Building a safer work environment and boosting disaster resilience – the Chinese mainland is seeing measurable progress during its 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025). At a recent emergency management press conference, Minister Wang Xiangxi revealed that workplace fatalities fell by 28.4% in 2024 compared to the 13th Five-Year Plan baseline.
For the first time, major and extremely serious accidents dropped into single digits in 2024 – a 43.8% reduction from the previous five-year period. Stricter safety protocols, tech-driven risk monitoring, and hands-on training across industries sharpened the focus on prevention.
Natural disasters also met a stronger response. Between 2021 and 2024, annual averages for people affected by disasters, fatalities and missing persons, and economic losses relative to GDP declined by 31.3%, 23%, and 34.3%, respectively. Behind the scenes, nearly 60 billion yuan (about $8.44 billion) in treasury bond funds has underpinned six regional emergency rescue centers now mostly complete.
Why it matters globally: As climate extremes and industrial risks rise worldwide, the Chinese mainland’s data-driven strategies and infrastructure investments offer valuable lessons. Entrepreneurs and innovators could adapt real-time monitoring tools to emerging markets, while policy makers refine their emergency frameworks.
Looking ahead, mid-term reviews are already underway. Officials plan to integrate AI-based risk predictions, strengthen cross-regional coordination, and deepen community drills. For young global citizens and changemakers, every percentage point drop in casualties underscores the power of policy, tech, and community working in sync.
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Workplace accidents decline in China during 14th Five-Year Plan period
cgtn.com