Resources Archive
This efficiency bulletin will maintain plant performance and help reduce costs by ensuring that the “critical components” lists includes only those items that warrant such classification based on their function.
NEI joined 14 other business associations urging Congress to approve the Export-Import Bank’s quorum requirement so it can again review transactions over $10 million.
This efficiency bulletin will help licensing and compliance groups at nuclear plants focus on priority tasks and eliminate low-value activities, resulting in efficiency gains and increased focus on regulatory issues.
This efficiency bulletin will implement changes to the off-site review committee to refocus on core requirements and standards.
This efficiency bulletin will reduce work management administrative burden and inefficiencies accumulated over time and streamline the work management process.
This fact sheet details the defense-in-depth philosophy used in the construction and operation of nuclear power plants, which are designed to provide high levels of protection for public health and safety.
This fact sheet explains how energy companies develop, maintain and exercise emergency preparedness plans to protect the health and safety of the public living near nuclear power plants.
This fact sheet explains the process of decommissioning a nuclear power plant after it is removed from service. This regulated process includes the removal and disposal of radioactive components and materials.
The industry must pool its collective testing experience so that the maintenance strategy can be adjusted based on actual experience from storing, testing and using the FLEX equipment.
There are large numbers of high-cost, high-frequency and resource-intensive preventive maintenance performed on noncritical equipment without a return value in equipment reliability.
The effectiveness and composition of fix-it-now teams have challenged the industry’s ability to manage incoming work, protect the schedule and provide timely resolution of high-priority work.
A substantial amount of work is performed using an extensive work management process requiring detailed instructions, scheduling and coordination. All work activities that are minor in scope and complexity, do not require detailed work package planning, and do not increase the risk of a plant transient or other consequential event should be planned as minor maintenance.