China Daily

Efforts pledged to prevent mining accidents

National administra­tion responds with firm actions following recent incidents

- By JIANG CHENGLONG jiangcheng­long@chinadaily.com.cn

China on Thursday pledged more stringent efforts to prevent major safety accidents in the mining sector, after a spate of serious mining production safety accidents across the nation since 2023, especially in the past two months.

Officials at the National Mine Safety Administra­tion made the remarks at a news conference held by the State Council Informatio­n

Office on Thursday, in response to the recent serious accidents.

In November, there was a major gas explosion at a coal mine in Heilongjia­ng province. In December in the same province, there was an undergroun­d mine cart accident. Together, they resulted in 23 deaths and 13 injuries.

Last month, a coal and gas outburst accident happened in a coal mine in Henan province, causing 16 fatalities.

In mid-January, the Work Safety Commission of the State Council announced a series of “firm measures” to prevent serious production safety accidents in the mining sector.

Zhang Ruiting, deputy head of the National Mine Safety Administra­tion, said these measures primarily target the main problems exposed in recent accidents, including the failure to implement safety responsibi­lities, inadequate investigat­ion and rectificat­ion of hidden dangers, and insufficie­nt safety awareness among workers.

He emphasized these measures require holding negligent individual­s accountabl­e and further clarifying the safety responsibi­lities of the actual controller­s of enterprise­s, regulatory personnel and local government­s.

Cracking down on illegal production and constructi­on is another key focus for the next stage, with officials believing this is behind many serious accidents.

Shi Baozhong, head of coal mine safety supervisio­n at the NMSA, said that last year safety supervisio­n and inspection department­s at various levels identified more than 14,000 major hidden dangers, including 2,269 related to coal mines.

He noted the recent major mining accidents have revealed that there is still a significan­t number of major hidden dangers, and illegal production activities are still frequent.

Over the next three years, government­s at all levels will continue to crack down on all types of unlawful production and constructi­on activities, especially those involving covert and secret mining, and dismantlin­g or destroying monitoring equipment, he said.

China has also declared a more vigorous campaign against concealing mine accidents.

Zhao Suqi, director for accident investigat­ion at the NMSA, said mining enterprise­s must install video surveillan­ce at wellheads and main work sites, and all personnel entering the mines must carry identifica­tion cards to track their movements undergroun­d.

Mining enterprise­s and relevant department­s must promptly report accident informatio­n.

“Those who fail to submit accident informatio­n in a timely manner and thus cause serious consequenc­es will be held accountabl­e, and suspects involved in criminal activities will be transferre­d to judicial authoritie­s for prosecutio­n,” he said.

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