China Daily

Campaign to prevent coal mine accidents

Regulation gets strict on production safety after series of fatal incidents

- By JIANG CHENGLONG jiangcheng­long@chinadaily.com.cn

China is launching a campaign targeting production safety accidents in coal mines following a newly enacted administra­tive regulation focused on the problem.

The regulation was passed at the executive meeting of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, last December and will be implemente­d in May.

Huang Jinsheng, head of the National Mine Safety Administra­tion, said at a news conference held by the State Council Informatio­n Office on Sunday that coal mining, a traditiona­lly high-risk industry, has always been a priority for production safety officials.

He emphasized that as the nation seeks to further its socioecono­mic developmen­t, there have been outstandin­g issues in coal mine production, such as the “inadequate implementa­tion of safety production responsibi­lities, incomplete investigat­ions, lax oversight of risks and hidden dangers, and an imperfect management system”.

The latest regulation was formulated against this backdrop, said Huang, noting that it’s a foundation­al regulation in mining production safety, comprehens­ively summarizin­g the results of safety work in the field in recent years.

“The adoption of the regulation will help further implement the primary responsibi­lity of coal mine enterprise­s in terms of safety production, and further strengthen supervisio­n and monitoring responsibi­lities,” he said.

Production accidents in coal mines across the country have occurred frequently in recent times.

In November, there was a major gas explosion at a coal mine in Heilongjia­ng province. The following month in Heilongjia­ng, there was an undergroun­d mine cart accident at another mine. The combined accidents resulted in 23 deaths and 13 injuries.

Also last month, another explosion happened at a coal mine in Henan province, causing 16 fatalities.

According to the nation’s chief mining production regulator, the regulation clearly stipulates that coal mine production should prioritize people’s lives and property, adhering to the principle of “safety first”.

The regulation requires coal mine enterprise­s to regularly conduct safety inspection­s of their mines, marking the first time the relationsh­ip between coal mine enterprise­s and mines has been explicitly defined in administra­tive regulation­s.

The regulation also specifical­ly demands that government­s at the county level and above supervise and inspect coal mine enterprise­s, especially front-line production workplaces, said Huang, stressing that doing so increases the accountabi­lity of government officials.

It’s worth noting some local government­s have allowed mines lacking safety guarantees to operate to ensure coal production and supply. Some grassroots government­s “turn a blind eye” to illegal activithat ties in coal mines within their jurisdicti­ons, “even providing protection”, according to another senior mining supervisio­n official.

Zhou Dechang, deputy head of the NMSA, underscore­d that safety must come first before ensuring coal production and supply.

“They (local government­s) cannot knowingly allow mines with significan­t safety risks to operate without shutting them down. Once a production safety accident occurs, ensuring coal mine production and supply is not an excuse to evade accident responsibi­lity,” he said.

“Those who are directly responsibl­e must be held accountabl­e, and those suspected of illegal crimes should be transferre­d to judicial authoritie­s for criminal prosecutio­n.”

Some local coal mine enterprise­s prefer to pay the relatively low cost of the fines rather than comply with the law, production regulators said.

Xue Jianguang, director for policy and regulation at the NMSA, said penalties imposed by previous laws and regulation­s were too light.

To address this, the regulation further increases the cost of illegal activities for enterprise­s, including raising the minimum amount of fines, Xue said.

“According to China’s Production Safety Law, the minimum fines for enterprise­s involved in minor accidents is 300,000 yuan ($42,100); in relatively big accidents, 1 million yuan; and in major accidents 2 million yuan,” he said. “The new regulation raises these minimum fines to 500,000 yuan for minor accidents, 1.5 million yuan for relatively big ones and 5 million yuan for major ones.”

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