China Daily

Regulation to boost emergency response

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

China will begin to enforce a new regulation on production safety and emergency response on April 1, under a decree signed by Premier Li Keqiang.

The regulation was approved in a State Council executive meeting on Dec 5 and is the first such document to be adopted after the Ministry of Emergency Management was establishe­d in March last year to oversee emergency responses nationwide.

The 35-clause regulation, written in compliance with China’s laws on safe production and emergency responses, clarifies the responsibi­lities of government­s at all levels, said Sun Huashan, vice-minister of emergency management, at a policy briefing hosted by the State Council Informatio­n Office on Friday. The regulation also lists requiremen­ts for emergency response plans, exercises, teambuildi­ng, equipment and on-duty arrangemen­ts, he said.

China has establishe­d a complete emergency management system for production safety, with 85 national teams covering mining, hazardous chemicals, oil and gas extraction and tunnel constructi­on, Sun said.

Last year had 51,000 fatal accidents, killing more than 34,000 people, the ministry said. China has more than 72,000 emergency management profession­als spread across about 1,000 rescue teams who have played a backbone role in responding to major accidents or natural disasters, Sun said.

However, emergency response operations continue to face some challenges, such as an inadequate number of profession­al teams. Also, on-site rescue mechanisms have yet to be perfected, Sun said. The new regulation was adopted to improve emergency responses and reduce casualties and economic losses, he said.

For on-site rescues, the regulation requires that business units must take immediate action to rescue people in peril and to evacuate others from the danger zone, said Zhang Xun, deputy director of the legislatio­n department of the Ministry of Justice.

The regulation also requires government at all levels to set up emergency rescue headquarte­rs to direct diverse operations and to coordinate efforts by different government­al bodies, Zhang said.

Guo Zhiwu, director of the emergency management ministry’s rescue coordinati­on and planning department, said 27 profession­al rescue teams and seven internatio­nal ones have been establishe­d since April, and that nongovernm­ental teams are encouraged to participat­e in rescue operations in an orderly way.

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