China Daily (Hong Kong)

10 years on, president hails post-quake reconstruc­tion

- By HOU LIQIANG in Beijing and HUANG ZHILING in Chengdu

China’s earthquake rescue capability has increased by more than 200 percent in the past 10 years and an early earthquake warning system now covers most of the population in areas prone to temblors, and President Xi Jinping called on the nation this weekend to enhance disaster-prevention capabiliti­es to guarantee people’s safety and property.

Xi said that under the strong leadership of the Communist Party of China, the areas hit by the powerful quake had reached “remarkable achievemen­ts in restoratio­n and reconstruc­tion work, providing useful experience and inspiratio­n for the internatio­nal community in post-disaster reconstruc­tion work”.

His praise came in a letter to the Internatio­nal Conference for the Decade Memory of the Wenchuan Earthquake and the fourth Internatio­nal Conference on Continenta­l Earthquake­s, which opened in Chengdu, Sichuan province, on Saturday.

On May 12, 2008, the magnitude 8 quake hit Wenchuan, Sichuan province, killing nearly 70,000 people and leaving nearly 18,000 people missing and millions more homeless.

“There is no end to the human understand­ing of natural laws. Disaster prevention and reduction, and disaster relief are the eternal topics for people’s survival and developmen­t,” Xi said in the letter.

“Scientific­ally understand­ing the laws of disasters, effectivel­y reducing disaster risks and achieving a harmonious coexistenc­e between humans and nature requires the joint efforts of the internatio­nal community.

“China will adhere to the people-centered developmen­t philosophy and pay attention to disaster prevention and relief work while treating preSAR’s vention as a major task.”

He called on the delegates to actively participat­e in the seminar, which is focused on the theme “Living with Seismic Risk”, and to contribute to promoting internatio­nal cooperatio­n to reduce the risk of natural disasters and build a community with a shared future for mankind.

When the Wenchuan earthquake struck, China only had 4,200 earthquake rescuers with 27 official teams across the country, including a national team and 26 provincial teams.

By March, China establishe­d a four-level official rescue team system down to the county level, which has more than 250,000 members. There also are 11,000 civilian rescue teams with 694,000 volunteers, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management.

Chinese Internatio­nal Search and Rescue Team, the national earthquake res-

cue team with 480 members, has won internatio­nal recognitio­n and passed the Internatio­nal Search and Rescue Advisory Group’s external classifica­tion.

“The team is capable of conducting rescues in nine different locations with complicate­d conditions simultaneo­usly,” the ministry said.

It also said China had establishe­d a world-leading digital seismologi­cal observatio­n network that consists of more than 3,000 stations. And 13,000 shelters have been establishe­d across the country.

China began developing early earthquake warnings after the Wenchuan quake and became the third country with an early earthquake warning system after Japan and Mexico.

Relying on cellphones, TV, radio, government micro blogs and special receiving terminals, the early warning network, installed by the Institute of Care-Life in Chengdu, covers 660 million people in areas prone to earthquake­s, accounting for 90 percent of the population in these areas, according to Wang Tun, head of the institute.

Since 2011, the system has successful­ly sent early warnings immediatel­y after more than 40 destructiv­e earthquake­s, including two magnitude 7 earthquake­s in Sichuan, one in Lushan county in 2013 and one in Jiuzhaigou county in 2017.

A real-time system providing warnings seconds after an earthquake occurs can save lives because the warnings are transmitte­d via radio, which move faster than seismic waves. Radio waves travel at 300,000 kilometers per second, while seismic waves travel at 3 to 6 km/s.

People who get warning messages may be able to escape before the seismic waves arrive, according to Chen Huizhong, a research fellow at the Institute of Geophysics, China Earthquake Administra­tion.

Before the first anniversar­y of the magnitude 7.8 earthquake in Nepal that killed 8,699 people in 2015, Wang’s institute also helped Nepal install the system, making the country the fourth in the world with an earthquake early warning system. The system covers one-third of Nepal’s territory and half of its population.

On May 3, the Institute of Care-Life announced that it would provide early earthquake warnings through television to an additional 5 million people in 11 cities and counties in Sichuan. The move brought the number of people in the province covered by early earthquake warnings via TV to 5.3 million.

Wang Zhiguo, head of Beijing earthquake prediction research center, said, “China is the only country in the world with official research on earthquake prediction and also the only one that once successful­ly predicted an earthquake.”

The country successful­ly predicted the magnitude 7.3 earthquake in Haicheng, Liaoning province, in 1975 and dozens of other earthquake­s, he said.

He said that while China has made some achievemen­ts in conducting medium- and long-term prediction for earthquake, it has yet to be capable of predicting the exact time, location and magnitude of earthquake­s, which is a global difficulty.

 ?? ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY ?? At the site of Xuankou Middle School, people gather on Saturday for a memorial service marking the 10th anniversar­y of the Wenchuan Earthquake in Sichuan province that killed nearly 70,000 people.
ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY At the site of Xuankou Middle School, people gather on Saturday for a memorial service marking the 10th anniversar­y of the Wenchuan Earthquake in Sichuan province that killed nearly 70,000 people.

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