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Administrative Measures For The Prevention Of Meteorological Disasters In Nanjing

Original Language Title: 南京市气象灾害防御管理办法

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Meteorological disaster defence management approach in South Kyoto

(Summit meeting of the Government of the South Kyoto City on 10 October 2009 to consider the adoption of Decree No. 274 of 20 October 2009 by the People's Government of the South Kyoto Republic, as of 1 December 2009)

Chapter I General

Article 1, in order to defend weather disasters, guarantee the lives and property security of the people and promote economic and social development, in line with the relevant laws and regulations, such as the People's Republic of China's Meteorological Act, the Southern Susang Province Meteorological Disaster Defence Regulations.

Article 2

Article 3 of this approach refers to disasters caused by tropical cyclones (intrusive), storms (cush), fire, typhoons, droughts, cholera, temperatures, ventilation, ices, ices, fuelling disasters, such as chillers, storms.

Article IV. Meteorological disaster defence should be guided by the principle of people-centred, integrated planning, prevention and integration.

Article 5

Article 6

(i) Monitoring and forecasting of disaster weather climate detection;

(ii) A manual impact on weather operations;

(iii) Re-electable disaster defence;

(iv) Emergency meteorological services, meteorological disaster assessments and climate feasibility arguments;

(v) Other meteorological disaster defence efforts under laws, regulations and regulations.

Article 7. Relevant sectors such as agroforestry, water, transport, construction, civil affairs, land resources, and municipal public use should be shared with meteorological disaster defence in accordance with the division of duties.

Chapter II Planning

Article 8. Meteorological authorities should conduct regular meteorological disaster surveys with national land resources, agroforestry, water, municipal use, civil affairs, the establishment of a meteorological disaster defence base database, the organization of disaster risk assessment and the delineation of meteorological disaster risk areas.

Article 9. Governments of municipalities, districts (zones) should organize meteorological authorities and other relevant sectors to develop meteorological disaster defence planning based on the assessment of weather hazards and the disaster risk area.

Article 10. Meteorological authorities should develop integrated meteorological detection, forecasting and early warning systems, based on meteorological disaster defence planning, and establish specialized communications facilities for emergency mobile meteorological disaster monitoring facilities, urban atmospheric border detection facilities and meteorological disaster early warning information.

In regions such as weather-prone regions and priority defence zones, as well as wind-potential areas, ecological good forest areas, militarized industrial zones, there should be an emphasis on the creation of automated meteorological sites and mine-elect monitoring stations to enhance meteorological disaster detection, monitoring capacity.

Article 11 Buildings of meteorological disaster detection, early warning information-specific communications facilities should be integrated into the use of public and rural facilities.

The meteorological authorities should support and facilitate the conditions in building a dedicated communications facility for meteorological disaster detection, early warning information.

Article 12

Project construction units, such as airfields, railways, highway roads, large-scale hydro-energy works, large bridges and ports, large-scale municipal infrastructure works, should include specialized meteorological disaster detection, early warning information dissemination facilities in project planning designs and organize construction.

No unit or individual may endanger or affect meteorological disaster detection facilities and their surrounding environment, nor shall it intrus, destroy or unauthorized mobile meteorological disaster detection, early warning facilities.

Chapter III Monitoring early warning

Article 15. Meteorological authorities are responsible for the management of the meteorological disaster monitoring information-sharing database.

Sectors and units such as meteorology, public safety, land resources, environmental protection, agroforestry, water, public transport, transport, maritime and civil aviation should be used to share resources, inter alia, information related to meteorological disaster defence, hydrology, landscape control.

Article 16 meteorological authorities should organize cross-regional, cross-sectoral federations for early warning of major meteorological disasters, provide information on critical disaster early warning and report to the current people's Government, while informing the relevant sectors.

The meteorological stations affiliated with meteorological authorities should produce and disseminate information on disaster weather forecasts, warnings and meteorological disaster early warning, and forest fire risk forecasts, in accordance with their responsibilities. Other organizations and individuals may not publish disaster weather forecasts, warnings and meteorological disaster warning information to society.

Article 18 Governments and all relevant departments should organize, in a timely manner, extensive dissemination in accordance with their respective responsibilities, after receiving information on meteorological disasters provided by local meteorological stations.

Article 19 Media and information services, such as radio, television, the Internet, newspapers, telecommunications, should be disseminated in a timely manner to the local meteorological stations directly providing timely information on meteoral early warning, indicating that the issuance of time is not allowed to change.

The management units, such as airport, ports, vehicle stations, highway, tourist landscape sites, should take measures to disseminate disaster weather forecasts, warnings and meteorological disaster early warning information in a timely manner.

Chapter IV Defence measures

Article 21, the Government of the city, the district (zone) should establish a coordination mechanism for meteorological disaster defence, strengthen the building of the Meteorological Disaster Emergency Response Team, and establish a dedicated or part-time meteorological disaster information writer and organize its activities for the dissemination of early warning information and defence knowledge, reporting on disaster situations.

Meteorological authorities should conduct regular training with relevant organizations and units on meteorological disaster relief and meteorological disaster information providers to enhance their capacity to respond to emergencies.

Article 22, entrepreneurship units and other organizations should carry out meteorological disaster defence knowledge advocacy and equip the necessary equipment to organize disaster relief and mitigation in a timely manner after meteorological disasters occur.

The Town People's Government (Roman Street Office) should implement meteorological disaster defence measures that promote the self-government of the population within the Territory and the work of the business unit for meteorological disaster defence.

The education sector should incorporate meteorological disaster defence knowledge into the medium-sized school education plan and enhance adolescent resilience awareness and capacity.

In accordance with article 23, construction (construction), premises and facilities should be designed for the installation of mine-protected devices, construction units should report on the clearance of the mine-facilitator, without clearance or inadvisibility, and construction units should not be delivered.

In the event of a nuclear construction licence, the construction of a mine-protected device has been reviewed by the meteorological authorities.

The following new construction, alteration and expansion projects should conduct risk assessment prior to the design of a mine-recovery mechanism:

(i) Storage of flammable items such as hydrocarbons;

(ii) Intensive places such as sports houses, hospitals, schools, large commercial sites and residential small areas;

(iii) Municipal utilities, such as water supply, heating, electricity, and communications hubs;

(iv) Other high-level construction (construction) construction.

The construction units should submit a mine risk assessment report in the course of the clearance of the project's defence devices. The construction units should be constructed in accordance with the requirements of the mine risk assessment report, the precautionary technical norms and standards.

Meteorological authorities should strengthen monitoring and management of mine risk assessment activities and organize expert evaluations of the assessment reports.

Article 25 Upon completion of the work of the mine-clearing mechanism, the construction sector shall not be used in accordance with the relevant provisions of the State, with the acceptance of the Meteorological Authority; the inadmissibility of the testing; and the responsibility of the meteorological authorities should be responsible for the construction of the unit's duration, the delay in renovating or reconfiguring it.

Article 26 facilities such as large bridges, large cross-cutting and high-level buildings, outdoor advertisements should be evaluated before construction.

Article 27, Meteorological authorities should be guided by mine-hydro disaster defence in rural areas. Removal units in small-scale urban areas should be maintained on a daily basis.

Article twenty-eighth meteorological authorities and the relevant sectors should undertake specialized man-made weather operations to avoid and mitigate the impact of meteorological disasters, based on the need for man-made weather operations, in important water banks, in the area of water resources for work in agriculture.

Article 29: Meteorological authorities should organize climate monitoring, analysis, assessment, enhancement of the integrated survey, district classification of climate resources, regular issuance of climate profiles, and provide the basis for decision-making by Governments to address climate change.

Article 33 Meteorological authorities should organize climate feasibility arguments for climate resource development projects such as urban and rural planning, priority construction works, major regional economic development projects and large solar and wind energy to avoid and reduce the impact of meteorological disasters on important facilities and engineering projects.

Chapter V

The Government of the people of the city, the district (zone) should develop meteorological disaster response scenarios based on meteorological disaster defence planning.

The relevant sectors should develop sectoral disaster response defence measures based on meteorological disaster emergencies.

In accordance with article 32, the Government of the city, the district (zone) may take the following emergency response measures, in accordance with the level of harm caused by meteorological disasters:

(i) Transport control;

(ii) Resolves, suspensions and suspensions;

(iii) Organize persons with specific expertise to participate in emergency relief and disposal;

(iv) Special management measures such as food, drinking water, fuel, drugs;

(v) In accordance with the law, the use of houses, transport instruments, communications equipment and premises;

(vi) Other measures under laws, regulations and regulations.

In the aftermath of the Meteorological disaster, the relevant units should immediately implement the Emergency Resorting Programme and report on disaster situations in a timely manner to the people's Government and the meteorological authorities without concealing, false or delaying.

Following the occurrence of major meteorological disasters, meteorological authorities should immediately investigate the extent of the impact of meteorological disasters, such as land resources, agroforestry, water, civil affairs, security production monitoring, and promote the timely adaptation of security shocks.

The relevant units and individuals should work in conjunction with the survey and assessment of weather-prone disasters to facilitate investigation.

Chapter VI Corporal punishment

Article 33 15, in violation of the provisions of this approach, imposes, destroys or unauthorized transmission facilities dedicated to mobile meteorological disaster detection and early warning information, and is responsible for the cessation of violations by meteorological authorities, the duration of restitution or other remedies, which may be fined by more than five thousand dollars, resulting in losses, the liability under the law and the criminal responsibility of the law.

Article 36, in violation of this approach, provides that the media, when disseminating information on the early warning of meteorology disasters, have been properly modified or have not indicated the time to be issued, with the time limit being converted by the Meteorological authorities and fines of up to three thousand dollars.

Article 37, in violation of this approach, provides that construction projects are not required to carry out a mine risk assessment, which is being converted by the Meteorological Authority's time limit, and that units can be fined up to three thousand dollars.

Article 338: Meteorological authorities and other relevant departments and their staff have one of the following acts, and administratively disposed of directly responsible supervisors and other persons directly responsible, in accordance with the law; constituted criminality by law:

(i) Failure to take the necessary measures and fulfil their responsibilities in accordance with the requirements of meteorological disaster defence planning or meteorological disaster emergency preparedness;

(ii) Failure to provide, in a timely manner, information on meteorology and water, drought and disaster situations needed to defend meteorious disasters, with serious consequences;

(iii) Distinguished information on meteorology due to negligence;

(iv) Other acts of negligence, abuse of authority, favouring private fraud.

Chapter VII

Article 39 of this approach is implemented effective 1 December 2009.