I am not sure, but I doubt it. There are available a few photographs of failed steam drums due to hydrotesting at below 20 C ( the one in florida in the 1970's comes to mind) , but there are also issues with the modern creep strength enhanced alloys of the HP main steam line ( P91), which may have marginally low ductility at temperatures below 20C.
To minimize the steam drum wall thickness ( and thus allow a faster startup time)very high strength carbon steel is used, but one issue that is inherited is lack of ductility below 20 C.
Another issue is that boiler fabricators and constructors use every loophole in the asme code to skip PWHT wherever permitted- one result is that there may be scattered components of the boiler that have brittle weld zones with pre-existing micro-cracks and pre-existing stresses from welding that have not been relieved.
"Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad "