An official with China's safety watchdog has pledged to trim
down 10,000 small coal mines, almost half of the country's total
small coal mines, by the end of 2010.
Huang Yi, spokesman of the State Administration of Work Safety
(SAWS), told a national energy forum that currently there are still
21,000 small coal mines operating in China.
The government encourages large state-controlled coal mines to
restructure small coal mines via mergers, acquisitions and
share-holding in a bid to strengthen management and enhance
centralization of the sector.
He disclosed that China will develop large coal production bases
and large coal producing enterprises.
By the end of the country's 11th Five-Year (2006-2010) program
period, he noted, the combined annual production capacity of
China's 13 large state-designated coal production bases will reach
around 1.3 billion tons, accounting for half of the country's
total.
As the world's biggest coal producer and consumer, China has
been plagued by the problem of frequent coal mine accidents over
the past few years.
According to SAWS, two-thirds of the country's coal mine deaths
occurred in small mines that were backwardly equipped and poorly
managed.
From January to April this year, small coal mines, whose output
accounted for only one third of the country's total, reported 763
deaths in 483 accidents
Last year, 5,938 people were killed in 3,341 coal-mine related
accidents throughout China. This prompted the authorities to
intensify efforts on cracking down on small and illegally operated
coal mines this year.
China has closed 5,931 small coal mines in the first four months
of 2006. The government aims to shut down all unsafe small coal
mines by 2007, whose number once stood at 80,000.
(Xinhua News Agency May 27, 2006)