BLR black range minerals limited

Here's an insight to the delays in attaining NRC permitting...

  1. 6,057 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 8
    Here's an insight to the delays in attaining NRC permitting within Powertechs soon to be renamed pending approval "Azarga Uranium" Dewey-Burdock Uranium Project.

    Seems the permitting guidance from the NRC has been a major issue, BUT it does seem that the permitting process has been simplified with a new Question & Answer format of processing.


    IMO: This can only assist an easier permitting road for Black Range Minerals, in regards to attaining all relevant NRC permits over the coming 12-18 Months.

    In the mean time all is focused on the " Ablation Recovery Process " and to a lesser extent attaining a quick transfer of Uranium Ones U.S. Owned Assets.



    IMO: This is a must read for Current & prospective BLR Holders !


    _________________________________________________________________________



    New Submission May Be Path Out of Impasse for Powertech
    By Nancy E. Roth, Managing Editor

    This has been one tough year for Powertech (TSX:PWE). Ever
    since it received a Request for Additional Information (RAI)
    from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in May 2010 on the
    company’s application for a license to develop an in-situ recovery
    mine on its Dewey-Burdock uranium property in South Dakota,
    it has been trying to produce a set of responses that the agency
    would accept.

    Conversations with Powertech and agency officials along with
    an examination of documents on NRC’s website detailing
    the company’s interactions with regulators make it clear that
    Powertech has had difficulty understanding what agency staff
    wanted of them at many points in the application process. This
    held true also in the company’s response to the RAI, which
    contained hundreds of detailed queries and requests for data
    about the proposed facility.

    Consequently Powertech submitted RAI responses that NRC
    staff repeatedly found insufficient. The first response went in on
    Dec. 13, 2010. NRC staff started communicating their concerns
    in February, and followed up with a detailed email on March
    7 from the NRC project manager, Ronald Burrows, laying out
    more than 100 deficiencies in the RAI responses. It also gave the
    company notice that NRC staff had stopped evaluating the health
    and safety section of the application.

    Powertech and NRC staff then held a public meeting at NRC
    headquarters for two full days, April 7-8, to discuss what the
    staff needed to continue the evaluation, plus give Powertech a
    chance to answer the major questions NRC had included in the
    RAI package.

    “We were very clear as to what was necessary to get in to us,”
    William Von Till, chief of NRC’s Uranium Recovery Licensing
    Branch, told FCW this week. “We gave them two days of
    discussion with the goal of getting them back on track.”
    Von Till noted that at the meeting Powertech had “pulled in
    additional consultants” to help them complete the RAI response,
    which Von Till thought was a positive development. “The meeting
    was very productive,” he told FCW.

    In an April 22 letter Powertech Vice President Richard Blubaugh
    told Burrows that the meeting had been “both instructional and
    clarifying” and that Powertech planned to submit “the complete
    and revised responses” to the remaining RAI questions on or
    about June 29.


    Press Distorts, Investors Punished

    On May 6, NRC, following normal procedure, sent the company
    a formal letter identifying the four “critical issues” discussed at
    the meeting that required more detailed information. The letter
    also repeated the notice that the staff had put aside the health
    and safety evaluation until the company provided the needed
    information. But the letter made it clear that NRC would
    continue reviewing the environmental section of the application
    as well as the Section 106 tribal consultations on the proposed
    in-situ facility (FCW #429, June 16).

    Agency staff told FCW last month that they could have decided
    to stop all work on the application, sending Powertech’s project
    to the back of the license-application queue. Instead, FCW was
    told, the staff had taken the most lenient corrective path because
    “we are confident that Powertech can deliver the information we
    need.”

    But what the popular press relayed to the public was very nearly
    the opposite.


    “Powertech operations have been suspended,” said the headline
    in the Coloradoan on May 10, although Powertech was not
    operating anything. NRC was “suspending the permitting process
    because Powertech was unable to answer public health and safety
    questions about the Dewey-Burdock mine” [FCW emphasis].
    By implying that Powertech could not answer the questions, the
    reporter subtly introduced the idea that the project itself had
    serious health and safety issues that Powertech might not want
    to reveal.

    The Rapid City Journal account of May 14 offered a more
    accurate headline but did not compare inaccurate assertions by
    project opponents with the text of the letter. Nor did the reporter
    apparently ask NRC staff about their intent.

    Powertech’s share price fell from $0.27 on May 3 to $0.17 on May
    16, a 37% drop. It subsequently recovered to $0.21, a net loss of
    33%. Whether investors were reacting to the NRC letter or the
    flurry of negative coverage is hard to say. Vol. 10 • No. 431 • June 30, 2011 http://fuelcycleweek.com 4
    Inconsistent Instruction?

    Dick Clement, company president and CEO, told FCW last
    month that he was confident that the new submission, which
    went in on Wednesday, would restart the full license application
    process, and affirmed that Powertech was not quitting.
    “Dewey-Burdock is the best uranium project in the U.S.,” he
    said.

    Asked about the company’s difficulty in responding to the RAI,
    Clement said the initial effort was made needlessly laborious, not
    because of the number or nature of the questions, but because
    NRC staff had instructed the company to format its response
    according to NUREG 1569 guidance. This was cumbersome and
    time-consuming for the staff, he said. After they submitted the
    document, said Clement, they heard from other NRC officials
    that they should have used a simpler, question-and-answer
    format.


    Asked for evidence that it had received varying instructions,
    Clement sent FCW the May 28, 2010, RAI document, which
    includes a request to “please submit all appropriate page changes
    that incorporate the response” with the RAI response. Blubaugh
    followed up with a telephone call to the project manager asking
    if the staff wanted replacement pages (in compliance with the
    guidance) and was told yes, according to Clement.

    A senior NRC official insisted that the staff had passed along no
    such formatting instruction, and that Powertech should have
    checked other examples of RAI submissions, had they been
    uncertain. In fact, said the official, the format of Powertech’s
    document was “problematic” for the reviewers.

    In February Powertech resubmitted the response in a question and-answer format.
    FCW understands from another license applicant that a similar
    miscommunication may have happened before.


    In that case the applicant had assembled its application according
    to the NUREG-1569 guidance, with the approval of its NRC
    project manager, FCW was told.

    The 255-page guidance document itself reveals in an introductory
    section that although the style and format it sets out “may be
    considered complex or redundant” it was “consistent with NRC
    practice for standard review plan style and format” and would
    “preserve consistency with other NRC standard review plans.”
    “We spent quite a lot of money putting it together,” the applicant
    told FCW. “Then [the application] comes back six months later
    and we’re told it’s unacceptable. They didn’t like our format.”



    Cheers from G64 :)
    Outcome of the above procedures ? Is A lesson learned !


    Black Range Minerals + Azarga/Blumont + Powertech + Anatolia = IMO: A Potential Major US/World Uranium Producer.

    .



 
Add to My Watchlist
What is My Watchlist?
A personalised tool to help users track selected stocks. Delivering real-time notifications on price updates, announcements, and performance stats on each to help make informed investment decisions.

Currently unlisted public company.

arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.