China Daily

Industrial accidents decline in first quarter

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

The overall number of accidents nationwide in the first quarter of this year decreased, and the safety situation in most regions and industries was stable, the Ministry of Emergency Management reported on Friday.

From January to March, a total of 3,570 accidents occurred nationwide, resulting in 3,359 deaths, representi­ng respective year-on-year decreases of 36.9 percent and 27.9 percent, it said.

Accidents and fatalities in key sectors including coal mining, the chemical industry, manufactur­ing and trade, fireworks and firecracke­rs, constructi­on, road and railway transporta­tion, and aviation all experience­d year-on-year decreases in the number of accidents and deaths.

Li Haowen, head of the ministry’s investigat­ion and statistics department, said that the overall situation of safety production in the first quarter was stable, yet in some regions and industry sectors, there have been typical accidents, indicating that safety risks still cannot be ignored.

In terms of mine safety, the risks mainly center around gas-related incidents. The chemical safety risks focus primarily on special operations and illegal production activities.

Regarding risks in manufactur­ing and trade, the current focus appears to be on aluminum processing, dust explosion risks and confined space operations.

Li highlighte­d the passenger transporta­tion risks and urged passengers to wear seat belts when taking a bus or driving. In one case in Linfen, Shanxi province, in March, a bus crashed into a tunnel, resulting in 14 deaths and 37 injuries. It was found that the driver’s improper operation of the vehicle, and the fact that most passengers were not wearing seat belts, were the cause of most fatalities.

The number of accidents in the constructi­on sector ranked second only to road transporta­tion, he said.

Last year, the Work Safety Committee of the State Council deployed a special action for the investigat­ion and rectificat­ion of significan­t hazards. During the period, 51 criteria or key inspection items for determinin­g significan­t accident hazards in various industry sectors were formulated or revised.

Wang Chongxian, head of the ministry’s safety coordinati­on department, said that during the special action, various regions conducted inspection­s based on these criteria, resulting in the identifica­tion of 395,000 significan­t hazards, a significan­t increase compared to the previous period, and a notable improvemen­t in inspection quality.

“However, during the nationwide safety production inspection­s and visits in the first quarter, we found that there are still prominent issues in timely and accurately identifyin­g and rectifying significan­t accident hazards,” he said.

Some company leaders, safety production managers and employees lack sufficient understand­ing and mastery of the criteria, and some regulatory enforcemen­t department­s and personnel did not prioritize the criteria as an important basis for law enforcemen­t inspection­s, resulting in a failure to identify significan­t hazards during on-site inspection­s, he said.

At the beginning this year, the Work Safety Committee of the State Council launched a three-year action plan for fundamenta­l improvemen­ts in production safety. So far, 81,000 significan­t hazards have been identified, and about 554,000 administra­tive penalties imposed on companies.

In addition, 5,353 regulatory talks and criticism notices — two sorts of administra­tive law enforcemen­t — were held and issued to the involved government­s and department­s that failed to perform their duties properly, and 1,239 individual­s were held accountabl­e after investigat­ion.

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