budgeted resources for safety activities are
$19.8 million, excluding the fee-relief adjustment and the
reclassification adjustment. This amount is allocated to each fee
category based on its percent of the total regulatory effort for safety
activities. For example, if the total effort factor for safety
activities for all fuel facilities is 100, and the total effort factor
for safety activities for a given fee category is 10, that fee category
will be allocated 10 percent of the total budgeted resources for safety
activities. Similarly, the budgeted resources amount of $17.4 million
for safeguards activities is allocated to each fee category based on
its percent of the total regulatory effort for safeguards activities.
The fuel facility fee class' portion of the fee-relief adjustment, $1.4
million, is allocated to each fee category based on its percent of the
total regulatory effort for both safety and
[[Page 15483]]
safeguards activities. The annual fee per licensee is then calculated
by dividing the total allocated budgeted resources for the fee category
by the number of licensees in that fee category. The fee (rounded) for
each facility is summarized in Table VIII.
Table VIII--Annual Fees for Fuel Facilities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Facility type (fee category) Proposed
annual fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
High-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(a))..................... $9,424,000
Low-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(b))...................... 3,243,000
Limited Operations (1.A(2)(a)).............................. 912,000
Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Demonstration (1.A.(2)(b))........ 1,824,000
Hot Cell (and others) (1.A.(2)(c)).......................... 912,000
Uranium Enrichment (1.E.)................................... 4,459,000
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion (2.A.(1))................... 1,925,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Uranium Recovery Facilities
The total FY 2015 budgeted costs to be recovered through annual
fees assessed to the uranium recovery class (which includes licensees
in fee categories 2.A.(2)(a), 2.A.(2)(b), 2.A.(2)(c), 2.A.(2)(d),
2.A.(2)(e), 2.A.(3), 2.A.(4), 2.A.(5), and 18.B. under Sec. 171.16)
are approximately $1.2 million. The derivation of this value is shown
in Table IX, with FY 2014 values shown for comparison purposes.
Table IX--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Uranium Recovery
Facilities
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources................ $10.9 $11.6
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts. -9.5 -10.1
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources........... 1.3 1.5
Allocated generic transportation........ N/A N/A
Fee-relief adjustment................... -0.0 -0.2
Billing adjustments..................... -0.1 -0.1
-------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.. 1.2 1.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In comparison to FY 2014, the proposed FY 2015 budgetary resources
for uranium recovery licensees increased due to greater resources
required for environmental reviews of uranium mining applications and
tribal consultations with uranium recovery licensing actions.
Specifically, staff worked to expedite environmental reviews for
uranium mining applications by improving the National Historic
Preservation Act Section 106 Tribal Consultation process to accelerate
NRC consideration of uranium mining applications.
Since FY 2002, the NRC has computed the annual fee for the uranium
recovery fee class by allocating the total annual fee amount for this
fee class between the DOE and the other licensees in this fee class.
The NRC regulates DOE's Title I and Title II activities under the
Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act (UMTRCA). The Congress
established the two programs, Title I and Title II, under UMTRCA to
protect the public and the environment from uranium milling. The UMTRCA
Title I program is for remedial action at abandoned mill tailings sites
where tailings resulted largely from production of uranium for the
weapons program. The NRC also regulates DOE's UMTRCA Title II program,
which is directed toward uranium mill sites licensed by the NRC or
Agreement States in or after 1978.
In FY 2015, the annual fee assessed to DOE includes recovery of the
costs specifically budgeted for the NRC's UMTRCA Title I and II
activities, plus 10 percent of the remaining annual fee amount,
including generic/other costs (minus 10 percent of the fee-relief
adjustment), for the uranium recovery class. The NRC assesses the
remaining 90 percent generic/other costs minus 90 percent of the fee-
relief adjustment, to the other NRC licensees in this fee class that
are subject to annual fees.
The costs to be recovered through annual fees assessed to the
uranium recovery class are shown in Table X.
Table X--Costs Recovered Through Annual Fees; Uranium Recovery Fee Class
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary of costs Proposed
annual fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DOE Annual Fee Amount (UMTRCA Title I and Title II) $593,233
General Licenses:......................................
UMTRCA Title I and Title II budgeted costs less 10
CFR part 170 receipts..............................
10 percent of generic/other uranium recovery 78,076
budgeted costs.....................................
10 percent of uranium recovery fee-relief adjustment -17,954
---------------
Total Annual Fee Amount for DOE (rounded)....... 653,000
Annual Fee Amount for Other Uranium Recovery Licenses:.. 702,680
90 percent of generic/other uranium recovery
budgeted costs less the amounts specifically
budgeted for Title I and Title II activities.......
90 percent of uranium recovery fee-relief adjustment -161,582
---------------
Total Annual Fee Amount for Other Uranium 541,098
Recovery Licenses..............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 15484]]
The NRC will continue to use a matrix, which is included in the
work papers, to determine the level of effort associated with
conducting the generic regulatory actions for the different (non-DOE)
licensees in this fee class. The weights derived in this matrix are
used to allocate the approximately $541,098 annual fee amount to these
licensees. The use of this uranium recovery annual fee matrix was
established in the FY 1995 final fee rule (60 FR 32217; June 20, 1995).
The FY 2015 matrix is described as follows.
First, the methodology identifies the categories of licenses
included in this fee class (besides DOE). These categories are:
Conventional uranium mills and heap leach facilities; uranium In Situ
Recovery (ISR) and resin ISR facilities, and mill tailings disposal
facilities, as defined in Section 11e.(2) of the AEA (11e.(2) disposal
facilities); and uranium water treatment facilities.
Second, the matrix identifies the types of operating activities
that support and benefit these licensees. The activities related to
generic decommissioning/reclamation are not included in the matrix
because they are included in the fee-relief activities. Therefore, they
are not a factor in determining annual fees. The activities included in
the matrix are operations, waste operations, and groundwater
protection. The relative weight of each type of activity is then
determined, based on the regulatory resources associated with each
activity. The operations, waste operations, and groundwater protection
activities have weights of 0, 5, and 10, respectively, in the matrix.
Each year, the NRC determines the level of benefit to each licensee
for generic uranium recovery program activities for each type of
generic activity in the matrix. This is done by assigning, for each fee
category, separate benefit factors for each type of regulatory activity
in the matrix. Benefit factors are assigned on a scale of 0 to 10 as
follows: 0 (no regulatory benefit), 5 (moderate regulatory benefit),
and 10 (high regulatory benefit). These benefit factors are first
multiplied by the relative weight assigned to each activity (described
previously). The NRC then calculates total and per licensee benefit
factors for each fee category. Therefore, these benefit factors reflect
the relative regulatory benefit associated with each licensee and fee
category.
Table XI displays the benefit factors per licensee and per fee
category, for each of the non-DOE fee categories included in the
uranium recovery fee class as follows:
Table XI--Benefit Factors for Uranium Recovery Licenses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Benefit factor Benefit factor
Fee category licensees per licensee Total value percent total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conventional and Heap Leach mills (2.A.(2)(a)).. 1 150 150 9
Basic In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(b)).. 8 190 1,520 76
Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities 1 215 215 11
(2.A.(2)(c))...................................
11e.(2) disposal incidental to existing tailings 1 85 85 4
sites (2.A.(4))................................
Uranium water treatment (2.A.(5))............... 1 25 25 1
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... 12 665 1,995 100
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applying these factors to the approximately $541,098 in budgeted
costs to be recovered from non-DOE uranium recovery licensees results
in the total annual fees for each fee category. The annual fee per
licensee is calculated by dividing the total allocated budgeted
resources for the fee category by the number of licensees in that fee
category, as summarized in Table XII.
Table XII--Annual Fees for Uranium Recovery Licensees
[Other than DOE]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Facility type (fee category) proposed
annual fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conventional and Heap Leach mills (2.A.(2)(a)).............. $40,700
Basic In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(b)).............. 51,500
Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(c))........... 58,300
11e.(2) disposal incidental to existing tailings sites 23,100
(2.A.(4))..................................................
Uranium water treatment (2.A.(5))........................... 6,800
------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Operating Power Reactors
The total budgeted costs to be recovered from the power reactor fee
class in FY 2015 in the form of annual fees is $503.6 million, as shown
in Table XIII. The FY 2014 values are shown for comparison. (Individual
values may not sum to totals due to rounding.)
Table XIII--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Operating Power Reactors
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources................ $799.3 $809.5
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts. -290.9 -288.5
-------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources....... 508.4 521.0
Allocated generic transportation........ 1.1 1.7
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge..... 0.6 -11.3
[[Page 15485]]
Billing adjustment...................... -10.2 -7.8
-------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.. 499.9 503.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The operating power reactor annual fee increase is partially the
result of a slight rise in budgetary resources in the FY 2015
President's budget, partially the result of a $2 million 10 CFR part
170 reduction in estimated billings, and partially the result of the
December 2014 shutdown of Vermont Yankee. The permanent shutdown of the
Vermont Yankee reactor decreases the fleet of operating reactors, which
subsequently increases the annual fees for the rest of the fleet. As
noted earlier, when the final fee rule incorporates the reduction
included in the FY 2015 appropriations, this operating power reactor
annual fee will decrease.
The budgeted costs to be recovered through annual fees to power
reactors are divided equally among the 99 power reactors licensed to
operate, resulting in an FY 2015 annual fee of $5,087,000 per reactor.
Additionally, each power reactor licensed to operate would be assessed
the FY 2015 spent fuel storage/reactor decommissioning annual fee of
$237,000. The total FY 2015 annual fee is $5,324,000 for each power
reactor licensed to operate. The annual fees for power reactors are
presented in Sec. 171.15.
d. Spent Fuel Storage/Reactors in Decommissioning
For FY 2015, budgeted costs of $28.9 million for spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning would be recovered through annual fees
assessed to 10 CFR part 50 power reactors and to 10 CFR part 72
licensees who do not hold a 10 CFR part 50 license. Those reactor
licensees that have ceased operations and have no fuel onsite would not
be subject to these annual fees.
The increased annual fee is due to an increase in budgetary
resources for rulemaking, a decrease in 10 CFR part 170 billings, and a
decrease in the number of licensees. Staff has dedicated significant
time working on improvements to 10 CFR part 71 to ensure compatibility
with International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) transportation and
storage standards--this generic rulemaking activity must be recovered
through 10 CFR part 171 fees. Furthermore, the estimated 10 CFR part
170 fees decreased because staff finalized major reviews in 2014. Table
XIV shows the calculation of this annual fee amount. The FY 2014 values
are shown for comparison. (Individual values may not sum to totals due
to rounding.)
Table XIV--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for the Spent Fuel Storage/
Reactor in Decommissioning Fee Class
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources................ $32.7 $33.4
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts. -5.4 -4.6
-------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources....... 27.3 28.8
Allocated generic transportation........ 0.6 1.0
Fee-relief adjustment................... 0.0 -0.5
Billing adjustments..................... -0.4 -0.3
-------------------------------
Total required annual fee 27.5 28.9
recovery.......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The required annual fee recovery amount is divided equally among
122 licensees, resulting in an FY 2015 annual fee of $237,000 per
licensee.
e. Research and Test Reactors (Non-Power Reactors)
Approximately $350,000 in budgeted costs would be recovered through
annual fees assessed to the research and test reactor class of licenses
for FY 2015. Table XV summarizes the annual fee calculation for the
research and test reactors for FY 2015. The FY 2014 values are shown
for comparison. (Individual values may not sum to totals due to
rounding.)
Table XV--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Research and Test Reactors
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources................ $2.63 $2.57
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts. -2.28 -2.18
-------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources....... 0.35 0.39
Allocated generic transportation........ 0.03 0.03
[[Page 15486]]
Fee-relief adjustment................... -0.01 -0.05
Billing adjustments..................... -0.03 -0.02
-------------------------------
Total required annual fee 0.34 0.35
recovery.......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The increased annual fee results from the decline in 10 CFR part
170 billings following the completion of licensing actions associated
with the Aerotest Radiography and Research Reactor. The resources
required for this project are now allocated elsewhere, as these
licensing decisions have been challenged and are currently the subject
of litigation before the Commission.
The required annual fee recovery amount is divided equally among
the four research and test reactors subject to annual fees and results
in an FY 2015 annual fee of $88,500 for each licensee.
f. Rare Earth Facilities
The agency is establishing an annual fee in the FY 2015 fee rule
for an anticipated rare earth facility that is currently expected to be
operational in 2016. No fees are currently expected to be charged in
this category in FY 2015; establishing this fee now is intended to
promote regulatory predictability and stability for potential licensees
in this category. The annual fee for rare earth facilities will be
$83,800. Table XVI shows the calculation of the FY 2015 annual fee
amount for rare earth facilities.
Table XVI--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Rare Earth Facilities
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources.................................... $0.24
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts..................... -0.15
-----------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................. 0.09
Allocated generic transportation............................ 0.00
Fee-relief adjustment....................................... -0.00
Billing adjustments......................................... -0.00
-----------
Total required annual fee recovery.................... 0.08
------------------------------------------------------------------------
g. Materials Users
For FY 2015, budget costs of $36.8 million for materials users
would be recovered through annual fees assessed to 10 CFR parts 30, 40,
and 70 licensees. Table XVII shows the calculation of the FY 2015
annual fee amount for materials users licensees. The FY 2014 values are
shown for comparison. Note the following fee categories under Sec.
171.16 are included in this fee class: 1.C., 1.D., 1.F., 2.B., 2.C.
through 2.F., 3.A. through 3.S., 4.A. through 4.C., 5.A., 5.B., 6.A.,
7.A. through 7.C., 8.A., 9.A. through 9.D., and 17. (Individual values
may not sum to totals due to rounding.)
Table XVII--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Materials Users
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources................ $32.8 $35.8
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts. -$0.9 -$1.0
-------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources....... 31.9 34.8
Allocated generic transportation........ 1.3 2.2
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge..... 0.2 0.1
Billing adjustments..................... -0.3 -0.3
-------------------------------
Total required annual fee 33.1 36.8
recovery.......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
To equitably and fairly allocate the $36.8 million in FY 2015
budgeted costs to be recovered in annual fees assessed to the
approximately 3,000 diverse materials users licensees, the NRC would
continue to base the annual fees for each fee category within this
class on the 10 CFR part 170 application fees and estimated inspection
costs for each fee category. Because the application fees and
inspection costs are indicative of the complexity of the license, this
approach would continue to provide a proxy for allocating the generic
and other regulatory costs to the diverse categories of licenses based
on the NRC's cost to regulate each category. This fee calculation would
also continue to consider the inspection frequency (priority), which is
indicative of the safety risk and resulting regulatory costs associated
with the categories of licenses.
The annual fee for these categories of materials users' licenses is
developed as follows: Annual fee = Constant x [Application Fee +
(Average Inspection Cost/Inspection Priority)] + Inspection Multiplier
x (Average Inspection Cost/Inspection Priority) + Unique Category
Costs.
The constant the multiplier necessary to recover approximately
$26.5 million in general costs (including allocated generic
transportation costs) is 1.49 for FY 2015. The average inspection cost
is the average inspection hours for each fee category multiplied by the
hourly rate of $277. The inspection priority is the interval between
routine inspections, expressed in years. The inspection multiplier is
the multiple
[[Page 15487]]
necessary to recover approximately $9.2 million in inspection costs,
and is 1.73 for FY 2015. The unique category costs are any special
costs that the NRC has budgeted for a specific category of licenses.
For FY 2015, approximately $243,000 in budgeted costs for the
implementation of revised 10 CFR part 35, ``Medical Use of Byproduct
Material (unique costs),'' has been allocated to holders of NRC human-
use licenses.
The annual fee to be assessed to each licensee also includes a
share of the fee-relief assessment of approximately $448,000 allocated
to the materials users fee class (see Table IV, ``Allocation of Fee-
Relief Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY 2015,'' in Section II,
``Discussion,'' of this document), and for certain categories of these
licensees, a share of the approximately $560,000 surcharge costs
allocated to the fee class. The annual fee for each fee category is
shown in Sec. 171.16(d).
h. Transportation
Table XVIII shows the calculation of the FY 2015 generic
transportation budgeted resources to be recovered through annual fees.
The FY 2014 values are shown for comparison. (Individual values may not
sum to totals due to rounding.)
Table XVIII--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Transportation
[Dollars in millions]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015
Summary fee calculations FY 2014 Final Proposed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Budgeted Resources................ $8.0 $10.3
Less Estimated 10 CFR Part 170 Receipts. -3.1 -3.0
Net 10 CFR Part 171 Resources........... 4.9 7.3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NRC must approve any package used for shipping nuclear material
before shipment. If the package meets NRC requirements, the NRC issues
a Radioactive Material Package Certificate of Compliance (CoC) to the
organization requesting approval of a package. Organizations are
authorized to ship radioactive material in a package approved for use
under the general licensing provisions of 10 CFR part 71, ``Packaging
and Transportation of Radioactive Material.'' The resources associated
with generic transportation activities are distributed to the license
fee classes based on the number of CoCs benefitting (used by) that fee
class, as a proxy for the generic transportation resources expended for
each fee class.
The total FY 2015 budgetary resources for generic transportation
activities, including those to support DOE CoCs, are $7.35 million. The
overall increase is due to rulemaking activities involving 10 CFR part
71 Compatibility with IAEA Transportation Standards & Improvements and
the increased activities from the development of the Continued Storage
Rule and associated Generic Environmental Impact Statement.
Generic transportation resources associated with fee-exempt
entities are not included in this total. These costs are included in
the appropriate fee-relief category (e.g., the fee-relief category for
nonprofit educational institutions).
Consistent with the policy established in the NRC's FY 2006 final
fee rule (71 FR 30721; May 30, 2006), the NRC would recover generic
transportation costs unrelated to DOE as part of existing annual fees
for license fee classes. The NRC would continue to assess a separate
annual fee under Sec. 171.16, fee category 18.A., for DOE
transportation activities. The amount of the allocated generic
resources is calculated by multiplying the percentage of total CoCs
used by each fee class (and DOE) by the total generic transportation
resources to be recovered.
The distribution of these resources to the license fee classes and
DOE is shown in Table XIX. The distribution is adjusted to account for
the licensees in each fee class that are fee-exempt. For example, if
four CoCs benefit the entire research and test reactor class, but only
4 of 31 research and test reactors are subject to annual fees, the
number of CoCs used to determine the proportion of generic
transportation resources allocated to research and test reactor annual
fees equals (4/31) x 4, or 0.5 CoCs.
Table XIX--Distribution of Generic Transportation Resources, FY 2015
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of CoCs Allocated
benefiting Percentage of generic
License fee class/DOE fee class or total CoCs transportation
DOE resources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total......................................................... 90.4 100.0 7.35
DOE........................................................... 20.0 22.1 1.63
Operating Power Reactors...................................... 21.0 23.2 1.71
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning.................... 12.0 13.3 0.98
Research and Test Reactors.................................... 0.4 0.4 0.03
Fuel Facilities............................................... 10.0 11.1 0.81
Materials Users............................................... 27.0 29.9 2.20
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NRC assesses an annual fee to DOE based on the 10 CFR part 71
CoCs it holds and does not allocate these DOE-related resources to
other licensees' annual fees, because these resources specifically
support DOE. Note that DOE's annual fee includes a reduction for the
fee-relief surplus adjustment (see Table IV, ``Allocation of Fee-Relief
Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY 2015,'' in Section II, ``Discussion,''
of this document), resulting in a total annual fee of $1,511,000
million for FY 2015. The overall increase is due to rulemaking
activities involving 10 CFR part 71 Compatibility with IAEA
Transportation Standards & Improvements. This
[[Page 15488]]
rulemaking is essential for 10 CFR part 71 updates and compliance.
Administrative Changes
The NRC is proposing the following 12 administrative changes:
1. Increase Direct Hours per Full-Time Equivalent in the Hourly
Rate Calculation. The hourly rate in 10 CFR part 170 is calculated by
dividing the cost per direct FTE by the number of direct hours per
direct FTE in a year. ``Direct hours'' are hours charged to mission
direct activities in the Nuclear Reactor Safety Program and Nuclear
Reactor Materials and Waste Program. The FY 2014 final fee rule used
1,375 hours per direct FTE in the hourly rate calculations. The NRC
staff reviewed and analyzed time and labor data for FY 2010 through FY
2012 to determine if it should revise the direct hours per FTE for the
FY 2015 budget formulation. Between FY 2010 and FY 2012, total direct
hours charged by direct employees increased. The increase in direct
hours was apparent in all mission business lines. To reflect this
increase in productivity as demonstrated by the time and labor data,
the staff determined that the number of direct hours per FTE should
increase to 1,420 hours for FY 2015. The staff used 1,420 hours in the
FY 2015 budget formulation cycle.
2. Add New Definition for ``Overhead and General and Administrative
Costs'' under 10 CFR 170.3, ``Definitions.'' The NRC proposes to add a
new definition to describe overhead and general and administrative
costs that are included in full cost charges relating to hours charged
by resident inspectors and project managers to licensees. The identical
definition is also proposed under 10 CFR 171.5, ``Definitions.''
3. Revise Definition for ``Utilization Facility'' under 10 CFR
170.3, ``Definitions.'' The NRC proposes to revise the definition for
``utilization facility'' to reflect the definition contained in the
direct final rule, ``Definition of a Utilization Facility,'' published
October 17, 2014 (79 FR 62329) and effective December 31, 2014. The
proposed definition would allow the NRC to add SHINE Medical
Technologies, Inc.'s proposed accelerator-driven subcritical operating
assemblies to the NRC's definition of a ``utilization facility.''
4. Revise the Assessment of Administrative Time for Project
Managers and Resident Inspectors. The NRC staff has examined the
charging of overhead time for project managers and resident inspectors
under 10 CFR part 170. The current practice evenly distributes overhead
time charges among the sites assigned to the individual. The NRC staff
believes this method of distribution does not consider that some
licensees generate more direct work than others. The NRC, therefore,
proposes to allocate overhead costs to each licensee based on direct
time to each docket. This method ensures that a licensee's overhead
costs are proportional to the regulatory services rendered by the NRC.
This method aligns with the NRC's longstanding fee policy that fees
assessed to licensees should, to the maximum extent practicable,
reflect the actual costs of NRC regulatory services, and does not
penalize licensees who require fewer regulatory services.
5. Add Fee Subcategories to 10 CFR 170.31 to Reflect a License with
Multiple Sites. The staff proposes to add fee subcategories to 3.L.
licenses (broad scope) under 10 CFR 170.31 to assess additional fees to
licensees such as the United States Department of Agriculture and the
Department of the Army, in order to accurately reflect the cost of
services provided by the NRC. The staff spends a disproportionate
amount of time on these licensees as compared to other licensees in the
same fee category. These two broad scope licenses also have a
considerable number of sites throughout the country and operate in a
manner similar to master materials licenses under fee category 17. In
FY 2014, the staff compared the work efforts expended by the NRC for
master materials licenses with multiple sites to NRC work efforts for
broad scope licenses with multiple sites. The staff concluded that NRC
work efforts for multi-site broad scope licensees are similar to work
efforts for master materials licensees. Therefore, consistent with NRC
policy that fees assessed to licensees accurately reflect the cost of
services provided, the NRC proposes to revise its fee categories to
consider the number of sites a broad scope licensee has in establishing
fees. An identical change is also proposed to 10 CFR 171.16, ``Annual
Fees: Materials Licensees, Holders of Certificates of Compliance,
Holders of Sealed Source and Device Registrations, Holders of Quality
Assurance Program Approvals, and Government Agencies Licensed by the
NRC.''
6. Modify 10 CFR 170.31, Footnote 6, to Avoid Duplicate Billing.
The NRC proposes to revise footnote 6 to 10 CFR 170.31, ``Schedule of
Fees for Materials Licenses and Other Regulatory Services, Including
Inspections, and Import and Export Licenses,'' to avoid duplicate
billing for fuel cycle facility licensees. The NRC currently charges a
single annual fee to fuel cycle facility licensees for major
activities. These licensees are not charged additional annual fees for
ancillary activities. An identical change is also proposed under 10 CFR
171.16, ``Annual Fees: Materials Licensees, Holders of Certificates of
Compliance, Holders of Sealed Source and Device Registrations, Holders
of Quality Assurance Program Approvals, and Government Agencies
Licensed by the NRC.''
7. Correct Definition for ``Overhead and General and Administrative
Costs'' under 10 CFR 171.5, ``Definitions.'' The NRC proposes to
correct the definition for ``Overhead and General and Administrative
Costs'' to reflect the FY 2008 merger of the Advisory Committee on
Nuclear Waste with the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards.
8. Revise Fees to Reflect Biennial Review of Fees. To comply with
the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990, the NRC evaluates, on a
biennial basis, the historical professional staff hours used to process
a new license application. The NRC also evaluates the inspection time
by reviewing hours spent by NRC staff on those materials users' fee
categories that are subject to flat application fees. This review also
includes new license and amendment applications for import and export
licenses. Changes resulting from this biennial review impact 10 CFR
part 170 flat fees for the small materials users and import and export
licensees.
Two program offices, the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and
Safeguards (NMSS) and the Office of International Programs (OIP), have
completed their biennial review to the CFO regarding the FY 2015 fees.
The NMSS recommended changes to the professional staff hours for most
of the small materials users. The OIP also recommended changes to the
hours for some import and export license fee categories.
Cumulatively, the FY 2015 biennial review resulted in increased
professional staff hours within 11 fee categories and decreased
professional staff hours within 11 fee categories. The changes in the
number of hours and the hourly rate are components that will be used to
determine the 10 CFR part 170 fees for the materials user's licenses as
well as import and export applications.
9. Change Small Entity Fees. In accordance with NRC policy, the
staff conducted a biennial review of small entity fees to determine if
the fees should be changed. The small entity fees primarily impact the
NRC's small materials licensees. In FY 2015, the staff performed a
biennial review using the fee methodology developed in FY 2009 that
applies a fixed percentage of 39 percent to the prior 2-year weighted
[[Page 15489]]
average of materials users' fees. As a result, the upper tier small
entity fee increased from $2,800 to $4,000 and the lower-tier fee
increased from $600 to $900. This constitutes a 43 percent and 50
percent increase, respectively. Implementing this increase would have a
disproportionate impact upon the NRC's small licensees compared to
other licensees. Therefore, the NRC staff revised the increase to 21
percent for the upper-tier fee. The 21 percent increase was applied
based on historical trends in the small entity fee and has been used in
previous biennial reviews. The NRC staff is amending the upper-tier
small entity fee to $3,400 and amending the lower-tier small entity fee
to $700 for FY 2015. The staff believes these fees are reasonable and
provide relief to small entities while at the same time recovering from
those licensees some of the NRC's costs for activities that benefit
them.
10. Increase the NRC's Small Business Lower-Tier Receipts-Based
Threshold. The NRC staff proposes to increase the lower-tier receipts-
based threshold from $485,000 to $520,000. This change would reflect
approximately the same percentage adjustment as the NRC's upper-tier
receipts-based standard adjustment from $7 million to $7.5 million and
is consistent with the Small Business Administration's interim final
rule, ``Small Business Size Standards: Inflation Adjustment to Monetary
Based Size Standards,'' published in the Federal Register on June 12,
2014 (79 FR 33647) and effective July 14, 2014.
11. Add Fee Subcategories to 10 CFR Part 171 to Reflect a License
with Multiple Sites. The NRC proposes to add fee subcategories to 3.L.
licenses (broad scope) under 10 CFR 171.16 to assess additional fees to
licensees such as the United States Department of Agriculture and the
Department of the Army, in order to accurately reflect the cost of
services provided by the NRC. The staff spends a disproportionate
amount of time on these licensees as compared to other licensees in the
same fee category. These two broad scope licenses also have a
considerable number of sites throughout the country and operate in a
manner similar to master materials licenses under fee category 17. In
FY 2014, the staff compared the work efforts expended by the NRC for
master materials licenses with multiple sites to NRC work efforts for
broad scope licenses with multiple sites. The staff concluded that NRC
work efforts for multi-site broad scope licensees are similar to work
efforts for master materials licensees. Therefore, consistent with NRC
policy that fees assessed to licensees accurately reflect the cost of
services provided, the NRC proposes to revise its fee categories to
consider the number of sites a broad scope licensee has in establishing
fees.
12. Modify 10 CFR 171.16, Footnote 16, to Avoid Duplicate Billing.
The NRC proposes to revise the footnote description under 10 CFR
171.16, ``Annual Fees: Materials Licensees, Holders of Certificates of
Compliance, Holders of Sealed Source and Device Registrations, Holders
of Quality Assurance Program Approvals, and Government Agencies
Licensed by the NRC,'' to avoid duplicate billing for fuel cycle
facility licensees. The NRC's current policy charges a single large
annual fee to fuel cycle facility licensees for major activities. These
licensees are not charged additional annual fees for ancillary
activities.
FY 2015 Billing
The FY 2015 fee rule will be a major rule as defined by the
Congressional Review Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801-808). Therefore, the
NRC's fee schedules for FY 2015 will become effective 60 days after
publication of the final rule in the Federal Register. Upon publication
of the final rule, the NRC will send an invoice for the amount of the
annual fees to reactor licensees, 10 CFR part 72 licensees, major fuel
cycle facilities, and other licensees with annual fees of $100,000 or
more. For these licensees, payment is due 30 days after the effective
date of the FY 2015 final rule. Because these licensees are billed
quarterly, the payment amount due is the total FY 2015 annual fee less
payments made in the first three quarters of the fiscal year.
Materials licensees with annual fees of less than $100,000 are
billed annually. Those materials licensees whose license anniversary
date during FY 2015 falls before the effective date of the FY 2015
final rule will be billed for the annual fee during the anniversary
month of the license at the FY 2014 annual fee rate. Those materials
licensees whose license anniversary date falls on or after the
effective date of the FY 2015 final rule will be billed for the annual
fee at the FY 2015 annual fee rate during the anniversary month of the
license, and payment will be due on the date of the invoice.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
The following paragraphs describe the specific amendments proposed
by this rulemaking.
10 CFR 170.3, Definitions
The NRC proposes to add a new definition of ``Overhead and General
and Administrative Costs'' and revise the definition for ``Utilization
facility.''
10 CFR 170.20, Average Cost per Professional Staff-Hour
The NRC proposes to revise this section to reflect the hourly rate
for FY 2015.
10 CFR 170.21, Schedule of Fees for Production or Utilization
Facilities, Review of Standard Referenced Design Approvals, Special
Projects, Inspections, and Import and Export Licenses
The NRC proposes to revise fees for fee category code K. to reflect
the FY 2015 proposed hourly rate for flat fee applications.
10 CFR 170.31, Schedule of Fees for Materials Licenses and Other
Regulatory Services, Including Inspections, and Import and Export
Licenses
The NRC proposes to add subcategories to fee category 3.L. licenses
(broad scope) to assess additional fees to licensees such as the United
States Department of Agriculture and the Department of the Army, in
order to accurately reflect the cost of services provided by the NRC.
The NRC also proposes to revise footnote 6 to avoid duplicate billing
for fuel cycle facility licensees.
10 CFR 171.5, Definitions
The NRC proposes to correct the definition for ``Overhead and
General and Administrative Costs'' to reflect the FY 2008 merger of the
Advisory Committee on Nuclear Waste with the Advisory Committee on
Reactor Safeguards.
10 CFR 171.15, Annual Fees: Reactor Licenses and Independent Fuel
Storage Licenses
The NRC proposes to revise paragraph (b)(1) to reflect the required
FY 2015 annual fee to be collected from each operating power reactor by
September 30, 2015. The NRC proposes to revise the introductory text of
paragraph (b)(2) to reflect FY 2015 in reference to annual fees and
fee-relief adjustment. The NRC proposes to revise paragraph (c)(1) and
the introductory text of paragraph (c)(2) to reflect the FY 2015 spent
fuel storage/reactor decommissioning and spent fuel storage annual fee
for 10 CFR part 50 licenses and 10 CFR part 72 licensees who do not
hold a 10 CFR part 50 license, and the FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment.
The NRC proposes to revise the introductory text of paragraph (d)(1)
and paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) to reflect the FY 2015 fee-relief
adjustment for the operating reactor power class of
[[Page 15490]]
licenses, the number of operating power reactors, and the FY 2015 fee-
relief adjustment for spent fuel storage reactor decommissioning class
of licenses. The NRC proposes to revise paragraph (e) to reflect the FY
2015 annual fees for research reactors and test reactors.
10 CFR 171.16, Annual Fees: Materials Licensees, Holders of
Certificates of Compliance, Holders of Sealed Source and Device
Registrations, Holders of Quality Assurance Program Approvals, and
Government Agencies Licensed by the NRC
The NRC proposes to revise paragraphs (d) and (e) to reflect FY
2015 annual fees and the FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment. The NRC also
proposes to add subcategories to fee category 3.L. licenses (broad
scope) to assess additional fees to licensees such as the Department of
Agriculture and the Department of the Army, in order to accurately
reflect the cost of services provided by the NRC. The NRC also proposes
to revise footnote 6 to avoid duplicate billing for fuel cycle facility
licensees.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
Section 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to
perform an analysis that considers the impact of a rulemaking on small
entities. The NRC's regulatory flexibility analysis for this proposed
rule is available as indicated in Section XIII, Availability of
Documents, of this document, and a summary is provided in the following
paragraphs.
The NRC is required by the OBRA-90, as amended, to recover
approximately 90 percent of its FY 2015 budget authority through the
assessment of user fees. The OBRA-90 further requires that the NRC
establish a schedule of charges that fairly and equitably allocates the
aggregate amount of these charges among licensees.
The FY 2015 proposed rule establishes the schedules of fees
necessary for the NRC to recover 90 percent of its budget authority for
FY 2015. The proposed rule estimates some increases in annual fees
charged to certain licensees and holders of certificates,
registrations, and approvals, and in decreases in those annual fees
charged to others. Licensees affected by these proposed estimates
include those who qualify as small entities under the NRC's size
standards in Sec. 2.810.
The NRC prepared a FY 2015 biennial regulatory analysis in
accordance with the FY 2001 final rule (66 FR 32467; June 14, 2001).
This rule also stated the small entity fees will be reexamined every 2
years and in the same years the NRC conducts the biennial review of
fees as required by the Office of Chief Financial Officer Act.
For this proposed rule, small entity fees would increase to $3,400
for the maximum upper-tier small entity fee and increase to $700 for
the lower-tier small entity as result of the biennial review which
factored in the number of increased hours for application reviews and
inspections in the fee calculations. The next small entity biennial
review is scheduled for FY 2017.
Additionally, the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act requires all Federal agencies to prepare a written compliance guide
for each rule for which the agency is required by 5 U.S.C. 604 to
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis. The NRC, in compliance with
the law, has prepared the ``Small Entity Compliance Guide,'' which is
available as indicated in Section XIII, Availability of Documents, of
this document.
VI. Regulatory Analysis
Under OBRA-90, as amended, and the AEA, the NRC is required to
recover 90 percent of its budget authority, or total appropriations of
$1,059.5 million, in FY 2015. The NRC established fee methodology
guidelines for 10 CFR part 170 in 1978, and more fee methodology
guidelines through the establishment of 10 CFR part 171 in 1986. In
subsequent rulemakings, the NRC has adjusted its fees without changing
the underlying principles of its fee policy in order to ensure that the
NRC continues to comply with the statutory requirements for cost
recovery in OBRA-90 and the AEA.
In this rulemaking, the NRC continues this long-standing approach.
Therefore, the NRC did not identify any alternatives to the current fee
structure guidelines and did not prepare a regulatory analysis for this
rulemaking.
VII. Backfitting and Issue Finality
The NRC has determined that the backfit rule, 10 CFR 50.109, does
not apply to this proposed rule and that a backfit analysis is not
required. A backfit analysis is not required because these amendments
do not require the modification of, or addition to, systems,
structures, components, or the design of a facility, or the design
approval or manufacturing license for a facility, or the procedures or
organization required to design, construct, or operate a facility.
VIII. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-274) requires Federal
agencies to write documents in a clear, concise, and well-organized
manner. The NRC has written this document to be consistent with the
Plain Writing Act as well as the Presidential Memorandum, ``Plain
Language in Government Writing,'' published June 10, 1998 (63 FR
31883). The NRC requests comment on the proposed rule with respect to
the clarity and effectiveness of the language used.
IX. National Environmental Policy Act
The NRC has determined that this rule is the type of action
described in 10 CFR 51.22(c)(1). Therefore, neither an environmental
impact statement nor environmental assessment has been prepared for
this proposed rule.
X. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not contain any information collection requirements
and, therefore, is not subject to the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Public Protection Notification
The NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to a request for information or an information collection
requirement unless the requesting document displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
XI. Voluntary Consensus Standards
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995,
Public Law 104-113, requires that Federal agencies use technical
standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies unless the use of such a standard is inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical. In this proposed fee rule, the
NRC is proposing to amend the licensing, inspection, and annual fees
charged to its licensees and applicants, as necessary, to recover
approximately 90 percent of its budget authority in FY 2015, as
required by OBRA-90, as amended. This action does not constitute the
establishment of a standard that contains generally applicable
requirements
XII. Availability of Guidance
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act requires all
Federal agencies to prepare a written compliance guide for each rule
for which the NRC is required by 5 U.S.C. 604 to prepare a regulatory
flexibility analysis. The NRC, in compliance with the law, prepared the
``Small Entity Compliance Guide'' for the FY 2015 proposed fee rule.
This document is available as indicated in Section XIII,
[[Page 15491]]
``Availability of Documents,'' of this document.
XIII. Availability of Documents
The documents identified in the following table are available to
interested persons through one or more of the following methods, as
indicated.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Document Adams accession No./Web link
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2015 Proposed Rule Work Papers ML15021A198.
FY 2015 Regulatory Flexibility ML15058A385.
Analysis.
FY 2015 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory ML15058A332.
Commission Small Entity
Compliance Guide.
NUREG-1100, Volume 30, http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-
``Congressional Budget collections/nuregs/staff/sr1100/v30/
Justification: Fiscal Year .
2015'' (March 2014).
NRC Form 526, Certification of http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-
Small Entity Status for the collections/forms/nrc526.pdf.
Purposes of Annual Fees Imposed
under 10 CFR Part 171.
Consolidated and Further https://www.congress.gov/113/bills/
Continuing Appropriations Act, hr83/BILLS-113hr83enr.pdf.
2015.
SECY-05-0164, ``Annual Fee ML052580332.
Calculation Method,'' September
15, 2005.
Staff Requirements Memorandum for ML14356A070.
SECY-14-0082, ``Jurisdiction for
Military Radium and U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission Oversight
of U.S. Department of Defense
Remediation of Radioactive
Material,'' December 22, 2014.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Throughout the development of this rule, the NRC may post documents
related to this rule, including public comments, on the Federal
rulemaking Web site at http://www.regulations.gov under Docket ID NRC-
2014-0200. The Federal rulemaking Web site allows you to receive alerts
when changes or additions occur in a docket folder. To subscribe: (1)
Navigate to the docket folder NRC-2014-0200; (2) click the ``Sign up
for Email Alerts'' link; and (3) enter your email address and select
how frequently you would like to receive emails (daily, weekly, or
monthly).
List of Subjects
10 CFR Part 170
Byproduct material, Import and export licenses, Intergovernmental
relations, Non-payment penalties, Nuclear materials, Nuclear power
plants and reactors, Source material, Special nuclear material.
10 CFR Part 171
Annual charges, Byproduct material, Holders of certificates,
registrations, approvals, Intergovernmental relations, Nonpayment
penalties, Nuclear materials, Nuclear power plants and reactors, Source
material, Special nuclear material.
For the reasons set out in the preamble and under the authority of
the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended; the Energy Reorganization
Act of 1974, as amended; and 5 U.S.C. 553, the NRC is proposing to
adopt the following amendments to 10 CFR parts 170 and 171.
PART 170--FEES FOR FACILITIES, MATERIALS IMPORT AND EXPORT LICENSES
AND OTHER REGULATORY SERVICES UNDER THE ATOMIC ENERGY ACT OF 1954,
AS AMENDED
0
1. The authority citation for part 170 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Independent Offices Appropriations Act sec. 501 (31
U.S.C. 9701); Atomic Energy Act sec. 161(w) (42 U.S.C. 2201(w));
Energy Reorganization Act sec. 201 (42 U.S.C. 5841); Chief Financial
Officers Act sec. 205 (31 U.S.C. 901, 902); Government Paperwork
Elimination Act sec. 1704 (44 U.S.C. 3504 note); Energy Policy Act
secs. 623, Energy Policy Act of 2005 sec. 651(e), Pub. L. 109-58,
119 Stat. 783 (42 U.S.C. 2201(w), 2014, 2021, 2021b, 2111).
0
2. In Sec. 170.3, add a new definition for ``Overhead and General and
Administrative Costs'' in alphabetical order and revise the definition
for ``Utilization facility'' to read as follows:
Sec. 170.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Overhead and General and Administrative Costs means:
(1) The Government benefits for each employee such as leave and
holidays, retirement and disability benefits, health and life insurance
costs, and social security costs;
(2) Travel costs;
(3) Overhead [e.g., supervision and support staff that directly
support the NRC's Nuclear Reactor Safety Program and Nuclear Materials
Safety and Waste Program; administrative support costs (e.g., rental of
space, equipment, telecommunications, and supplies)]; and
(4) Indirect costs that would include, but not be limited to, NRC
central policy direction, legal and executive management services for
the Commission and special and independent reviews, investigations, and
enforcement and appraisal of NRC programs and operations. Some of the
organizations included, in whole or in part, are the Commissioners,
Secretary, Executive Director for Operations, General Counsel,
Congressional and Public Affairs (except for international safety and
safeguards programs), Inspector General, Investigations, Enforcement,
Small Business and Civil Rights, the Technical Training Center,
Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, and the Atomic Safety and
Licensing Board Panel. The Commission views these budgeted costs as
support for all its regulatory services provided to applicants,
licensees, and certificate holders, and these costs must be recovered
under Public Law 101-508.
* * * * *
Utilization facility means:
(1) Any nuclear reactor other than one designed or used primarily
for the formation of plutonium or U-233; or
(2) An accelerator-driven subcritical operating assembly used for
the irradiation of materials containing special nuclear material and
described in the application assigned docket number 50-608.
0
3. Revise Sec. 170.20 to read as follows:
Sec. 170.20 Average cost per professional staff-hour.
Fees for permits, licenses, amendments, renewals, special projects,
10 CFR part 55 re-qualification and replacement examinations and tests,
other required reviews, approvals, and inspections under Sec. Sec.
170.21 and 170.31 will be calculated using the professional staff-hour
rate of $277 per hour.
[[Page 15492]]
0
4. In Sec. 170.21, in the table, revise the fee category K. to read as
follows:
Sec. 170.21 Schedule of fees for production or utilization
facilities, review of standard referenced design approvals, special
projects, inspections, and import and export licenses.
Schedule of Facility Fees
[See footnotes at end of table]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Facility categories and type of fees Fees \1\ \2\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
K. Import and export licenses:
Licenses for the import and export only of
production or utilization facilities or the
export only of components for production or
utilization facilities issued under 10 CFR
part 110.
1. Application for import or export of
production or utilization facilities \4\
(including reactors and other facilities)
and exports of components requiring
Commission and Executive Branch review,
for example, actions under 10 CFR
110.40(b).
Application--new license, or amendment; $18,000
or license exemption request..........
2. Application for export of reactor and
other components requiring Executive
Branch review, for example, those actions
under 10 CFR 110.41(a).
Application--new license, or amendment; $9,700
or license exemption request..........
3. Application for export of components
requiring the assistance of the Executive
Branch to obtain foreign government
assurances.
Application--new license, or amendment; $4,400
or license exemption request..........
4. Application for export of facility
components and equipment not requiring
Commission or Executive Branch review, or
obtaining foreign government assurances.
Application--new license, or amendment; $5,000
or license exemption request..........
5. Minor amendment of any active export or
import license, for example, to extend the
expiration date, change domestic
information, or make other revisions which
do not involve any substantive changes to
license terms or conditions or to the type
of facility or component authorized for
export and, therefore, do not require in-
depth analysis or review or consultation
with the Executive Branch, U.S. host
state, or foreign government authorities.
Minor amendment to license............. $2,800
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Fees will not be charged for orders related to civil penalties or
other civil sanctions issued by the Commission under Sec. 2.202 of
this chapter or for amendments resulting specifically from the
requirements of these orders. For orders unrelated to civil penalties
or other civil sanctions, fees will be charged for any resulting
licensee-specific activities not otherwise exempted from fees under
this chapter. Fees will be charged for approvals issued under a
specific exemption provision of the Commission's regulations under
Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (e.g., 10 CFR 50.12, 10
CFR 73.5) and any other sections in effect now or in the future,
regardless of whether the approval is in the form of a license
amendment, letter of approval, safety evaluation report, or other
form.
\2\ Full cost fees will be determined based on the professional staff
time and appropriate contractual support services expended. For
applications currently on file and for which fees are determined based
on the full cost expended for the review, the professional staff hours
expended for the review of the application up to the effective date of
the final rule will be determined at the professional rates in effect
when the service was provided.
* * * * * * *
\4\ Imports only of major components for end-use at NRC-licensed
reactors are authorized under NRC general import license in 10 CFR
110.27.
0
5. In Sec. 170.31, revise the table to read as follows:
Sec. 170.31 Schedule of fees for materials licenses and other
regulatory services, including inspections, and import and export
licenses.
* * * * *
Schedule of Materials Fees
[See footnotes at end of table]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category of materials licenses and type of
fees \1\ Fee \2\ \3\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Special nuclear material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of
U-235 or plutonium for fuel fabrication
activities.
(a) Strategic Special Nuclear Full Cost.
Material (High Enriched Uranium)
[Program Code(s): 21130].
(b) Low Enriched Uranium in Full Cost.
Dispersible Form Used for
Fabrication of Power Reactor Fuel
[Program Code(s): 21210].
(2) All other special nuclear materials
licenses not included in Category
1.A.(1) which are licensed for fuel
cycle activities.
(a) Facilities with limited Full Cost.
operations [Program Code(s): 21310,
21320].
(b) Gas centrifuge enrichment Full Cost.
demonstration facilities.
(c) Others, including hot cell Full Cost.
facilities.
B. Licenses for receipt and storage of Full Cost.
spent fuel and reactor-related Greater
than Class C (GTCC) waste at an
independent spent fuel storage
installation (ISFSI) [Program Code(s):
23200].
C. Licenses for possession and use of
special nuclear material of less than a
critical mass as defined in Sec. 70.4
in sealed sources contained in devices
used in industrial measuring systems,
including x-ray fluorescence analyzers.
\4\
Application [Program Code(s): 22140]. $1,300.
[[Page 15493]]
D. All other special nuclear material
licenses, except licenses authorizing
special nuclear material in sealed or
unsealed form in combination that would
constitute a critical mass, as defined
in Sec. 70.4 of this chapter, for
which the licensee shall pay the same
fees as those under Category 1.A. \4\
Application [Program Code(s): 22110, $2,600.
22111, 22120, 22131, 22136, 22150,
22151, 22161, 22170, 23100, 23300,
23310].
E. Licenses or certificates for Full Cost.
construction and operation of a uranium
enrichment facility [Program Code(s):
21200].
F. For special nuclear materials licenses Full Cost.
in sealed or unsealed form of greater
than a critical mass as defined in Sec.
70.4 of this chapter.\4\ [Program
Code(s): 22155].
2. Source material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of Full Cost.
source material for refining uranium
mill concentrates to uranium
hexafluoride or for deconverting uranium
hexafluoride in the production of
uranium oxides for disposal. [Program
Code(s): 11400].
(2) Licenses for possession and use of
source material in recovery operations
such as milling, in-situ recovery, heap-
leaching, ore buying stations, ion-
exchange facilities, and in processing
of ores containing source material for
extraction of metals other than uranium
or thorium, including licenses
authorizing the possession of byproduct
waste material (tailings) from source
material recovery operations, as well as
licenses authorizing the possession and
maintenance of a facility in a standby
mode.
(a) Conventional and Heap Leach Full Cost.
facilities [Program Code(s): 11100].
(b) Basic In Situ Recovery facilities Full Cost.
[Program Code(s): 11500].
(c) Expanded In Situ Recovery Full Cost.
facilities [Program Code(s): 11510].
(d) In Situ Recovery Resin facilities Full Cost.
[Program Code(s): 11550].
(e) Resin Toll Milling facilities Full Cost.
[Program Code(s): 11555].
(f) Other facilities [Program Full Cost.
Code(s): 11700].
(3) Licenses that authorize the receipt Full Cost.
of byproduct material, as defined in
Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy
Act, from other persons for possession
and disposal, except those licenses
subject to the fees in Category 2.A.(2)
or Category 2.A.(4) [Program Code(s):
11600, 12000].
(4) Licenses that authorize the receipt Full Cost.
of byproduct material, as defined in
Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy
Act, from other persons for possession
and disposal incidental to the disposal
of the uranium waste tailings generated
by the licensee's milling operations,
except those licenses subject to the
fees in Category 2.A.(2) [Program
Code(s): 12010].
(5) Licenses that authorize the Full Cost.
possession of source material related to
removal of contaminants (source
material) from drinking water [Program
Code(s): 11820].
B. Licenses which authorize the
possession, use, and/or installation of
source material for shielding \6\ \7\
\8\
Application [Program Code(s): 11210]. $1,220.
C. Licenses to distribute items
containing source material to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements
of part 40 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 11240]. $2,800.
D. Licenses to distribute source material
to persons generally licensed under part
40 of this chapter.
Application [Program Codes(s): 11230, $2,700.
11231].
E. Licenses for possession and use of
source material for processing or
manufacturing of products or materials
containing source material for
commercial distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 11710]. $2,600.
F. All other source material licenses
Application [Program Code(s): 11200, $2,600.
11220, 11221, 11300, 11800, 11810].
3. Byproduct material:
A. Licenses of broad scope for the
possession and use of byproduct material
issued under parts 30 and 33 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing
of items containing byproduct material
for commercial distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 03211, $13,000.
03212, 03213].
B. Other licenses for possession and use
of byproduct material issued under part
30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing
byproduct material for commercial
distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 03214, $3,600.
03215, 22135, 22162].
C. Licenses issued under Sec. Sec.
32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that
authorize the processing or
manufacturing and distribution or
redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals,
generators, reagent kits, and/or sources
and devices containing byproduct
material. This category does not apply
to licenses issued to nonprofit
educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt
under Sec. 170.11(a)(4).
Application [Program Code(s): 02500, $5,200.
02511, 02513].
D. [Reserved]............................ N/A.
E. Licenses for possession and use of
byproduct material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is not removed from its shield
(self-shielded units).
Application [Program Code(s): 03510, $3,200.
03520].
F. Licenses for possession and use of
less than 10,000 curies of byproduct
material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes
underwater irradiators for irradiation
of materials where the source is not
exposed for irradiation purposes.
Application [Program Code(s): 03511]. $6,500.
[[Page 15494]]
G. Licenses for possession and use of
10,000 curies or more of byproduct
material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes
underwater irradiators for irradiation
of materials where the source is not
exposed for irradiation purposes.
Application [Program Code(s): 03521]. $61,800.
H. Licenses issued under Subpart A of
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material that
require device review to persons exempt
from the licensing requirements of part
30 of this chapter. The category does
not include specific licenses
authorizing redistribution of items that
have been authorized for distribution to
persons exempt from the licensing
requirements of part 30 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03254, $6,600.
03255, 03257].
I. Licenses issued under Subpart A of
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material or
quantities of byproduct material that do
not require device evaluation to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements
of part 30 of this chapter. This
category does not include specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of
items that have been authorized for
distribution to persons exempt from the
licensing requirements of part 30 of
this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03250, $11,000.
03251, 03252, 03253, 03256].
J. Licenses issued under Subpart B of
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material that
require sealed source and/or device
review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter. This
category does not include specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of
items that have been authorized for
distribution to persons generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03240, $2,000.
03241, 03243].
K. Licenses issued under Subpart B of
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material or
quantities of byproduct material that do
not require sealed source and/or device
review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter. This
category does not include specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of
items that have been authorized for
distribution to persons generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03242, $1,100.
03244].
L. Licenses of broad scope for possession
and use of byproduct material issued
under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter
for research and development that do not
authorize commercial distribution.
Number of locations of use: 1-5.
(1) Licenses of broad scope for
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and
33 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 6-20.
(2) Licenses of broad scope for
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and
33 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 20 or more.
Application [Program Code(s): 01100, $5,500.
01110, 01120, 03610, 03611, 03612,
03613].
M. Other licenses for possession and use
of byproduct material issued under part
30 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 03620]. $5,000.
N. Licenses that authorize services for
other licensees, except:
(1) Licenses that authorize only
calibration and/or leak testing
services are subject to the fees
specified in fee Category 3.P.; and
(2) Licenses that authorize waste
disposal services are subject to the
fees specified in fee Categories
4.A., 4.B., and 4.C.
Application [Program Code(s): 03219, $6,300.
03225, 03226].
O. Licenses for possession and use of
byproduct material issued under part 34
of this chapter for industrial
radiography operations.
Application [Program Code(s): 03310, $3,200.
03320].
P. All other specific byproduct material
licenses, except those in Categories
4.A. through 9.D.\ 9\
Application [Program Code(s): 02400, $2,700.
02410, 03120, 03121, 03122, 03123,
03124, 03130, 03140, 03220, 03221,
03222, 03800, 03810, 22130]
Q. Registration of a device(s) generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Registration......................... $400.
R. Possession of items or products
containing radium-226 identified in 10
CFR 31.12 which exceed the number of
items or limits specified in that
section.\5\
1. Possession of quantities exceeding
the number of items or limits in 10
CFR 31.12(a)(4), or (5) but less
than or equal to 10 times the number
of items or limits specified.
Application [Program Code(s): $2,500.
02700].
2. Possession of quantities exceeding
10 times the number of items or
limits specified in 10 CFR
31.12(a)(4), or (5).
Application [Program Code(s): $2,500.
02710].
S. Licenses for production of accelerator-
produced radionuclides.
Application [Program Code(s): 03210]. $14,200.
4. Waste disposal and processing:
A. Licenses specifically authorizing the N/A.
receipt of waste byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material from other persons for the
purpose of contingency storage or
commercial land disposal by the
licensee; or licenses authorizing
contingency storage of low-level
radioactive waste at the site of nuclear
power reactors; or licenses for receipt
of waste from other persons for
incineration or other treatment,
packaging of resulting waste and
residues, and transfer of packages to
another person authorized to receive or
dispose of waste material. [Program
Code(s): 03231, 03233, 03235, 03236,
06100, 06101].
[[Page 15495]]
B. Licenses specifically authorizing the
receipt of waste byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material from other persons for the
purpose of packaging or repackaging the
material. The licensee will dispose of
the material by transfer to another
person authorized to receive or dispose
of the material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03234]. $6,900.
C. Licenses specifically authorizing the $5,000.
receipt of prepackaged waste byproduct
material, source material, or special
nuclear material from other persons. The
licensee will dispose of the material by
transfer to another person authorized to
receive or dispose of the
material.Application [Program Code(s):
03232]
5. Well logging:
A. Licenses for possession and use of
byproduct material, source material, and/
or special nuclear material for well
logging, well surveys, and tracer
studies other than field flooding tracer
studies
Application [Program Code(s): 03110, $4,600.
03111, 03112].
B. Licenses for possession and use of
byproduct material for field flooding
tracer studies.
Licensing [Program Code(s): 03113]... Full Cost.
6. Nuclear laundries:
A. Licenses for commercial collection and
laundry of items contaminated with
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03218]. $22,100.
7. Medical licenses:
A. Licenses issued under parts 30, 35,
40, and 70 of this chapter for human use
of byproduct material, source material,
or special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in gamma stereotactic
radiosurgery units, teletherapy devices,
or similar beam therapy devices.
Application [Program Code(s): 02300, $11,100.
02310].
B. Licenses of broad scope issued to
medical institutions or two or more
physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40,
and 70 of this chapter authorizing
research and development, including
human use of byproduct material, except
licenses for byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy
devices. This category also includes the
possession and use of source material
for shielding when authorized on the
same license.\ 10\
Application [Program Code(s): 02110]. $8,600.
C. Other licenses issued under parts 30,
35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human
use of byproduct material, source
material, and/or special nuclear
material, except licenses for byproduct
material, source material, or special
nuclear material in sealed sources
contained in teletherapy devices.
Application [Program Code(s): 02120, $4,500.
02121, 02200, 02201, 02210, 02220,
02230, 02231, 02240, 22160].
8. Civil defense:
A. Licenses for possession and use of
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material for civil
defense activities.
Application [Program Code(s): 03710]. $2,500.
9. Device, product, or sealed source safety
evaluation:
A. Safety evaluation of devices or
products containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material, except reactor fuel devices,
for commercial distribution.
Application--each device............. $5,400.
B. Safety evaluation of devices or
products containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material manufactured in accordance with
the unique specifications of, and for
use by, a single applicant, except
reactor fuel devices.
Application--each device............. $9,000.
C. Safety evaluation of sealed sources
containing byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material,
except reactor fuel, for commercial
distribution.
Application--each source............. $5,300.
D. Safety evaluation of sealed sources
containing byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material,
manufactured in accordance with the
unique specifications of, and for use
by, a single applicant, except reactor
fuel.
Application--each source............. $1,050.
10. Transportation of radioactive material:
A. Evaluation of casks, packages, and
shipping containers.
1. Spent Fuel, High-Level Waste, and Full Cost.
plutonium air packages.
2. Other Casks....................... Full Cost.
B. Quality assurance program approvals
issued under part 71 of this chapter.
1. Users and Fabricators:
Application...................... $4,200.
Inspections...................... Full Cost.
2. Users:
Application...................... $4,200.
Inspections...................... Full Cost.
[[Page 15496]]
C. Evaluation of security plans, route Full Cost.
approvals, route surveys, and
transportation security devices
(including immobilization devices).
11. Review of standardized spent fuel Full Cost.
facilities.
12. Special projects:
Including approvals, pre-application/
licensing activities, and inspections
Application [Program Code: 25110].... Full Cost.
13. A. Spent fuel storage cask Certificate of Full Cost.
Compliance.
B. Inspections related to storage of Full Cost.
spent fuel under Sec. 72.210 of this
chapter.
14. A. Byproduct, source, or special nuclear Full Cost.
material licenses and other approvals
authorizing decommissioning,
decontamination, reclamation, or site
restoration activities under parts 30, 40,
70, 72, and 76 of this chapter, including
MMLs. Application [Program Code(s): 3900,
11900, 21135, 21215, 21240, 21325, 22200].
B. Site-specific decommissioning Full Cost.
activities associated with unlicensed
sites, including MMLs, regardless of
whether or not the sites have been
previously licensed.
15. Import and Export licenses:
Licenses issued under part 110 of this
chapter for the import and export only of
special nuclear material, source material,
tritium and other byproduct material, and
the export only of heavy water, or nuclear
grade graphite (fee categories 15.A. through
15.E.).
A. Application for export or import of
nuclear materials, including radioactive
waste requiring Commission and Executive
Branch review, for example, those
actions under 10 CFR 110.40(b).
Application--new license, or $18,000.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
B. Application for export or import of
nuclear material, including radioactive
waste, requiring Executive Branch
review, but not Commission review. This
category includes applications for the
export and import of radioactive waste
and requires NRC to consult with
domestic host state authorities (i.e.,
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact
Commission, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, etc.)
Application--new license, or $9,700.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
C. Application for export of nuclear
material, for example, routine reloads
of low enriched uranium reactor fuel and/
or natural uranium source material
requiring the assistance of the
Executive Branch to obtain foreign
government assurances.
Application--new license, or $4,400.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
D. Application for export or import
of nuclear material not requiring
Commission or Executive Branch
review, or obtaining foreign
government assurances..
Application--new license, or $5,000.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
E. Minor amendment of any active export
or import license, for example, to
extend the expiration date, change
domestic information, or make other
revisions which do not involve any
substantive changes to license terms and
conditions or to the type/quantity/
chemical composition of the material
authorized for export and, therefore, do
not require in-depth analysis, review,
or consultations with other Executive
Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign
government authorities.
Minor amendment...................... $1,400.
Licenses issued under part 110 of this
chapter for the import and export only of
Category 1 and Category 2 quantities of
radioactive material listed in Appendix P to
part 110 of this chapter (fee categories
15.F. through 15.R.).
Category 1 (Appendix P, 10 CFR Part 110)
Exports:
F. Application for export of Appendix P
Category 1 materials requiring
Commission review (e.g. exceptional
circumstance review under 10 CFR
110.42(e)(4)) and to obtain government-
to-government consent for this process.
For additional consent see 15.I.).
Application--new license, or $15,200.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
G. Application for export of Appendix P
Category 1 materials requiring Executive
Branch review and to obtain government-
to-government consent for this process.
For additional consents see 15.I.
Application--new license, or $8,300.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
H. Application for export of Appendix P
Category 1 materials and to obtain one
government-to-government consent for
this process. For additional consents
see 15.I.
Application--new license, or $5,500.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
I. Requests for each additional
government-to-government consent in
support of an export license application
or active export license.
Application--new license, or $280.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
Category 2 (Appendix P, 10 CFR Part 110)
Exports:
J. Application for export of Appendix P
Category 2 materials requiring
Commission review (e.g. exceptional
circumstance review under 10 CFR
110.42(e)(4)).
Application--new license, or $15,200.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
K. Applications for export of Appendix P
Category 2 materials requiring Executive
Branch review.
Application--new license, or $8,300.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
L. Application for the export of Category
2 materials
Application--new license, or $4,200.
amendment; or license exemption
request.
M. [Reserved]............................ N/A.
N. [Reserved]............................ N/A.
[[Page 15497]]
O. [Reserved]............................ N/A.
P. [Reserved]............................ N/A.
Q. [Reserved]............................ N/A.
Minor Amendments (Category 1 and 2, Appendix
P, 10 CFR Part 110, Export):
R. Minor amendment of any active export
license, for example, to extend the
expiration date, change domestic
information, or make other revisions
which do not involve any substantive
changes to license terms and conditions
or to the type/quantity/chemical
composition of the material authorized
for export and, therefore, do not
require in-depth analysis, review, or
consultations with other Executive
Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign
authorities.
Minor amendment...................... $1,400.
16. Reciprocity:
Agreement State licensees who conduct
activities under the reciprocity provisions
of 10 CFR 150.20.
Application.............................. $1,900.
17. Master materials licenses of broad scope
issued to Government agencies
Application [Program Code(s): 03614]..... Full Cost.
18. Department of Energy:
A. Certificates of Compliance. Evaluation Full Cost.
of casks, 11packages, and shipping
containers (including spent fuel, high-
level waste, and other casks, and
plutonium air packages).
B. Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Full Cost.
Control Act (UMTRCA) activities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Types of fees--Separate charges, as shown in the schedule, will be
assessed for pre-application consultations and reviews; applications
for new licenses, approvals, or license terminations; possession-only
licenses; issuances of new licenses and approvals; certain amendments
and renewals to existing licenses and approvals; safety evaluations of
sealed sources and devices; generally licensed device registrations;
and certain inspections. The following guidelines apply to these
charges:
(a) Application and registration fees. Applications for new materials
licenses and export and import licenses; applications to reinstate
expired, terminated, or inactive licenses, except those subject to
fees assessed at full costs; applications filed by Agreement State
licensees to register under the general license provisions of 10 CFR
150.20; and applications for amendments to materials licenses that
would place the license in a higher fee category or add a new fee
category must be accompanied by the prescribed application fee for
each category.
(1) Applications for licenses covering more than one fee category of
special nuclear material or source material must be accompanied by the
prescribed application fee for the highest fee category.
(2) Applications for new licenses that cover both byproduct material and
special nuclear material in sealed sources for use in gauging devices
will pay the appropriate application fee for fee category 1.C. only.
(b) Licensing fees. Fees for reviews of applications for new licenses,
renewals, and amendments to existing licenses, pre-application
consultations and other documents submitted to the NRC for review, and
project manager time for fee categories subject to full cost fees are
due upon notification by the Commission in accordance with Sec.
170.12(b).
(c) Amendment fees. Applications for amendments to export and import
licenses must be accompanied by the prescribed amendment fee for each
license affected. An application for an amendment to an export or
import license or approval classified in more than one fee category
must be accompanied by the prescribed amendment fee for the category
affected by the amendment, unless the amendment is applicable to two
or more fee categories, in which case the amendment fee for the
highest fee category would apply.
(d) Inspection fees. Inspections resulting from investigations conducted
by the Office of Investigations and nonroutine inspections that result
from third-party allegations are not subject to fees. Inspection fees
are due upon notification by the Commission in accordance with Sec.
170.12(c).
(e) Generally licensed device registrations under 10 CFR 31.5.
Submittals of registration information must be accompanied by the
prescribed fee.
\2\ Fees will not be charged for orders related to civil penalties or
other civil sanctions issued by the Commission under 10 CFR 2.202 or
for amendments resulting specifically from the requirements of these
orders. For orders unrelated to civil penalties or other civil
sanctions, fees will be charged for any resulting licensee-specific
activities not otherwise exempted from fees under this chapter. Fees
will be charged for approvals issued under a specific exemption
provision of the Commission's regulations under Title 10 of the Code
of Federal Regulations (e.g., 10 CFR 30.11, 40.14, 70.14, 73.5, and
any other sections in effect now or in the future), regardless of
whether the approval is in the form of a license amendment, letter of
approval, safety evaluation report, or other form. In addition to the
fee shown, an applicant may be assessed an additional fee for sealed
source and device evaluations as shown in fee categories 9.A. through
9.D.
\3\ Full cost fees will be determined based on the professional staff
time multiplied by the appropriate professional hourly rate
established in Sec. 170.20 in effect when the service is provided,
and the appropriate contractual support services expended.
\4\ Licensees paying fees under categories 1.A., 1.B., and 1.E. are not
subject to fees under categories 1.C., 1.D. and 1.F. for sealed
sources authorized in the same license, except for an application that
deals only with the sealed sources authorized by the license.
\5\ Persons who possess radium sources that are used for operational
purposes in another fee category are not also subject to the fees in
this category. (This exception does not apply if the radium sources
are possessed for storage only.)
\6\ Licensees subject to fees under fee categories 1.A., 1.B., 1.E., or
2.A. must pay the largest applicable fee and are not subject to
additional fees listed in this table.
\7\ Licensees paying fees under 3.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\8\ Licensees paying fees under 7.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\9\ Licensees paying fees under 3.N. are not subject to paying fees
under 3.P. for calibration or leak testing services authorized on the
same license.
\10\ Licensees paying fees under 7.B. are not subject to paying fees
under 7.C. for broad scope license licenses issued under parts 30, 35,
40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source
material, and/or special nuclear material, except licenses for
byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices authorized on the same
license.
[[Page 15498]]
PART 171--ANNUAL FEES FOR REACTOR LICENSES AND FUEL CYCLE LICENSES
AND MATERIALS LICENSES, INCLUDING HOLDERS OF CERTIFICATES OF
COMPLIANCE, REGISTRATIONS, AND QUALITY ASSURANCE PROGRAM APPROVALS
AND GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY THE NRC
0
6. The authority citation for part 171 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act sec.
7601, Pub. L. 99-272, as amended by sec. 5601, Pub. L. 100-203, as
amended by sec. 3201, Pub. L. 101-239, as amended by sec. 6101, Pub.
L. 101-508, as amended by sec. 2903a, Pub. L. 102-486 (42 U.S.C.
2213, 2214), and as amended by Title IV, Pub. L. 109-103 (42 U.S.C.
2214); Atomic Energy Act sec. 161(w), 223, 234 (42 U.S.C. 2201(w),
2273, 2282); Energy Reorganization Act sec. 201 (42 U.S.C. 5841);
Government Paperwork Elimination Act sec. 1704 (44 U.S.C. 3504
note); Energy Policy Act of 2005 sec. 651(e), Pub. L. 109-58 (42
U.S.C. 2014, 2021, 2021b, 2111).
0
7. In Sec. 171.15, revise paragraph (b)(1), the introductory text of
paragraph (b)(2), paragraph (c)(1), the introductory text of paragraphs
(c)(2) and (d)(1), and paragraphs (d)(2), (d)(3), and (e) to read as
follows:
Sec. 171.15 Annual fees: Reactor licenses and independent spent fuel
storage licenses.
* * * * *
(b)(1) The FY 2015 annual fee for each operating power reactor
which must be collected by September 30, 2015, is $5,324,000.
(2) The FY 2015 annual fees are comprised of a base annual fee for
power reactors licensed to operate, a base spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning annual fee, and associated additional charges (fee-
relief adjustment). The activities comprising the spent storage/reactor
decommissioning base annual fee are shown in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and
(ii) of this section. The activities comprising the FY 2015 fee-relief
adjustment are shown in paragraph (d)(1) of this section. The
activities comprising the FY 2015 base annual fee for operating power
reactors are as follows:
* * * * *
(c)(1) The FY 2015 annual fee for each power reactor holding a 10
CFR part 50 license that is in a decommissioning or possession-only
status and has spent fuel onsite, and for each independent spent fuel
storage 10 CFR part 72 licensee who does not hold a 10 CFR part 50
license, is $237,000.
(2) The FY 2015 annual fee is comprised of a base spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning annual fee (which is also included in
the operating power reactor annual fee shown in paragraph (b) of this
section) and a fee-relief adjustment. The activities comprising the FY
2015 fee-relief adjustment are shown in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section. The activities comprising the FY 2015 spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning rebaselined annual fee are:
* * * * *
(d)(1) The fee-relief adjustment allocated to annual fees includes
a surcharge for the activities listed in paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this
section, plus the amount remaining after total budgeted resources for
the activities included in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) and (d)(1)(iii) of
this section are reduced by the appropriations the NRC receives for
these types of activities. If the NRC's appropriations for these types
of activities are greater than the budgeted resources for the
activities included in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) and (d)(1)(iii) of this
section for a given FY, annual fees will be reduced. The activities
comprising the FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment are as follows:
* * * * *
(2) The total FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment allocated to the
operating power reactor class of licenses is an $11,313,600 fee-relief
surplus, not including the amount allocated to the spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning class. The FY 2015 operating power reactor fee-
relief adjustment to be assessed to each operating power reactor is
approximately a $114,279 fee-relief surplus. This amount is calculated
by dividing the total operating power reactor fee-relief surplus
adjustment, $11.3 million, by the number of operating power reactors
(99).
(3) The FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment allocated to the spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning class of licenses is a $533,600 fee-
relief assessment. The FY 2015 spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning fee-relief adjustment to be assessed to each operating
power reactor, each power reactor in decommissioning or possession-only
status that has spent fuel onsite, and to each independent spent fuel
storage 10 CFR part 72 licensee who does not hold a 10 CFR part 50
license, is a $4,374 fee-relief assessment. This amount is calculated
by dividing the total fee-relief adjustment costs allocated to this
class by the total number of power reactor licenses, except those that
permanently ceased operations and have no fuel onsite, and 10 CFR part
72 licensees who do not hold a 10 CFR part 50 license.
(e) The FY 2015 annual fees for licensees authorized to operate a
research or test (non-power) reactor licensed under part 50 of this
chapter, unless the reactor is exempted from fees under Sec.
171.11(a), are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Research reactor........................................... $88,500
Test reactor............................................... 88,500
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
8. In Sec. 171.16, revise paragraph (d) and the introductory text of
paragraph (e) to read as follows;
Sec. 171.16 Annual fees: Materials licensees, holders of certificates
of compliance, holders of sealed source and device registrations,
holders of quality assurance program approvals, and government agencies
licensed by the NRC.
* * * * *
(d) The FY 2015 annual fees are comprised of a base annual fee and
an allocation for fee-relief adjustment. The activities comprising the
FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment are shown for convenience in paragraph
(e) of this section. The FY 2015 annual fees for materials licensees
and holders of certificates, registrations, or approvals subject to
fees under this section are shown in the following table:
Schedule of Materials Annual Fees and Fees for Government Agencies
Licensed by NRC
[See footnotes at end of table]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category of materials licenses Annual fees \1\ \2\ \3\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Special nuclear material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of
U-235 or plutonium for fuel fabrication
activities.
(a) Strategic Special Nuclear $9,424,000.
Material (High Enriched Uranium)
[Program Code(s): 21130].
(b) Low Enriched Uranium in $3,243,000.
Dispersible Form Used for
Fabrication of Power Reactor Fuel
[Program Code(s): 21210].
(2) All other special nuclear materials
licenses not included in Category 1.A.
(1) which are licensed for fuel cycle
activities
[[Page 15499]]
(a) Facilities with limited $912,000.
operations [Program Code(s): 21310,
21320].
(b) Gas centrifuge enrichment $1,824,000.
demonstration facilities.
(c) Others, including hot cell $912,000.
facilities.
B. Licenses for receipt and storage of N/A. \11\
spent fuel and reactor-related Greater
than Class C (GTCC) waste at an
independent spent fuel storage
installation (ISFSI) [Program Code(s):
23200].
C. Licenses for possession and use of $3,300.
special nuclear material of less than a
critical mass, as defined in Sec. 70.4
of this chapter, in sealed sources
contained in devices used in industrial
measuring systems, including x-ray
fluorescence analyzers.\15\ [Program
Code(s): 22140].
D. All other special nuclear material $8,400.
licenses, except licenses authorizing
special nuclear material in sealed or
unsealed form in combination that would
constitute a critical mass, as defined
in Sec. 70.4 of this chapter, for
which the licensee shall pay the same
fees as those under Category 1.A.\15\
[Program Code(s): 22110, 22111, 22120,
22131, 22136, 22150, 22151, 22161,
22170, 23100, 23300, 23310].
E. Licenses or certificates for the $4,459,000.
operation of a uranium enrichment
facility [Program Code(s): 21200].
F. For special nuclear materials licenses $7,100.
in sealed or unsealed form of greater
than a critical mass as defined in Sec.
70.4 of this chapter.\15\ [Program
Code: 22155].
2. Source material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of $1,925,000.
source material for refining uranium
mill concentrates to uranium
hexafluoride or for deconverting uranium
hexafluoride in the production of
uranium oxides for disposal. [Program
Code: 11400].
(2) Licenses for possession and use of
source material in recovery operations
such as milling, in-situ recovery, heap-
leaching, ore buying stations, ion-
exchange facilities and in-processing of
ores containing source material for
extraction of metals other than uranium
or thorium, including licenses
authorizing the possession of byproduct
waste material (tailings) from source
material recovery operations, as well as
licenses authorizing the possession and
maintenance of a facility in a standby
mode
(a) Conventional and Heap Leach $40,700.
facilities [Program Code(s): 11100].
(b) Basic In Situ Recovery facilities $51,500.
[Program Code(s): 11500].
(c) Expanded In Situ Recovery $58,300.
facilities [Program Code(s): 11510].
(d) In Situ Recovery Resin facilities $0.
[Program Code(s): 11550].
(e) Resin Toll Milling facilities N/A. \5\
[Program Code(s): 11555].
(f) Other facilities \4\ [Program $83,800.
Code(s): 11700].
(3) Licenses that authorize the receipt N/A. \5\
of byproduct material, as defined in
Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy
Act, from other persons for possession
and disposal, except those licenses
subject to the fees in Category 2.A.(2)
or Category 2.A.(4) [Program Code(s):
11600, 12000].
(4) Licenses that authorize the receipt $23,100.
of byproduct material, as defined in
Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy
Act, from other persons for possession
and disposal incidental to the disposal
of the uranium waste tailings generated
by the licensee's milling operations,
except those licenses subject to the
fees in Category 2.A.(2) [Program
Code(s): 12010].
(5) Licenses that authorize the $6,800.
possession of source material related to
removal of contaminants (source
material) from drinking water [Program
Code(s): 11820].
B. Licenses that authorize possession, $3,700.
use, and/or installation of source
material for shielding.\16\ \17\ \18\
[Program Code: 11210].
C. Licenses to distribute items $7,000.
containing source material to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements
of part 40 of this chapter. [Program
Code: 11240].
D. Licenses to distribute source material $6,900.
to persons generally licensed under part
40 of this chapter [Program Code(s):
11230 and 11231].
E. Licenses for possession and use of $8,600.
source material for processing or
manufacturing of products or materials
containing source material for
commercial distribution. [Program Code:
11710].
F. All other source material licenses. $8,000.
[Program Code(s): 11200, 11220, 11221,
11300, 11800, 11810].
3. Byproduct material:
A. Licenses of broad scope for possession $31,700.
and use of byproduct material issued
under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter
for processing or manufacturing of items
containing byproduct material for
commercial distribution [Program
Code(s): 03211, 03212, 03213].
B. Other licenses for possession and use $13,300.
of byproduct material issued under part
30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing
byproduct material for commercial
distribution [Program Code(s): 03214,
03215, 22135, 22162].
C. Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. $14,000.
32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter
authorizing the processing or
manufacturing and distribution or
redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals,
generators, reagent kits, and/or sources
and devices containing byproduct
material. This category also includes
the possession and use of source
material for shielding authorized under
part 40 of this chapter when included on
the same license. This category does not
apply to licenses issued to nonprofit
educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt
under Sec. 171.11(a)(1). [Program
Code(s): 02500, 02511, 02513].
D. [Reserved]............................ N/A. \5\
E. Licenses for possession and use of $10,200.
byproduct material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is not removed from its shield
(self-shielded units) [Program Code(s):
03510, 03520].
F. Licenses for possession and use of $12,600.
less than 10,000 curies of byproduct
material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes
underwater irradiators for irradiation
of materials in which the source is not
exposed for irradiation purposes
[Program Code(s): 03511].
G. Licenses for possession and use of $112,000.
10,000 curies or more of byproduct
material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes
underwater irradiators for irradiation
of materials in which the source is not
exposed for irradiation purposes
[Program Code(s): 03521].
[[Page 15500]]
H. Licenses issued under subpart A of $12,700.
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material that
require device review to persons exempt
from the licensing requirements of part
30 of this chapter, except specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of
items that have been authorized for
distribution to persons exempt from the
licensing requirements of part 30 of
this chapter [Program Code(s): 03254,
03255].
I. Licenses issued under subpart A of $18,900.
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material or
quantities of byproduct material that do
not require device evaluation to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements
of part 30 of this chapter, except for
specific licenses authorizing
redistribution of items that have been
authorized for distribution to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements
of part 30 of this chapter [Program
Code(s): 03250, 03251, 03252, 03253,
03256].
J. Licenses issued under subpart B of $4,900.
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material that
require sealed source and/or device
review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter, except
specific licenses authorizing
redistribution of items that have been
authorized for distribution to persons
generally licensed under part 31 of this
chapter [Program Code(s): 03240, 03241,
03243].
K. Licenses issued under subpart B of $3,500.
part 32 of this chapter to distribute
items containing byproduct material or
quantities of byproduct material that do
not require sealed source and/or device
review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter, except
specific licenses authorizing
redistribution of items that have been
authorized for distribution to persons
generally licensed under part 31 of this
chapter [Program Code(s): 03242, 03244].
L. Licenses of broad scope for possession $18,400.
and use of byproduct material issued
under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter
for research and development that do not
authorize commercial distribution.
Number of locations of use: 1-5.
[Program Code(s): 01100, 01110, 01120,
03610, 03611, 03612, 03613].
(1) Licenses of broad scope for $24,600.
possession and use of product
material issued under parts 30 and
33 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 6-20.
(2) Licenses of broad scope for $30,600.
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and
33 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 20 or more.
M. Other licenses for possession and use $12,800.
of byproduct material issued under part
30 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution [Program
Code(s): 03620].
N. Licenses that authorize services for $21,700.
other licensees, except: (1) Licenses
that authorize only calibration and/or
leak testing services are subject to the
fees specified in fee Category 3.P.; and
(2) Licenses that authorize waste
disposal services are subject to the
fees specified in fee categories 4.A.,
4.B., and 4.C. [Program Code(s): 03219,
03225, 03226].
O. Licenses for possession and use of $26,900.
byproduct material issued under part 34
of this chapter for industrial
radiography operations. This category
also includes the possession and use of
source material for shielding authorized
under part 40 of this chapter when
authorized on the same license [Program
Code(s): 03310, 03320].
P. All other specific byproduct material $8,200.
licenses, except those in Categories
4.A. through 9.D.\19\ [Program Code(s):
02400, 02410, 03120, 03121, 03122,
03123, 03124, 03140, 03130, 03220,
03221, 03222, 03800, 03810, 22130].
Q. Registration of devices generally N/A. \13\
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
R. Possession of items or products
containing radium-226 identified in 10
CFR 31.12 which exceed the number of
items or limits specified in that
section: \14\
1. Possession of quantities exceeding $8,100.
the number of items or limits in 10
CFR 31.12(a)(4), or (5) but less
than or equal to 10 times the number
of items or limits specified
[Program Code(s): 02700].
2. Possession of quantities exceeding $8,600.
10 times the number of items or
limits specified in 10 CFR
31.12(a)(4) or (5) [Program Code(s):
02710].
S. Licenses for production of accelerator- $32,000.
produced radionuclides [Program Code(s):
03210].
4. Waste disposal and processing:
A. Licenses specifically authorizing the N/A. \5\
receipt of waste byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material from other persons for the
purpose of contingency storage or
commercial land disposal by the
licensee; or licenses authorizing
contingency storage of low-level
radioactive waste at the site of nuclear
power reactors; or licenses for receipt
of waste from other persons for
incineration or other treatment,
packaging of resulting waste and
residues, and transfer of packages to
another person authorized to receive or
dispose of waste material [Program
Code(s): 03231, 03233, 03235, 03236,
06100, 06101].
B. Licenses specifically authorizing the $22,700.
receipt of waste byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material from other persons for the
purpose of packaging or repackaging the
material. The licensee will dispose of
the material by transfer to another
person authorized to receive or dispose
of the material [Program Code(s): 03234].
C. Licenses specifically authorizing the $15,200.
receipt of prepackaged waste byproduct
material, source material, or special
nuclear material from other persons. The
licensee will dispose of the material by
transfer to another person authorized to
receive or dispose of the material
[Program Code(s): 03232].
5. Well logging:
A. Licenses for possession and use of $14,900.
byproduct material, source material, and/
or special nuclear material for well
logging, well surveys, and tracer
studies other than field flooding tracer
studies [Program Code(s): 03110, 03111,
03112].
B. Licenses for possession and use of N/A. \5\
byproduct material for field flooding
tracer studies. [Program Code(s): 03113].
6. Nuclear laundries:
A. Licenses for commercial collection and $41,200.
laundry of items contaminated with
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material [Program
Code(s): 03218].
7. Medical licenses:
A. Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, $25,500.
40, and 70 of this chapter for human use
of byproduct material, source material,
or special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in gamma stereotactic
radiosurgery units, teletherapy devices,
or similar beam therapy devices. This
category also includes the possession
and use of source material for shielding
when authorized on the same license.
[Program Code(s): 02300, 02310].
[[Page 15501]]
B. Licenses of broad scope issued to $38,500.
medical institutions or two or more
physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40,
and 70 of this chapter authorizing
research and development, including
human use of byproduct material, except
licenses for byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy
devices. This category also includes the
possession and use of source material
for shielding when authorized on the
same license.\9\ [Program Code(s):
02110].
C. Other licenses issued under parts 30, $13,700.
35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human
use of byproduct material, source
material, and/or special nuclear
material, except licenses for byproduct
material, source material, or special
nuclear material in sealed sources
contained in teletherapy devices. This
category also includes the possession
and use of source material for shielding
when authorized on the same license.\9\
\20\ [Program Code(s): 02120, 02121,
02200, 02201, 02210, 02220, 02230,
02231, 02240, 22160].
8. Civil defense:
A. Licenses for possession and use of $8,100.
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material for civil
defense activities [Program Code(s):
03710].
9. Device, product, or sealed source safety
evaluation:
A. Registrations issued for the safety $8,200.
evaluation of devices or products
containing byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material,
except reactor fuel devices, for
commercial distribution.
B. Registrations issued for the safety $13,600.
evaluation of devices or products
containing byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material
manufactured in accordance with the
unique specifications of, and for use
by, a single applicant, except reactor
fuel devices.
C. Registrations issued for the safety $8,000.
evaluation of sealed sources containing
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material, except reactor
fuel, for commercial distribution.
D. Registrations issued for the safety $1,600.
evaluation of sealed sources containing
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material, manufactured
in accordance with the unique
specifications of, and for use by, a
single applicant, except reactor fuel.
10. Transportation of radioactive material:
A. Certificates of Compliance or other
package approvals issued for design of
casks, packages, and shipping containers
1. Spent Fuel, High-Level Waste, and N/A. \6\
plutonium air packages.
2. Other Casks....................... N/A. \6\
B. Quality assurance program approvals
issued under part 71 of this chapter
1. Users and Fabricators............. N/A. \6\
2. Users............................. N/A. \6\
C. Evaluation of security plans, route N/A. \6\
approvals, route surveys, and
transportation security devices
(including immobilization devices).
11. Standardized spent fuel facilities....... N/A. \6\
12. Special Projects [Program Code(s): 25110] N/A. \6\
13. A. Spent fuel storage cask Certificate of N/A. \6\
Compliance.
B. General licenses for storage of spent N/A. \12\
fuel under 10 CFR 72.210.
14. Decommissioning/Reclamation:
A. Byproduct, source, or special nuclear N/A. \7\
material licenses and other approvals
authorizing decommissioning,
decontamination, reclamation, or site
restoration activities under parts 30,
40, 70, 72, and 76 of this chapter,
including master materials licenses
(MMLs) [Program Code(s): 3900, 11900,
21135, 21215, 21240, 21325, 22200].
B. Site-specific decommissioning N/A. \7\
activities associated with unlicensed
sites, including MMLs, whether or not
the sites have been previously licensed.
15. Import and Export licenses............... N/A. \8\
16. Reciprocity.............................. N/A. \8\
17. Master materials licenses of broad scope $353,000.
issued to Government agencies [Program
Code(s): 03614].
18. Department of Energy:
A. Certificates of Compliance............ $1,511,000. \10\
B. Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation $653,000.
Control Act (UMTRCA) activities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Annual fees will be assessed based on whether a licensee held a
valid license with the NRC authorizing possession and use of
radioactive material during the current FY. The annual fee is waived
for those materials licenses and holders of certificates,
registrations, and approvals who either filed for termination of their
licenses or approvals or filed for possession only/storage licenses
before October 1, 2012, and permanently ceased licensed activities
entirely before this date. Annual fees for licensees who filed for
termination of a license, downgrade of a license, or for a possession-
only license during the FY and for new licenses issued during the FY
will be prorated in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 171.17.
If a person holds more than one license, certificate, registration, or
approval, the annual fee(s) will be assessed for each license,
certificate, registration, or approval held by that person. For
licenses that authorize more than one activity on a single license
(e.g., human use and irradiator activities), annual fees will be
assessed for each category applicable to the license.
\2\ Payment of the prescribed annual fee does not automatically renew
the license, certificate, registration, or approval for which the fee
is paid. Renewal applications must be filed in accordance with the
requirements of parts 30, 40, 70, 71, 72, or 76 of this chapter.
\3\ Each FY, fees for these materials licenses will be calculated and
assessed in accordance with Sec. 171.13 and will be published in the
Federal Register for notice and comment.
\4\ Other facilities include licenses for extraction of metals, heavy
metals, and rare earths.
\5\ There are no existing NRC licenses in these fee categories. If NRC
issues a license for these categories, the Commission will consider
establishing an annual fee for this type of license.
\6\ Standardized spent fuel facilities, 10 CFR parts 71 and 72
Certificates of Compliance and related Quality Assurance program
approvals, and special reviews, such as topical reports, are not
assessed an annual fee because the generic costs of regulating these
activities are primarily attributable to users of the designs,
certificates, and topical reports.
\7\ Licensees in this category are not assessed an annual fee because
they are charged an annual fee in other categories while they are
licensed to operate.
\8\ No annual fee is charged because it is not practical to administer
due to the relatively short life or temporary nature of the license.
\9\ Separate annual fees will not be assessed for pacemaker licenses
issued to medical institutions that also hold nuclear medicine
licenses under fee categories 7.B. or 7.C.
[[Page 15502]]
\10\ This includes Certificates of Compliance issued to the U.S.
Department of Energy that are not funded from the Nuclear Waste Fund.
\11\ See Sec. 171.15(c).
\12\ See Sec. 171.15(c).
\13\ No annual fee is charged for this category because the cost of the
general license registration program applicable to licenses in this
category will be recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees.
\14\ Persons who possess radium sources that are used for operational
purposes in another fee category are not also subject to the fees in
this category. (This exception does not apply if the radium sources
are possessed for storage only.)
\15\ Licensees paying annual fees under category 1.A., 1.B., and 1.E.
are not subject to the annual fees for categories 1.C., 1.D., and 1.F.
for sealed sources authorized in the license.
\16\ Licensees subject to fees under categories 1.A., 1.B., 1.E., or
2.A. must pay the largest applicable fee and are not subject to
additional fees listed in this table.
\17\ Licensees paying fees under 3.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\18\ Licensees paying fees under 7.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\19\ Licensees paying fees under 3.N. are not subject to paying fees
under 3.P. for calibration or leak testing services authorized on the
same license.
\20\ Licensees paying fees under 7.B. are not subject to paying fees
under 7.C. for broad scope license licenses issued under parts 30, 35,
40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source
material, and/or special nuclear material, except licenses for
byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices authorized on the same
license.
(e) The fee-relief adjustment allocated to annual fees includes the
budgeted resources for the activities listed in paragraph (e)(1) of
this section, plus the total budgeted resources for the activities
included in paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of this section, as reduced by
the appropriations the NRC receives for these types of activities. If
the NRC's appropriations for these types of activities are greater than
the budgeted resources for the activities included in paragraphs (e)(2)
and (3) of this section for a given FY, a negative fee-relief
adjustment (or annual fee reduction) will be allocated to annual fees.
The activities comprising the FY 2015 fee-relief adjustment are as
follows:
* * * * *
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 9th day of March 2015.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Maureen E. Wylie,
Chief Financial Officer.
[FR Doc. 2015-06377 Filed 3-20-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P