8-5 Prevention of Occupational Diseases
and Protection of the Working Environment in the Mining Industry
Project Scope and Relationship to China's Agenda
21
This project seeks to establish a comprehensive
national strategy and program for the prevention of occupational diseases
and the protection of the working environment in China's mining industry.
This project was developed in accordance with programme area 9B of China's
Agenda 21 -- Minimizing the impact of Environmental Pollution on People's
Health -- and will contribute to the sustainable use of mineral resources
and the participation of workers in sustainable development (programme areas
14G and 20D).
1. Background
Occupational diseases caused by high levels of
mining dust and other toxic substances, unhealthy working conditions, inadequate
protective equipment and lack of proper training are seriously threatening
the health and lives of workers in China's mining industry. Nearly half
a million workers have been infected with silicosis in the last forty-five
years, equalling the total number of pneumoconiosis cases in the world during
the same time period. About 200,00 new cases are added each year. Thousands
of cases of acute occupational poisoning are reported each year. Nearly
20 percent of all workers in some China's coal mines over the age of 40
suffer from occupational diseases.
The cost of treating these occupational diseases,
which has been estimated at 7 billion yuan annually (roughly US $800 million),
has had a major impact on China's economy. Some enterprises have even had
to close down production because they cannot afford to support the number
of skilled workers that have retired due to occupational disabilities. The
large number of occupational diseases cases has in turn led to a number
of serious social problems.
China has begun to take steps to confront this
urgent situation. It has established national institutes for labor protection
and occupational health as well as corresponding institutes at the provincial
and city levels. It has conducted research and several pilot projects on
occupational health and safety, which were listed as key projects during
the last three Five-Year Plans (1980-1995). Assisted by UNDP and ILO, China
is preparing to establish a national training center for occupational safety
and health as well as a national monitoring center.
Yet much more work needs to be done in order to
expand this work into a national strategy and programme for the prevention,
control and treatment of occupational disease and protection of the working
environment. China is now seeking international cooperation and assistance
in order to draft a comprehensive set of laws, regulations and standards;
set up an effective program of compliance and enforcement; perfect the system
for monitoring and evaluation of pollution levels, workers' exposure and
occupational hazards; strengthen the capability of medical organizations
for diagnosis and treatment; develop simple and effective protective equipment
and other technical measures; survey and analyze the extent of the problem
and develop a database and a computer forecasting system; and expand the
training program.
2. Objectives
Long-term Objectives
- Develop and implement a national strategy and
programme for the prevention and control of occupational diseases and the
protection of the working environment in China's mining industry. Apply
safety and prevention principles at every stage of the mining process.
Reduce the occurrence of occupational diseases in the mining industry by
50 percent, limit occupational accidents indirectly, and reduce the annual
economic costs of occupational diseases.
Immediate Objectives
- Through survey, research and analysis, develop
a thorough understanding of the types, distribution and severity of existing
occupational hazards and occupational diseases, as well as the relationship
between them; the efficiency of existing preventive measures; and future
trends.
- Develop a comprehensive regulatory, monitoring
and enforcement system for the prevention and control of occupational diseases
in various mining industries.
- Improve existing methods and equipment for the
prevention, diagnosis and treatment of occupational diseases.
- Develop and implement a standardized nationwide
training system for both administrators and workers to increase understanding
of worker safety and ensure compliance with applicable requirements.
3. Activities
3.1 Draft and promulgate a comprehensive system
of laws, regulations and standards for the prevention of occupational diseases
and protection of the working environment.
- Develop standards and requirements for protection
against different types of occupational hazards in the coal, metallurgical,
chemical and building materials industries.
- Promulgate regulations for monitoring, inspection,
enforcement and worker training.
3.2 Establish an effective program at every level
of government to supervise and enforce compliance with regulatory requirements.
- Hire and train a sufficient number of inspectors
and provide the necessary equipment.
3.3 Strengthen and perfect the monitoring and evaluation
system for occupational diseases in the mining industry.
- Establish and strengthen national and provincial
level monitoring centers for labor protection and city level monitoring
stations to monitor pollution levels in various mining industries, evaluate
workers' exposure levels and determine the severity of occupational hazards.
- Formulate standardized methods for measurement
and evaluation.
3.4 Strengthen the establishment of national, provincial
and city level medical organizations concerned with occupational diseases.
- Raise the technical level and comprehensive capability
for diagnosis and treatment of occupational diseases.
3.5 Develop and apply simple and effective protective
measures, such as masks, to reduce the occupational hazard in the working
environment.
- Develop effective protective measures and technologies
for dust control.
- Develop effective protective measures and technologies
for control of toxic substances, including inorganic toxic such as lead
and organic substances such as diesel emissions.
- Develop effective protective measures for noise
and vibration control.
3.6 Survey and analyze the types, distribution
and severity of occupational hazards in various mining industries.
- Create a data base regarding occupational hazards
in the coal, metallurgical, chemical and building material industries.
- Explore the relationship between the rate of
occupational diseases, such as pneumoconiosis, occupational poisoning and
deafness, and the concentration and compositions of harmful substances
in the working environment.
- Study the principles of occupational disease
development.
- Develop computer simulation systems to forecast
trends in occupational diseases.
- Establish two or three pilot projects in each
of the following areas: dust control, toxic substances control and noise
control.
- Select 2-5 departments to participate in each
of the pilot projects and disseminate the results to similar areas and
industries.
3.7 Develop and implement a standardized nationwide
training system for both administrators and workers to increase understanding
of worker safety and ensure compliance with applicable requirements.
- Strengthen the national and provincial centers
for occupational health and expand their services.
- Train inspectors as well as the occupational
health monitoring officials at each enterprise for compliance with applicable
regulatory requirements.
- Gradually establish a standardized training system
for occupational safety and health.
The project duration will be for five years.
This Project will be implemented by the Ministry
of Labour, the Ministry of Public Health, the Ministry of Coal Industry,
the Ministry of Metallurgical Industry, the Ministry of Chemical Industry,
and the Ministry of Construction.
4. Inputs
4.1 Chinese Inputs
- Project administration
- Travel and accommodations for personnel involved
in the project
- Office facilities and equipment
- Science, technology, statistical data and special
knowledge available from existing international projects
- Training on techniques and administration of
occupational safety and health
4.2 International Cooperation
- Relevant science, technologies, statistical data
and research results
- necessary equipment and communication facilities
- Training on advanced international techniques
and experience in the field of occupational safety and health
- International experts
4.3 Budget
Total funding for the project is US $4.4 million
dollars, including US $3 million from domestic funds and $1.4 million from
international grant assistance.
Budget (in million US dollars)
| Items |
Chinese Inputs |
International Input |
Total |
| Experts |
0.4 |
0.3 |
0.7 |
| Other staff |
0.5 |
 |
0.5 |
| Equipments |
0.6 |
0.4 |
1.0 |
| Facilities |
0.5 |
0.2 |
0.7 |
| Research |
0.6 |
0.2 |
0.8 |
| Training |
0.2 |
0.2 |
0.4 |
Miscellaneous |
0.2 |
0.1 |
0.3 |
| Total |
3.0 |
1.4 |
4.4 |
5. Benefits
This project will benefit thousands of workers
in China's mining industries by establishing a national strategy and programme
for the prevention of occupational diseases and the protection of the working
environment. The development and enforcement of standards, practices and
effective protective measures could greatly improve worker health at low
cost, with the concomitant benefits of increased enterprise production and
worker efficiency. If the rate of occupational diseases could be reduced
by 50 percent, it would save China RMB 500 million yuan each year. This
project would also contribute to the achievement of the World Health Organization's
goal of "Health for All by the Year 2000."
Text Browser Utilities: [Back, ACCA21 Home]

For more information about ACCA21
contact:
web@acca21.edu.cn
Address: 109 Wanquanhe Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100089, People's
Republic of China
Telephone: +86-10-82636193, +86-10-82634400 Ext.2401
Fax: +86-10-82636192
|