[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 22]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR192.02]

[Page 19-20]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 192--HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION STANDARDS FOR URANIUM AND THORIUM 
MILL TAILINGS--Table of Contents
 
 Subpart A--Standards for the Control of Residual Radioactive Materials 
                 from Inactive Uranium Processing Sites
 
Sec. 192.02  Standards.

    Control of residual radioactive materials and their listed 
constituents shall be designed \1\ to:
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    \1\ Because the standard applies to design, monitoring after 
disposal is not required to demonstrate compliance with respect to 
Sec. 192.02(a) and (b).
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    (a) Be effective for up to one thousand years, to the extent 
reasonably achievable, and, in any case, for at least 200 years, and,
    (b) Provide reasonable assurance that releases of radon-222 from 
residual radioactive material to the atmosphere will not:
    (1) Exceed an average \2\ release rate of 20 picocuries per square 
meter per second, or
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    \2\ This average shall apply over the entire surface of the disposal 
site and over at least a one-year period. Radon will come from both 
residual radioactive materials and from materials covering them. Radon 
emissions from the covering materials should be estimated as part of 
developing a remedial action plan for each site. The standard, however, 
applies only to emissions from residual radioactive materials to the 
atmosphere.
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    (2) Increase the annual average concentration of radon-222 in air at 
or above any location outside the disposal site by more than one-half 
picocurie per liter.
    (c) Provide reasonable assurance of conformance with the following 
groundwater protection provisions:
    (1) The Secretary shall, on a site-specific basis, determine which 
of the constituents listed in Appendix I to Part 192 are present in or 
reasonably derived from residual radioactive materials and shall 
establish a monitoring program adequate to determine background levels 
of each such constituent in groundwater at each disposal site.
    (2) The Secretary shall comply with conditions specified in a plan 
for remedial action which includes engineering specifications for a 
system of disposal designed to ensure that constituents identified under 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section entering the groundwater from a 
depository site (or a processing site, if residual radioactive materials 
are retained on the site) will not exceed the concentration limits 
established under paragraph (c)(3) of this section (or the supplemental 
standards established under Sec. 192.22) in the uppermost aquifer 
underlying the site beyond the point of compliance established under 
paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
    (3) Concentration limits:
    (i) Concentration limits shall be determined in the groundwater for 
listed constituents identified under paragraph (c)(1) of this section. 
The concentration of a listed constituent in groundwater must not 
exceed:
    (A) The background level of that constituent in the groundwater; or
    (B) For any of the constituents listed in Table 1 to subpart A, the 
respective value given in that Table if the background level of the 
constituent is below the value given in the Table; or
    (C) An alternate concentration limit established pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section.
    (ii)(A) The Secretary may apply an alternate concentration limit if, 
after considering remedial or corrective actions to achieve the levels 
specified in paragraphs (c)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section, he has 
determined that the constituent will not pose a substantial present or 
potential hazard to human health and the environment as long as the 
alternate concentration limit is not exceeded, and the Commission has 
concurred.
    (B) In considering the present or potential hazard to human health 
and the

[[Page 20]]

environment of alternate concentration limits, the following factors 
shall be considered:
    (1) Potential adverse effects on groundwater quality, considering:
    (i) The physical and chemical characteristics of constituents in the 
residual radioactive material at the site, including their potential for 
migration;
    (ii) The hydrogeological characteristics of the site and surrounding 
land;
    (iii) The quantity of groundwater and the direction of groundwater 
flow;
    (iv) The proximity and withdrawal rates of groundwater users;
    (v) The current and future uses of groundwater in the region 
surrounding the site;
    (vi) The existing quality of groundwater, including other sources of 
contamination and their cumulative impact on the groundwater quality;
    (vii) The potential for health risks caused by human exposure to 
constituents;
    (viii) The potential damage to wildlife, crops, vegetation, and 
physical structures caused by exposure to constituents;
    (ix) The persistence and permanence of the potential adverse 
effects;
    (x) The presence of underground sources of drinking water and 
exempted aquifers identified under Sec. 144.7 of this chapter; and
    (2) Potential adverse effects on hydraulically-connected surface-
water quality, considering:
    (i) The volume and physical and chemical characteristics of the 
residual radioactive material at the site;
    (ii) The hydrogeological characteristics of the site and surrounding 
land;
    (iii) The quantity and quality of groundwater, and the direction of 
groundwater flow;
    (iv) The patterns of rainfall in the region;
    (v) The proximity of the site to surface waters;
    (vi) The current and future uses of surface waters in the region 
surrounding the site and any water quality standards established for 
those surface waters;
    (vii) The existing quality of surface water, including other sources 
of contamination and their cumulative impact on surface water quality;
    (viii) The potential for health risks caused by human exposure to 
constituents;
    (ix) The potential damage to wildlife, crops, vegetation, and 
physical structures caused by exposure to constituents; and
    (x) The persistence and permanence of the potential adverse effects.
    (4) Point of compliance: The point of compliance is the location at 
which the groundwater concentration limits of paragraph (c)(3) of this 
section apply. The point of compliance is the intersection of a vertical 
plane with the uppermost aquifer underlying the site, located at the 
hydraulically downgradient limit of the disposal area plus the area 
taken up by any liner, dike, or other barrier designed to contain the 
residual radioactive material.
    (d) Each site on which disposal occurs shall be designed and 
stabilized in a manner that minimizes the need for future maintenance.

[60 FR 2865, Jan. 11, 1995]