74.33—Nuclear material control and accounting for uranium enrichment facilities authorized to produce special nuclear material of low strategic significance.
(a) General performance objectives.
Each licensee who is authorized by this chapter to possess equipment capable of enriching uranium or operate an enrichment facility, and produce, possess, or use more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material of low strategic significance at any site or contiguous sites, subject to control by the licensee, shall establish, implement, and maintain a NRC-approved material control and accounting system that will achieve the following objectives:
(1)
Maintain accurate, current, and reliable information of and periodically confirm the quantities and locations of source material and special nuclear material in the licensee's possession;
(2)
Protect against and detect production of uranium enriched to 10 percent or more in the isotope U 235 ;
(5)
Resolve indications of production of uranium enriched to 10 percent or more in the isotope U 235 (for centrifuge enrichment facilities this requirement does not apply to each cascade during its start-up process, not to exceed the first 24 hours);
(8)
Provide information to aid in the investigation of the production of uranium enriched to 10 percent or more in the isotope U 235; and
(9)
Provide information to aid in the investigation of unauthorized production of uranium of low strategic significance.
(b) Implementation dates.
Each applicant for a license who would, upon issuance of a license pursuant to any part of this chapter, be subject to the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section shall:
(1)
Submit a fundamental nuclear material control plan describing how the performance objectives of § 74.33(a), the system features and capabilities of § 74.33(c), and the recordkeeping requirements of § 74.33(d) will be met; and
(2)
Implement the NRC approved plan submitted pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this section prior to:
(i)
The cumulative receipt of 5,000 grams of U 235 contained in any combination of natural, depleted, or enriched uranium or
(ii)
NRC's issuance of a license to test or operate the enrichment facility; whichever occurs first.
(c) System features and capabilities.
To meet the general performance objectives of paragraph (a) of this section, the Material Control and Accounting (MC&A) system must include the features and capabilities described in paragraphs (c) (1) through (8) of this section. The licensee shall establish, document, and maintain:
(2)
A measurement program that ensures that all quantities of source material and special nuclear material in the accounting records are based on measured values;
(i)
Measurement bias is estimated and minimized through the measurement control program, and any significant biases are eliminated from inventory difference values of record;
(ii)
All MC&A measurement systems are controlled so that twice the standard error of the inventory difference, based on all measurement error contributions, is less than the greater of 5,000 grams of U 235 or 0.25 percent of the U 235 of the active inventory for each total plant material balance; and
(iii)
Any measurements performed under contract are controlled so that the licensee can satisfy the requirements of paragraphs (c)(3) (i) and (ii) of this section;
(i)
Performing, unless otherwise required to satisfy part 75 of this chapter, a dynamic (nonshutdown) physical inventory of in-process (e.g., in the enrichment equipment) uranium and U 235 at least every 65 days, and performing a static physical inventory of all other uranium and total U 235 contained in natural, depleted, and enriched uranium located outside of the enrichment processing equipment at least every 370 calendar days, with static physical inventories being conducted in conjunction with a dynamic physical inventory of in-process uranium and U 235 so as to provide a total plant material balance at least every 370 calendar days; and
(ii)
Reconciling and adjusting the book inventory to the results of the static physical inventory and resolving, or reporting an inability to resolve, any inventory difference that is rejected by a statistical test which has a 90 percent power of detecting a discrepancy of a quantity of U 235, established by NRC on a site-specific basis, within 60 days after the start of each static physical inventory;
(i)
Production of uranium enriched to 10 percent or more in the U 235 isotope, to the extent that SNM of moderate strategic significance could be produced within any 370 calendar day period;
(i)
Current knowledge is maintained of items with respect to identity, uranium and U 235 content, and stored location; and
(ii)
Items are stored and handled, or subsequently measured, in a manner so that unauthorized removal of 500 grams or more of U 235, as individual items or as uranium contained in items, will be detected. Exempted from the requirements of paragraph (c)(6) (i) and (ii) of this section are licensed-identified items each containing less than 500 grams U 235 up to a cumulative total of 50 kilograms of U 235 and items that exist for less than 14 calendar days;
(7)
A resolution program that ensures that any shipper-receiver differences are resolved that are statistically significant and exceed 500 grams U 235 on:
(d) Recordkeeping.
(1)
Each licensee shall establish records that will demonstrate that the performance objectives of paragraph (a) of this section and the system features and capabilities of paragraph (c) of this section have been met and maintain these records in an auditable form, available for inspection, for at least 3 years, unless a longer retention time is required by part 75 of this chapter.
(2)
Records that must be maintained pursuant to this part may be the original or a reproduced copy or a microform if such reproduced copy or microform is duly authenticated by authorized personnel and the microform is capable of producing a clear and legible copy after storage for the period specified by Commission regulations. The record may also be stored in electronic media with the capability for producing, on demand, legible, accurate, and complete records during the required retention period. Records such as letters, drawings, and specifications must include all pertinent information such as stamps, initials, and signatures.