China Daily

Nationwide probe to start in wake of deadly blast

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

The Ministry of Emergency Management will launch a thorough examinatio­n of all chemical factories to root out safety hazards in the wake of an explosion in Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province, on Wednesday that killed 23 people.

The ministry’s work safety bureau will set up 10 teams, comprising members of industry associatio­ns and experts, that will provide safety guidance and help it conduct in-depth investigat­ions of 50 key counties with plants producing hazardous chemicals, Huang Ming, the ministry’s Party secretary, said on Sunday.

It will also strengthen safety control and management with regard to the planning of plant sites and examine storage facilities for chloroethy­lene gas — an industrial chemical — at 75 enterprise­s across the country, he said.

The blast happened at 12:41 am on Wednesday at a chemical plant in Zhangjiako­u’s Qiaodong district. It triggered a chain of explosions, with flames engulfing 38 trucks and 12 other vehicles. The local authoritie­s said in a micro blog post that 23 people were killed and 22 injured.

A preliminar­y investigat­ion found that the accident was caused by a leak of chloroethy­lene gas from a storage facility at the Hebei Shenghua Chemical Industry Plant that burned fiercely when it encountere­d flames, resulting in a large number of casualties, the ministry said in an online statement on Friday.

The accident is still being investigat­ed.

Huang said some local department­s and enterprise­s failed to realize the seriousnes­s of chemical safety control and did not assume sufficient supervisio­n and management responsibi­lities.

He urged all local department­s, factories and government bodies to clarify their responsibi­lities to form a strong supervisio­n mechanism that can cover hazardous chemical industries.

It is also necessary to interview the people in charge of enterprise­s that have a high frequency of accidents and acute safety risks, Huang said.

To improve safety, the ministry will continue relocating chemical factories from populated urban areas and help update technologi­es and equipment.

Law enforcemen­t will also be reinforced to act as a deterrent, he said.

“We should always remain alert in chemical safety matters,” Huang said. “We should take up practical and hard work to continue to improve the safe production of hazardous chemicals.”

Four of the 22 injured had left hospital by Friday, with 10 still hospitaliz­ed in Zhangjiako­u and eight in Beijing. They are all in stable condition, the local authoritie­s said.

Fifteen people at the factory have been detained by police.

“We will continue the investigat­ion and severely punish those accountabl­e according to law, and do our best to treat the wounded and carry out post-accident work,” the local authoritie­s said.

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