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Lightning Disaster Prevention And Emergency Response, Zhejiang Province (Revised 2008)

Original Language Title: 浙江省雷电灾害防御和应急办法(2008年修正本)

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(Act No. 190 of 15 March 2005 of the People's Government Order No. 190 of the Zangangi People's Government of 8 July 2008, in accordance with the Decision No. 246 of the People's Government Order No. 246 of 8 July 2008, the Government of the Republic of the Great Socialist Republics amended to amend the three regulations, such as the Rehydro Disaster Defence and Emergency Responses in the Province of Jang Province)

Chapter I General
Article 1, in order to avoid and reduce mine-electric disasters, preserve the lives and property security of the people, promote economic and social sustainable development, and develop this approach in line with the laws and regulations of the People's Republic of China, the People's Republic of China Security Production Act.
Article 2 applies to the use of this approach in the administration of the province for the defence of mines and disaster response. The law, legislation and regulations provide otherwise, from their provisions.
Article III. Re-electable disaster defence and emergency response, upholding the principle of integrated planning, management, division of labour and collaboration, in conjunction with prevention, defence and assistance.
Article IV. Governments of more people at the district level should strengthen their leadership in mine-conferenhanced defence efforts by integrating mine-conferencing financing into the same-tier financial budget, gradually scaling up inputs to mine-elect disaster defence efforts and enhancing early warning and emergency response capacities for mine-electronic disasters.
Article 5
Relevant sectors such as public security, construction, planning, security regulation, quality technicians, information industry, electricity, etc. should be co-ordinated in the defence and emergency response of mine-electric disasters, in accordance with their respective responsibilities.
More than 6 meteorological authorities and relevant departments should encourage and support the research on mine-farm defence science and technology, promote and apply advanced mine-electronic defence techniques, promote scientific knowledge for the promotion of mine-electronic disaster defence, and increase social awareness of disaster risk reduction.
Chapter II
Article 7. Provincial Meteorological Authorities, in conjunction with relevant sectors such as public security, construction, planning, security regulation, are preparing a state-wide disaster defence plan, which is published by the Government of the People of the province on an expert basis.
In the municipalities, districts (at the city, under the same area), meteorological authorities will prepare a mine-conferenhance disaster defence programme in the current administrative area, with the approval of the Government of the people of the post-election post, and report to the top-level meteorological authorities.
Article 8
(i) Analysis of the state of mine-electric disaster;
(ii) The defence principles and basic requirements of the mine-electric disaster;
(iii) Mine-focused defence zones;
(iv) Monitoring, early warning and construction of mine-elected disasters;
(v) Mine-elected disaster defence measures.
Article 9. More than the meteorological authorities in the counties should establish and improve the mine-electronic disaster monitoring network and early warning information systems to ensure the proper functioning of monitoring and early warning systems.
The meteorological stations affiliated with the meteorological authorities should strengthen monitoring of mine-hydro-disaster weather and the timely publication of disaster forecasts to society.
Article 10: The following construction (constitution), facilities or places must be installed in mine-electric defence devices and be designed in parallel with the work of the main subjects, while at the same time construction and use:
(i) One, second and third types of defence (construction) established by the national mine-designed norm;
(ii) Production and storage of flammable materials such as oil, chemical and biological industries;
(iii) Facilities and facilities in public service industries such as electricity, communications, transport, radio television, financial securities, health and computer networks;
(iv) Other construction (construction), facilities or places under legal, regulatory, regulatory and related technical norms.
As described in the previous paragraph, the defence device refers to a total of mine-faring products and facilities, such as defence-positive, mine-conferencing and mine-washing intrusive intrusive power, absorption mechanism, a resistance, a gesture protectr and other connectors.
Article 11. The mined products must be in compliance with national standards and are tested in accordance with the law and are eligible for a product certificate. The sale and use of mined products without qualified certificates is prohibited.
The production, operation of mine-recovery products within the province's administration should be made available to the approval of mined products and to the locational meteorological authorities for the product licence.
Article 12 units engaged in the testing, engineering professional design and construction of a mine-electronic defence facility shall be subject to a corresponding certificate of qualifications under the law and shall engage in the testing, engineering professional design and construction activities in the context of a licence.
Professional technicians engaged in the detection, engineering professional design and construction of a mine-conferencing device shall be eligible under the law.
The quality, qualifications and qualifications of the testing, engineering professional design and construction of a mine-elected defence facility are determined to be carried out by the State or by the provincial meteorological authorities.
Article 13 units engaged in the testing, engineering professional design and construction of a mine-electronic defence facility should be implemented in accordance with national standards, industry standards or local standards.
The provincial executive authorities should work with provincial meteorological authorities and relevant departments to improve local standards for mine-electronic defence techniques and to organize implementation in accordance with the requirements for safe production.
Article 14. The design programme for the mine-electric defence mechanism shall be subject to review by meteorological authorities; without the consent of the clearance, the construction shall not be delivered.
The construction, planning, public security sector, etc., shall require the construction units to provide clearances for the design of the mine-electric defence devices by meteorological authorities when they are subject to administrative authorizations for the construction of a mine-electric device that must be installed.
The designers and design units of the mine-electronic defence mechanism should be responsible for the design of the electrical defence devices.
Article 15. The construction units of the mine power defence facility must be constructed in accordance with the approved design programme and be responsible for the quality of the construction of the mine-electric defence devices.
The construction units should be entrusted with the implementation of the monitoring of the construction of the mine-conferenhance defence devices by the appropriate supervisory body. The testing body should record the data, register the file, produce the test report and be responsible for the authenticity of the data.
After completion of the work of the mine-electronic defence mechanism, it should be completed by the meteorological authorities; without experience or access, and no use should be delivered.
Article 16 units that have installed a mine power defence facility should maintain, maintain and entrust the mine-electronic defence test body with regular safety tests.
The mine-conferencing devices in flammable sites should be tested every biannual period, and other mine power defence devices are tested every year.
Article 17 implements administrative licence matters under this approach, which should be guided by the principles of efficiency, the principle of the public and the promotion of centralized or joint processing.
More than zone meteorological authorities should monitor the inspection system and strictly perform oversight responsibilities. The inspection and treatment of the licensee's activities in administrative licence matters should be recorded and the public has the right to access.
More than the meteorological authorities in the district carry out administrative licences and supervision inspections under the law, and no charges are charged and the relevant units and individuals are not required to purchase their designated products or equipment.
Any unit and person in article 18 have the right to sue and prosecute violations committed in the defence and emergency disposal of mine-electric disasters.
More than the meteorological authorities in the district should establish a reporting system that would openly report telephones or e-mail addresses, and if verified, written material should be generated and processed in a timely manner.
Chapter III
More than 19 districts of the Meteorological Authority will prepare, with the same level of security regulation, construction, public safety, electricity, communications, health, emergency relief advances in mine-electronic disasters in the current administrative area, to be published after the approval of the Government.
Article 20
(i) The division of responsibility between emergency agencies and relevant sectors;
(ii) Monitoring and early warning of mine-electronic disasters;
(iii) Level-level and impact analysis of mine power disasters;
(iv) Organization and emergency preparedness of relief personnel;
(v) Survey, reporting and processing procedures for mine-electronic disasters;
(vi) Emergency security in the event of a mine-electric disaster;
(vii) Emergency action programmes such as evacuation of property, transfer routes and medical treatment.
The mine-electronic disaster emergency response case should be revised in a timely manner based on implementation.
The establishment of (construction) or facilities listed in Article 10 of this approach shall establish a disaster emergency response recovery programme for mine-electronic disasters, establish emergency rescue organizations or designated and part-time emergency rescue personnel, and implement the responsibility to respond to emergencies.
The mine-electronic disaster response recovery programme should report on the safe regulatory and meteorological authorities.
In the aftermath of a mine-elect disaster, the relevant units should rapidly implement the emergency rescue programme and report immediately on the local people's Government and the security regulatory, meteorological authorities, without concealing reports, lies or delays and not disrupting the accident scene.
The Government of the local population or the security management sector, the meteorological authorities should immediately be sent to the site, organize risk relief, prevent the expansion of the disaster and, in accordance with the relevant provisions of the national and provincial authorities, report on the state-level administration of the mine-electronic disaster.
Article 23, the Government of the city, and the people of the district, after having received a report on the situation of mine-conferencing disaster risk, should initiate and organize the implementation of the corresponding mine-conferencing emergency relief scenarios.
The relevant sectors of the population at the district level should be matched by the division of labour for disaster preparedness.
The units and individuals concerned should work in conjunction with disaster relief and provide all facilities.
In the aftermath of a mine-electing disaster, the security management sector, the meteorological authorities should organize investigations with the relevant authorities in a timely manner, identify the nature and responsibilities, propose corrective measures and make comments on the responsible units and responsibilities.
No unit or individual shall interfere with and obstruct the treatment of mine-conferencing.
More than 25 per cent of the meteorological authorities in the district should provide timely statistical analysis of the incidence of mine-conferencing disasters in the current administration area and be made available to society.
Chapter IV Legal responsibility
Article 26 Governments, meteorological authorities and relevant departments have one of the following acts, and administratively disposed of directly responsible supervisors and other persons directly responsible, in accordance with the law; constituted criminal liability by law:
(i) No provision for the preparation of emergency relief advances for mine-electronic disasters or failure to perform their duties as required by the mine-electronic disaster response;
(ii) Provision of administrative licences for the design of a mine-conferencing device that does not meet technical standards;
(iii) Protestation, engineering professional design, wage quality certificates and eligibility certificates for non-conditional units and personnel;
(iv) Constraints, false reports or disguised others to conceal, falsely report the disaster;
(v) In the context of mine-elector disaster defence, emergency response, there is a violation of the provisions of the law, legislation and this approach, with other malfunctioning and negligence.
Article 27, in violation of this approach, provides that one of the following acts is converted by the time limit of responsibility of more meteorological authorities in the district, which is punishable by a fine of up to 5,000 dollars; in the case of a serious fine of up to €2 million; criminal liability for the offence; liability for damages to others by law:
(i) The installation of a mine-electric defence facility should not be installed;
(ii) The design of a mine-facilitative device without the approval of the construction;
(iii) The self-exploitation of the mine-clearing defence devices without the completion of the test or the lack of qualifications;
(iv) The mine-electric defence device has been detected and has refused to change.
Article 28, in violation of this approach, provides that one of the following acts is liable under the law:
(i) Resistance in the detection, engineering professional design, construction activities;
(ii) Non-exclusiveness, qualification certificates or extensions of their qualifications, qualification creativity, engineering professional design, construction operations;
(iii) Fering, selling and selling a mine-electric test, engineering professional design, wage quality, eligibility certificate.
Legislation, legislation and regulations have already been provided for administrative penalties for the former paragraph.
Chapter V
Article 29 engages in disaster defence and emergency relief activities in areas under the jurisdiction of this province, and should be respected.
Article 33 Disasters are classified as large, large, medium, small and medium-sized, depending on the level of casualties, economic losses and social impacts. Specific classification criteria were developed by the Provincial Security Regulatory Department with provincial meteorological authorities and confirmed by the Government.
Article 31 of this approach was implemented effective 1 May 2005.