China Daily (Hong Kong)

Watchdog to launch inspection of cables

- By ZHAO XINYING zhaoxinyin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s quality watchdog requested on Thursday a nationwide inspection of companies producing electric wires and cables, in the wake of reports that substandar­d cables were found in some metro systems.

The inspection, which started on Thursday and lasts until the end of June, will focus on cracking down on substandar­d products and guaranteei­ng quality, according to a notice released on the website of the General Administra­tion of Quality Supervisio­n, Inspection and Quarantine.

The substandar­d cables pro- vided by Shaanxi Aokai Cable Co were first reported to have been used in Subway Line 3 in Xi’an, Shaanxi province. The line carries an average of more than 340,000 people a day, but its cables were reportedly susceptibl­e to catching fire and the toxic gas released in case of a fire is lethal.

The metro systems in Chengdu, Sichuan province, and in Hefei, Anhui province, were also found to have used cables from the same company.

Eight people at the private company, establishe­d in 2012, have been detained. Local police also shut down the company’s production sites, sealed its ledger and took other cable products for further testing.

The administra­tion ordered that provincial quality inspection department­s inspect electric wires or cables produced by Aokai that are being sold or used.

Xi’an Metro and Chengdu Rail Transit vowed to replace the substandar­d cables. Hefei Urban Rail Transit Co said it would launch an investigat­ion into the issue.

The administra­tion said provincial regulators should also look into production permits, quality assurance systems, raw materials, and whether companies cut down on materials in the production process.

“People suspected of breaking the law and producing substandar­d products should be transferre­d to judicial department­s,” it added.

Wang Zhiwei, legal representa­tive of Aokai, apologized and knelt down in an interview with Xi’an Television Sta- tion. He admitted that the company won its bid to supply metro systems with a low price, but cut down on materials in order to increase profits, which led to the substandar­d products.

Shan Juan contribute­d to this story.

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