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§ 53.020 Definitions.

10 CFR 53.020

Citation10 CFR 53.020
CorpusDaily eCFR
Displayed edition2026-05-07
Last updated2026-05-07

§ 53.020 Definitions.

As used in this part:

Anticipated event sequence means event sequences expected to occur one or more times during the life of a commercial nuclear plant. Anticipated event sequences take into account the expected response of all structures, systems, and components (SSCs) within the plant, regardless of safety classification.

Applicant means a person applying for a license, permit, or other form of Commission permission or approval under this part.

Certified fuel handler means, for a commercial nuclear plant, either—

(1) A non-licensed operator who has qualified in accordance with a fuel handler training program approved by the Commission; or

(2) A non-licensed operator who demonstrates compliance with the following criteria:

(i) Has qualified in accordance with a fuel handler training program that demonstrates compliance with the same requirements as training programs for non-licensed operators required by § 53.830, and

(ii) Is responsible for decisions on—

(A) Safe conduct of decommissioning activities,

(B) Safe handling and storage of spent fuel; and

(C) Appropriate response to plant emergencies.

Combined license (COL) means a combined construction permit (CP) and operating license (OL) with conditions for a commercial nuclear plant issued under this part.

Commercial nuclear plant means a facility consisting of one or more commercial nuclear reactors and associated co-located support facilities, including the collection of buildings, radionuclide sources, and SSCs for which a license, certification, or approval is being sought under this part, that is or will be used for producing power for commercial electric power or other commercial purposes. For the purposes of requirements in this part that reference requirements in part 50 of this chapter, a commercial nuclear plant is equivalent to a nuclear power plant.

Commercial nuclear reactor means an apparatus, other than an atomic weapon, designed or used to sustain nuclear fission. For the purposes of requirements in this part that reference requirements in 10 CFR part 50, a commercial nuclear reactor is equivalent to a nuclear reactor as defined in § 50.2 of this chapter.

Commission means the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) or its duly authorized representatives.

Construction means the activities in paragraph (1) of this definition and does not mean the activities in paragraph (2) of this definition.

(1) Activities constituting construction are those activities that are conducted on-site to build the commercial nuclear plant, including the driving of piles; subsurface preparation; placement of backfill, concrete, or permanent retaining walls within an excavation; installation of foundations; or in-place assembly, erection, fabrication, or testing, which are for—

(i) Safety-related (SR) SSCs and those non-safety-related but safety-significant (NSRSS) SSCs of a facility for which special treatment includes requirements on design or installation, including associated quality assurance measures;

(ii) SSCs necessary to comply with 10 CFR part 73; or

(iii) Onsite emergency facilities necessary to comply with § 53.855.

(2) Construction does not include—

(i) Changes for temporary use of the land for public recreational purposes;

(ii) Site exploration, including necessary borings to determine foundation conditions or other preconstruction monitoring to establish background information related to the suitability of the site, the environmental impacts of construction or operation, or the protection of environmental values;

(iii) Preparation of a site for construction of a facility, including clearing of the site, grading, installation of drainage, erosion, and other environmental mitigation measures, and construction of temporary roads and borrow areas;

(iv) Erection of fences and other access control measures;

(v) Excavation;

(vi) Erection of support buildings (such as construction equipment storage sheds, warehouse and shop facilities, utilities, concrete mixing plants, docking and unloading facilities, and office buildings) for use in connection with the construction of the facility;

(vii) Building of service facilities (such as paved roads, parking lots, railroad spurs, exterior utility and lighting systems, potable water systems, sanitary sewage treatment facilities, and transmission lines);

(viii) Procurement or fabrication of components or portions of the proposed facility occurring at locations other than the final, in-place location at the facility; or

(ix) Manufacture of a nuclear power reactor under a manufacturing license (ML) under subpart H of this part to be installed at the proposed site and to be part of the proposed facility.

Custom combined license (custom COL) means a COL that does not reference a standard design approval, standard design certification, or manufacturing license.

Decommission or decommissioning means to remove a plant or site safely from service and reduce residual radioactivity to a level that permits—

(1) Release of the property for unrestricted use and termination of the license; or

(2) Release of the property under restricted conditions and termination of the license.

Defense in depth means inclusion of two or more independent and redundant layers of defense in the design of a facility and its operating procedures to compensate for uncertainties such that no single layer of defense, no matter how robust, is exclusively relied upon. Defense in depth includes, but is not limited to, the use of access controls, physical barriers, redundant and diverse safety functions, and emergency response measures.

Design-basis accidents (DBAs) means postulated event sequences that are used to set functional design criteria and performance objectives for the design of SR SSCs through deterministic analyses. Design-basis accidents are a type of licensing-basis event and are based on the capabilities and reliabilities of SR SSCs needed to mitigate and prevent event sequences, respectively.

Design-basis external hazard level means the level of severity or intensity of an external hazard for which the SR SSCs are protected against or designed to withstand without losing their capability to perform their safety functions.

Design features means the active and passive SSCs and the inherent characteristics of those SSCs that contribute to limiting the total effective dose equivalent to individual members of the public during normal operations and prevent or mitigate the consequences of event sequences.

Early site permit (ESP) means a Commission approval, issued under subpart H of this part, for a site for one or more commercial nuclear plants. An early site permit is a partial construction permit.

Electric utility means any entity that generates or distributes electricity and that recovers the cost of this electricity, either directly or indirectly, through rates established by the entity itself or by a separate regulatory authority. Investor-owned utilities, including generation or distribution subsidiaries, public utility districts, municipalities, rural electric cooperatives, and State and Federal agencies, including associations of any of the foregoing, are included within the meaning of “electric utility.”

Event sequence means a postulated initiating event defined for a set of initial plant conditions followed by system, safety function, and operator successes or failures, and terminating in a specified end state depending on the system, safety function, and operator successes and failures (e.g., prevention of release of radioactive material or release in one of the reactor-specific release categories). An event sequence may include many unique variations of events that are similar in terms of results or end states.

Exclusion area means that area surrounding the reactor, in which the reactor licensee has the authority to determine all activities including exclusion or removal of personnel and property from the area. This area may be traversed by a highway, railroad, or waterway, provided these are not so close to the facility as to interfere with normal operations of the facility and provided appropriate and effective arrangements are made to control traffic on the highway, railroad, or waterway, in case of emergency, to protect the public health and safety. Residence within the exclusion area must normally be prohibited. In any event, residents must be subject to ready removal in case of necessity. Activities unrelated to operation of the reactor may be permitted in an exclusion area under appropriate limitations, provided that no significant hazards to the public health and safety will result.

Fission product release means the amount and composition of radioactive material released to the environment, after accounting for any retention of radionuclides provided by reactor design features.

Fuel means special nuclear material (SNM) or source material, discrete elements that physically contain SNM or source material, and homogeneous mixtures that contain SNM or source material, intended to or used to create power in a commercial nuclear plant.

Functional design criteria means metrics for the performance of SSCs. For SR SSCs, these criteria define performance metrics necessary to demonstrate compliance with the safety criteria in § 53.210. For NSRSS SSCs, these criteria define performance metrics necessary to demonstrate compliance with the safety criteria in § 53.220.

License, when used in the context of a facility, means a limited work authorization, CP, OL, early site permit, COL, or ML under this part, or a renewed license issued by the Commission under this part. When used in the context of a license authorizing an individual to manipulate the controls of a facility, license means a license issued by the Commission to perform the function of an operator, senior operator, or generally licensed reactor operator as defined in this part.

Licensee means a person who is authorized to conduct activities under a license issued under this part by the Commission.

Licensing-basis events means a collection of event sequences considered in the design and licensing of the commercial nuclear plant. Licensing-basis events are unplanned events and include anticipated event sequences, unlikely event sequences, very unlikely event sequences, and DBAs.

Licensing-basis information means the information contained in regulations, orders, licenses, certifications, or approvals issued by the NRC for a commercial nuclear plant licensed under this part and that information submitted to the NRC by an applicant or licensee in a Safety Analysis Report, program description, or other licensing-related document required under this part.

Low-population zone means the area immediately surrounding the exclusion area which contains residents, the total number and density of which are such that there is a reasonable probability that appropriate protective measures could be taken on their behalf in the event of a serious accident. A permissible population density or total population within this zone is not included in this definition because the situation may vary from case to case. Whether a specific number of people can, for example, be evacuated from a specific area or instructed to take shelter on a timely basis, will depend on many factors such as location, number and size of highways, scope and extent of advance planning, and actual distribution of residents within the area.

Major decommissioning activity means, for a commercial nuclear plant, any activity that results in permanent removal of major radioactive components, permanently modifies the structure of the containment, if applicable, or results in dismantling components for shipment containing greater than class C waste in accordance with § 61.55 of this chapter.

Major feature of the emergency plans means an aspect of those plans necessary to:

(1) Address in whole or part either one or more of the 16 standards in 10 CFR 50.47(b) or the requirements of 10 CFR 50.160(b), as applicable; or

(2) Describe the emergency planning zones as required in 10 CFR 53.1109(g).

Manufactured reactor means the essential portions of a nuclear reactor that are manufactured under an ML and subsequently transported and incorporated into a commercial nuclear plant under a COL or CP.

Manufacturing license means a license issued under this part that authorizes the manufacture of manufactured reactors but not its construction, installation, or operation.

Non-Safety-Related but Safety-Significant (NSRSS) SSCs means those SSCs which are not SR but are relied on to achieve adequate defense in depth or perform risk-significant functions and warrant special treatment.

Non-Safety-Significant SSCs means those SSCs that are not SR or NSRSS, are not relied on to achieve adequate defense in depth or to perform risk-significant functions, and do not warrant special treatment.

Person means—

(1) Any individual, corporation, partnership, firm, association, trust, estate, public or private institution, group, government agency other than the Commission or the Department of Energy, except that the Department of Energy shall be considered a person to the extent that its facilities are subject to the licensing and related regulatory authority of the Commission pursuant to section 202 of the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, any State or any political subdivision of, or any political entity within a State, any foreign government or nation or any political subdivision of any such government or nation, or other entity; and

(2) Any legal successor, representative, agent, or agency of the foregoing.

Population center distance means the distance from the reactor to the nearest boundary of a densely populated center containing more than about 25,000 residents.

Programmatic controls means administrative measures that govern human action in implementing programs and operating, monitoring, and maintaining SSCs and equipment of a commercial nuclear plant. Programmatic controls considered to be licensing basis information are addressed by programs under § 53.845 and are specified in an application for a requested activity of the Commission.

Quality assurance (QA) means all those planned and systematic actions necessary to ensure that a structure, system, or component will perform satisfactorily in service. Quality assurance includes quality control, which comprises those QA actions related to the physical characteristics of a material, structure, component, or system which provide a means to control the quality of the material, structure, component, or system to predetermined requirements.

Safety criteria means performance-based metrics that establish a level of safety provided in requirements in §§ 53.210 and 53.220.

Safety-related structures, systems, or components means those SSCs that are relied upon to demonstrate compliance with the safety criteria in § 53.210 and warrant special treatment.

Small modular reactor means a power reactor, which may be of modular design as defined in § 52.1 of this chapter, licensed under this part to produce heat energy up to 1,000 megawatts thermal per module.

Site characteristics means the actual physical, environmental, and demographic features of a site. Site characteristics are specified in an early site permit or in a Preliminary or Final Safety Analysis Report for a limited work authorization, CP, or COL, as applicable.

Site parameters are the postulated physical, environmental, and demographic features of an assumed site. Site parameters are specified in a standard design approval, standard design certification, or ML.

Source material means source material as defined in subsection 11z. of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, (the Act) and in the regulations contained in part 40 of this chapter.

Special nuclear material (SNM) means:

(1) Plutonium, uranium-233, uranium enriched in the isotope-233 or in the isotope-235, and any other material which the Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 51 of the Act, determines to be SNM, but does not include source material; or

(2) Any material artificially enriched by any of the foregoing, but does not include source material.

Special treatment means those requirements, such as QA, design criteria, and programmatic controls, that are taken beyond the procurement, installation, and maintenance of commercial grade products to ensure that SR and NSRSS SSCs will provide defense in depth or perform risk-significant functions. The requirements also ensure that the SSCs will perform under the service conditions and with the reliability assumed in the analysis performed under § 53.450 to demonstrate compliance with the safety criteria in §§ 53.210 for SR SSCs and 53.220 for SR and NSRSS SSCs.

Standard design means a design which is sufficiently detailed and complete to support certification or approval in accordance with subpart H of this part, and which is usable under of this part for a multiple number of units or at a multiple number of sites without reopening or repeating the review.

Standard design approval or design approval means an NRC staff approval, issued under subpart H of this part, of a final standard design for a commercial nuclear plant. The approval may be for either the final design for the entire reactor facility or the final design of major portions thereof.

Standard design certification or design certification means a Commission approval, issued under subpart H of this part, of a final standard design for a nuclear power facility. This design may be referred to as a certified standard design.

Total effective dose equivalent means the sum of the effective dose equivalent (for external exposures) and the committed effective dose equivalent (for internal exposures).

Utilization facility means any commercial nuclear reactor other than one designed or used primarily for the formation of plutonium or uranium-233.

Unlikely event sequences means event sequences that are not expected to occur in the life of a commercial nuclear plant and are less likely than anticipated event sequences, but are infrequent rather than rare. Unlikely event sequences take into account the expected response of all SSCs within the plant regardless of safety classification.

Very unlikely event sequences means event sequences that are not expected to occur in the life of a commercial nuclear plant, are less likely than an unlikely event sequence, and are rare. Very unlikely event sequences take into account the expected response of all SSCs within the plant regardless of safety classification.

[91 FR 15794, Mar. 30, 2026, as amended at 91 FR 18773, Apr. 13, 2026]