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US Nuclear Power Regulator proposes to narrow scope of environmental reviews

The U.S. nuclear power regulator on Wednesday proposed narrowing the scope of environmental?reviews required under federal law for licenses for new and renewed reactors. The?U.S. nuclear regulator proposed on Wednesday to narrow the scope of?environmental?reviews required by federal law for licenses to new and renewed reactors.

The proposal is just one of many changes that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has made to its rules. The U.S. President Donald Trump wants to quadruple the nuclear power capacity of the U.S. by 2050 in order to meet the power demand, which has risen due to data centers and electric vehicles.

The NRC has also proposed a change to a rule that protects people from radiation coming from power plants, and security standards for reactors.

Ho Nieh, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), told reporters that the NRC "did much more for many, many, years than was required by law under the National Environmental 'Policy Act." This brings us right back to the NEPA requirements, nothing more and nothing less."

Nieh stated that the NRC is proposing to limit areas in which it doesn't have authority over environmental effects, such as the construction of nuclear power plants.

He said: "Dust and noise, air impact, non-radiological waters, or nonradiological effects are all examples of things that we will not be doing in the future."

The proposal would also "eliminate routine requests for public comments on draft Environmental Impact Statements." The public will still be able to provide comments during other stages of the approval process.

The proposal also expands categorical exemptions for certain actions. This includes some new reactor projects where the NRC determined that they do not normally result in significant environmental impact.

Kimyata Savoy is the NRC’s chief environmental review and permitting officer. She told reporters the proposal would save the NRC about $135 millions in costs.

Trump approved four executive orders last year on nuclear energy that sought to'shorten the approvals of new reactor licenses from a multiyear process to a 18-month one.

The orders called for a revamp of the NRC, including examining staffing levels and instructing the Energy and Defense Departments that they should work together to construct pilot nuclear plants on federal land. (Reporting and editing by David Gregorio; Timothy Gardner)

(source: Reuters)