The anti-Qing movement began with the looting of the Eight-Nation Alliance.

Chapter 289 Adding Trouble!



Chapter 289 Adding Trouble!

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Special operations refer to operations that involve high altitude, high pressure, flammable, explosive, toxic, harmful, or suffocating conditions, which may cause harm or damage to the operator, others, and surrounding buildings, structures, equipment, and facilities. These include hot work, confined space work, pipeline opening (blind flange removal and installation), work at height, hoisting work, temporary electrical work, earthwork, and circuit breaking work.

(iii) Non-routine operations refer to temporary operations that lack prescribed operating procedures, are irregular, and have no fixed frequency, such as operations near high-voltage live conductors, and pressure testing operations of gas station equipment (pipelines).

(iv) Routine operations refer to operations carried out by the unit's employees in areas such as oil depots, non-terminal oil, gas, hydrogen, and electricity stations, without fixed frequency requirements, such as regular cleaning of oil depot filters and calibration of oil tanks at gas stations. Each unit should develop corresponding operating procedures, risk control measures, and emergency response measures for such operations. Operations for which measures have not yet been developed can be temporarily classified as non-routine operations for management.

Chapter Two: Management Organization and Responsibilities

Article 1 The Company's Quality, Safety and Environmental Protection Department shall perform the following duties:

(i) Responsible for establishing, maintaining, training, consulting, supervising, and assessing the work permit management system;

(ii) Responsible for organizing training, continuing education, and online assessment for relevant management, technical, and operational personnel, and organizing the authorization of work permit approvers at different levels and categories.

Article 2. Each department of the company shall perform the following duties:

(i) Responsible for the implementation of the work permit system and standards within its jurisdiction, and for proposing improvement suggestions;

(ii) Responsible for guiding and supervising the implementation of the work permit system for this professional line.

Article 3 The subordinate units shall perform the following duties:

(i) Responsible for organizing and implementing operation permits for its affiliated oil depots, non-terminal oil, gas, hydrogen and electricity stations, construction sites, other office locations, independent charging stations not relying on gas stations (hereinafter referred to as charging stations), central warehouses, wharves and other areas, and proposing improvement suggestions;

(ii) Responsible for organizing and implementing the training and assessment of personnel such as work approvers and work supervisors in accordance with the requirements of graded and classified training.

Article 4. The unit where the work area is located refers to the unit with the authority to approve work permits according to the principle of hierarchical approval, responsible for the management of the entire work process, and whose safety responsibilities mainly include:

(i) Organize the work unit and relevant parties to conduct risk assessments and formulate corresponding safety measures or work plans;

(ii) Provide on-site safety conditions and conduct safety technical briefings for the work units;

(iii) Review and supervise the implementation of safety measures or work plans;

(iv) Responsible for coordinating work with relevant units involved in the operation;

(v) Supervise on-site operations. If any violations or abnormalities are found, operations shall be stopped immediately and evacuation shall be organized promptly if necessary.

Article 5. The person approving the work operation should be a manager within the unit where the work area is located, familiar with the site conditions, and authorized to provide, allocate, and coordinate risk control resources. Following the principle of "whoever is in charge is responsible," this typically includes the heads of subordinate units, the heads of the relevant business departments within those units, the heads of district/county branches (regions), the heads of oil depots or non-terminal oil, gas, hydrogen, and electricity stations, and project managers, who are responsible for operational safety. Their safety responsibilities mainly include:

(i) Organize a written review of the work application and verify the consistency between the work permit approval level and approval process and the company's management system requirements;

(ii) Organize on-site verification to check the implementation of risk identification and safety measures, and complete the approval process at the work site;


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