China Daily

Penalties for work safety breaches to be increased

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China plans to step up punishment for unlawful acts that pose safety hazards in workplaces and resort to greater use of informatio­n technologi­es to enhance safety management, according to draft amendments to the Law on Workplace Safety.

As well as facing tougher penalties, companies will be fined on a daily basis if they refuse to rectify violations, according to the draft amendments, which were submitted to the 25th session of the Standing Committee of the 13th National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, for deliberati­on on Wednesday.

Companies with severe breaches may be shut down and have their business licenses revoked. Those responsibl­e for the breaches can be banned from working in related industries, the draft amendments said.

Work safety supervisio­n will also be more intelligen­t and based on informatio­n technology, with the draft amendments saying government bodies should enhance the sharing of informatio­n about major safety hazards and emergency countermea­sures.

The Ministry of Emergency Management will lead the work to establish a national rescue informatio­n system for workplace accidents, and government bodies and government­s above the county level will set up similar systems for different industries, sectors and regions.

The draft amendments also call for the market to play a bigger role in work safety management. It will be mandatory for companies in industries with high risks to contribute to a work safety liability insurance.

Local government­s will have to improve the infrastruc­ture required for workplace safety management and enhance its capacity, with the cost included in their budgets.

New safety hazards have emerged since the law, which took effect in 2002, was amended in 2009 and 2014, Huang Ming, the ministry’s Party chief, told the NPC Standing Committee.

“Many safety hazards that stayed hidden for an extended period of time have been exposed in a concentrat­ed manner,” he said.

In China’s most recent reform of national institutio­ns in March 2018, 13 disaster relief-related responsibi­lities from 11 government bodies, including the defunct state administra­tion of work safety, were shifted to the newly establishe­d ministry.

The duties of various government bodies also need to be amended because of the reshuffle, Huang said.

 ?? TAN YUNFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Law enforcemen­t personnel from the local emergency management authority conduct a safety check 93 meters undergroun­d in a mine in Changxing county, Huzhou, Zhejiang province, on Friday.
TAN YUNFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY Law enforcemen­t personnel from the local emergency management authority conduct a safety check 93 meters undergroun­d in a mine in Changxing county, Huzhou, Zhejiang province, on Friday.

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