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Administrative Measures For The Weather In Jilin Province

Original Language Title: 吉林省人工影响天气管理办法

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Mandatory weather management approach in Glin Province

(The 13th ordinary meeting of the People's Government of Glin, 16 November 2010, considered the publication, effective 1 March 2011, of the People's Government Order No. 216 of 17 December 2010, of the People's Government Order No.

In order to enhance the management of man-made weather-affected weather efforts, the full development of the use of air water resources, the defence and mitigation of meteorious disasters, the development of this approach, in line with the People's Republic of China's Meteorological Act and the manually Impact weather management regulations, is based on the practice of the province.

Article 2 engages in man-made weather activities within the territorial administration and is subject to this approach.

Article 3 of this approach refers to activities for the purpose of increasing rains, habeas, rains, fuslides and furthering, by rationalizing the use of climate resources for avoiding or mitigating meteoral disasters, and by using scientific and technological means for the physical, chemical processes of the atmosphere of the Department.

Article IV. Governments of more people at the district level should strengthen leadership and organizational coordination for man-made weather-affected weather efforts to integrate man-made weather work into the planning of economic and social development for the same-level nationals.

Article 5 The work plan on man-made weather impacts was prepared by the multi-level meteorological authorities, with the approval of the HPR.

In the absence of meteorological authorities, the manually impacted weather work plan is prepared by the top-level meteorological authorities.

Article 6 is a public good cause in accordance with the manual impact of weather work carried out in accordance with the work plan approved by the Government. Requirements are included in the same-level financial budget and are gradually increased in accordance with needs.

Funding for man-made weather work should be dedicated to infrastructure-building, technology development, personnel funding, acquisition of supplies, operational command and operational security for manually affecting weather work.

Article 7. Meteorological authorities at all levels, under the leadership of the local people's Government, are responsible for the implementation and guidance of organizations responsible for artificially affecting weather work in the current administration.

Sectors such as public security, finance, housing and urban and rural construction, transport, water, civil aviation, communications and flight control should be matched by the responsibilities of meteorological authorities to work on artificially affected weather.

Article 8.

Article 9 organizations that carry out man-affected weather operations must have the following conditions:

(i) A legal personality;

(ii) The number of personnel trained in the conduct of the vetting and qualified operations and the number of meteorological authorities in the Department of State;

(iii) Command centres, operational technical systems and regulations that guarantee the safe and effective implementation of artificially affected weather operations;

(iv) Operational equipment, operational platforms, operating corridors, operating equipment pools, ammunition swing pools, duty stations, security guard facilities, electricity communications facilities, mine facilities.

Article 10 implements manually affecting weather operations and shall apply to the flight control sector for operating airfields and operating time limits, in accordance with the provisions of the approved air area and time-bound organizations:

(i) The use of high-radio, rocket-launching devices, the use of ballistic launch devices to carry out man-affected weather operations, and the application of an application by the operational meteorological authorities;

(ii) There is a need to implement artificially impact weather operations across the administrative regions of the district level, which are submitted by the top-level meteorological authorities;

(iii) The use of aircraft to carry out man-made weather activities, which are submitted by provincial meteorological authorities.

Article 11 implements man-made weather operations, and meteorological stations in the field should provide information on meteorological monitoring, analysis, information, forecasting, in a timely manner; relevant sectors such as civil affairs, agriculture, water, forestry, etc. should provide information on disaster situations, hydrology, fire and so forth.

Article 12 implements manually affecting weather operations and must strictly implement the security regime, operational norms and operational protocols established by States and provinces to ensure operational safety.

More than communicators at the district level should, with the organization of the people's government, develop artificial pre-emptions to influence weather emergencies with the relevant sectors and units.

When artificially affected weather operations have a security accident, the local people's Government should organize relief and disposal in a timely manner and report to the people and meteorological authorities at the highest level.

Article 14. The acquisition of equipment belonging to weapons equipment and explosive items, such as heavy artillery, artillery, artillery, rocket launch devices, rockets, fire launch devices, fire bombers, and fires, by operating meteorological authorities, with the consent of the current people's Government, of the uniform organization of procurement by the provincial meteorological authorities in accordance with the relevant national provisions.

The equipment provided prior to this article prohibits unauthorized acquisition and transfer to non- manually affected weather operations and shall not be used for activities that are not related to artificially affected weather events, and the transport and storage of equipment shall be subject to the State's regulations governing the management of arms equipment, explosive items.

Article 15. The annual inspection of equipment, such as high-launching, rocket-launching devices used by weather operations, is carried out by provincial meteorological authorities.

In the absence of annual inspections, unqualified annual inspections, high-radio, rocket-launching devices and more effective-time shells, rockets, fires cannot be used for artificially affecting weather activities.

Article 16 organizations that implement artificially affect weather operations should document operational information and establish operational archives.

Article 17 Operational personnel engaged in the manual impact of the weather work of the aircraft enjoy the state-mandated aircrew treatment; wild operational personnel enjoy the country-mandated work.

The organization engaged in manually affecting weather operations should conduct personal accidental injury insurance for persons who are carrying out their work.

No organization or individual shall intrus the equipment and facilities that undermine the operation of man-made weather operations and shall interfere with the channels of communication that affect the operation.

The Government of the people at all levels and its relevant administrative authorities are responsible for the management of command vehicles and operating vehicles carrying out man-affected weather operations, in accordance with the provincial disaster risk reduction vehicle management provisions.

Article 20

Article 21, in violation of this approach, provides that one of the following acts is rectified by the responsibility of more than one of the meteorological authorities at the district level; a fine of up to $50 million; and liability is paid by law:

(i) The use of unqualified, more effective or disable artificially affecting weather operations equipment;

(ii) Expropriation, destruction of artificially affecting weather operations equipment, facilities, and interference with artificially affecting weather operating communications channels.

Article 2