China releases new guidelines to strictly regulate coal mines at risk of severe disasters
20 Sep 2023
A guideline to improve workplace safety in mines aims to
eradicate hidden loopholes that lead to accidents by shifting the focus of the
country's mine safety management to prevention, Chinese authorities said on
Monday at a press conference elaborating on the newly released guidelines.
The guideline is the first framework document for mine safety with the approval
of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council
since the founding of the People's Republic of China, which means they have
great practical significance and far-reaching historical significance, Zhang
Xin, deputy director of the National Mine Safety Administration, told the press
conference.
The guideline comes at the right time as the national mine safety situation is
grim and complex, coal mine accidents have rebounded sharply, open-pit coal
mine accidents, and illegal activities such as concealing accidents have
occurred frequently since the beginning of 2023, according to a discipline
inspection official dispatched to the Ministry of Emergency Management.
One of the highlights of the guideline is that the country will stop building
new coal mines with an annual production capacity below 900,000 tons that are
also at risk of coal and gas outbursts, or involve complicated hydrogeological
conditions. The small scale of these coal mines' production capacity will
inevitably have a significant impact on safety investment and safety management
of the enterprises, making it highly prone to major accidents resulting in
casualties.
The guideline stipulates that the safety facility design review and safety
production license approval for coal mines, metal and non-metal underground
mines, tailings ponds and other construction projects shall be the
responsibility of mine safety supervision departments at or above the
provincial level, and shall not be delegated or entrusted to other
institutions.
Among the seven provisions of the guideline, six focus on targeted arrangements
in improving mining safety - strict mine safety access, the transformation and
upgrading of mines, preventing and resolving major safety risks, strengthening
the main responsibility of enterprises, implementing the responsibility of
local party and government leadership and department supervision, and promoting
the legal management of mine safety. The seventh provision stipulates how to
strengthen organization and accountability and establish a coordination
mechanism.
At a press conference, Xue Jianguang, an official from the National Mine Safety
Administration, revealed that following the introduction of the guideline, the
country will focus on improving laws and regulations on mine safety production
standards and comprehensively revising the Mine Safety Law.
He revealed that the current revision has been officially launched, and it is
in the process of research, demonstration and drafting.
Since the beginning of this year, overall mine safety in the country has been
stable, with the number of mining accidents in the country dropping by 13
percent. The total number of non-coal mine accidents continues to decline, but
coal mine accidents have rebounded, data provided by the National Mine Safety
Administration in July shows. For instance, the country's largest open-pit coal
mine accident since the establishment of the People's Republic of China
occurred in North China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in February.
The coal mine collapse in Inner Mongolia that
killed 53, injured six and caused direct economic losses of over 204 million
yuan ($27.99 million) was a production safety accident resulting from major
long-term hidden risks.