China has promulgated new industrial safety regulations, with all
mines, construction firms and producers of hazardous chemicals,
fireworks and civilian explosives across the country required to
first obtain a "safe production license".
The Regulations on Licenses for Safe Production, adopted by the
State Council at its 34th executive meeting on Jan. 7, took effect
from Jan. 13.
The new regulations aim at promoting industrial safety in mines and
enterprises related to construction, hazardous chemicals, fireworks
and civilian explosives. "Those enterprises which fail to meet the
requirements for safe production that can not get a license are not
allowed to continue with their production activities," the
regulations stipulate.
A
"safe production license" has a three-year period of validity and
must be renewed three months before it expires.
To
obtain licenses, enterprises must standardize their operational
procedures to ensure safe production, establish administrative
bodies to supervise production, provide necessary education and
training on safe production for their employees, furnish workplace,
infrastructures and equipment to meet safety demands, and prepare
emergency plans and rescue equipment.
According to the regulations, any enterprise that produces without
a license or in violation of the regulations will be ordered to
halt operation immediately, fined for 50,000 yuan (6,045.9 US
dollars) to 100,000 yuan (12,091.9 US dollars), and even subject to
criminal penalties if major accidents have occurred.
The Chinese government is making a industrial safety a top
priority, which has turned out to be a major challenge for the
country in recent years.
Each year thousands of lives are claimed by mine accidents across
China, while two fireworks plant blasts sounded alarms for the
industry once again as the Chinese lunar new year is drawing
near.
Nine were killed and five others injured in an explosion on Jan.1,
at a village factory in Liling City, one of the major fireworks
production bases in central China's Hunan Province. Another
fireworks factory explosion in northeast China's Liaoning Province
on Dec. 30, 2003 killed 38 people and injured 33 others.
(Xinhua News Agency January 20, 2004)
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