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Qualitative human reliability analysis-informed insights on cask drops

Brewer, Jeffrey D.; Hendrickson, Stacey M.; Boring, Ronald L.; Cooper, Susan E.

Human Reliability Analysis (HRA) methods have been developed primarily to provide information for use in probabilistic risk assessments analyzing nuclear power plant (NPP) operations. Despite this historical focus on the control room, there has been growing interest in applying HRA methods to other NPP activities such as dry cask storage operations (DCSOs) in which spent fuel is transferred into dry cask storage systems. This paper describes a successful application of aspects of the "A Technique for Human Event Analysis" (ATHEANA) HRA approach [1, 2] in performing qualitative HRA activities that generated insights on the potential for dropping a spent fuel cask during DCSOs. This paper provides a description of the process followed during the analysis, a description of the human failure event (HFE) scenario groupings, discussion of inferred human performance vulnerabilities, a detailed examination of one HFE scenario and illustrative approaches for avoiding or mitigating human performance vulnerabilities that may contribute to dropping a spent fuel cask.