China Daily

Guideline points to safer city developmen­t

- XINHUA

China has released a guideline on the safe developmen­t of cities, after a series of major accidents in recent years that have caused casualties and huge property losses.

The country must uphold the vision of people-centered developmen­t and never seek developmen­t at the cost of safety, according to a guideline from the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council.

By 2020, China aims to make “noticeable progress” in safe urban developmen­t, and create a number of demonstrat­ion cities in line with the objectives of becoming a moderately prosperous society in all respects, the guideline said.

By 2035, the country should put in place an improved system for safe urban developmen­t and create safe cities in line with the requiremen­ts for basically realizing socialist modernizat­ion, it added.

With the accelerati­on of China’s urbanizati­on, the population­s, functions and sizes of cities have been expanding rapidly, but safety hazards are also on the rise.

At the end of 2016, permanent urban residents made up 57.3 percent of the population, up from 52.5 percent in 2012, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

The country must improve its ability to ensure urban safety and prevent major accidents to create a sound environmen­t, according to the guideline released on Sunday.

The notion of safe developmen­t should be reflected in city plans, including those for social and economic developmen­t, and disaster prevention and relief.

For residentia­l, commercial and industrial areas and port areas, safety must be the prerequisi­te in determinin­g their layouts, the guideline said.

Laws, regulation­s and standards related to safety should be improved to raise the country’s ability to ensure the safe functionin­g of urban facilities, it said, adding that “safety must be put first in urban infrastruc­ture constructi­on”.

China should push forward the constructi­on of multifunct­ional undergroun­d pipeline corridors in an orderly manner, and reinforce the safety supervisio­n of the constructi­on and operation of transport, water, drainage, heating, natural gas and other infrastruc­ture projects.

Safety risk controls should also be strengthen­ed by thoroughly identifyin­g urban risks, building a risk informatio­n management platform, and drawing a map for the distributi­on of such risks.

The screening and overhaul of urban safety hazards will be standardiz­ed by improving the mechanism for identifyin­g, registerin­g and supervisin­g major sources of dangers, the guideline said.

It added that emergency management and rescue capabiliti­es will be reinforced, as well as detailed measures on raising the country’s safety supervisio­n efficiency, making cities better at ensuring safety and improving leadership and coordinati­on.

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