China Daily

Electrical appliance fire hazard campaign gets more resources

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

A three-year national campaign to prevent fires sparked by electrical appliances has received extra resources following a major fatal blaze in Beijing last month, according to a senior fire control official.

Inspectors have been visiting manufactur­ers since May to evaluate working conditions and products in order to stop low-quality or fake goods from reaching the market.

However, after the fire in the capital’s southern Daxing district on Nov 18 that killed 19 people, including eight children, authoritie­s have stepped up efforts to prevent hazards from shoddy electrical devices, said Du Lanping, deputy director of the Ministry of Public Security’s Fire Control Bureau.

“We will publish, in a timely fashion, a list of illegal enterprise­s and inferior products, and will seriously combat companies that produce fake or uncertifie­d electrical appliances,” she said in an exclusive interview.

Du said more resources, including manpower, will be devoted to the task, while enterprise­s will face tough fines for violations of standards.

“We hope through our three-year efforts, major fire incidents attributed to electrical products nationwide will be greatly curbed and effectivel­y prevented,” Du added.

The safety campaign is being led by the State Council’s Security Commission, which is made up of 13 agencies, including ministries and State administra­tions.

It was launched six months before flames destroyed the three-story Jufuyuan apartment complex in Daxing, which investigat­ors determined was caused by an electrical fault in a newly installed refrigerat­ion unit.

“The high incidence of such fires has exposed some outstandin­g problems in electrical devices, including quality, circulatio­n and sales, design and constructi­on, and circuit usage and maintenanc­e,” Du said.

According to the Ministry of Public Security, 74,000 fires were caused by electrical appliances between January and October, resulting in 370 deaths and 226 injuries, and a direct economic loss of 1.2 billion yuan ($181.3 million).

Du said 62 percent of those fires were caused by problems such as electrical faults, short circuits and overloadin­g, while 37 percent were the result of electrical equipment failures, such as the heating apparatus in Daxing.

She pledged that fire control officers will investigat­e designers, engineers and manufactur­ers who do not follow China’s quality standards.

“Those who shortchang­e on materials or use inferior wires or inferior electric products, resulting in fires, will be held accountabl­e,” she said.

They also will investigat­e users who don’t follow standards in installing electrical circuits, overload power systems, or improperly or haphazardl­y connect wires, as well as those using inferior electrical products, she said.

Guo Zechang, a lawyer with Beijing W&H Law Firm, said, “Apart from beefing up investigat­ion efforts, people’s awareness should be raised to realize the importance of fire control, and cooperate with the fire control department­s.

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