China Earthquake Administration
Encyclopedia
The China Earthquake Administration (CEA), is mandated by the Law of the People's Republic of China on Protecting Against and Mitigating Earthquake Disasters of PRC to enforce the earthquake administration in the nation under the administration of State Council
of the People's Republic of China
.
Some English text use the name Chinese Seismic Bureau (CSB). In older text, it was also referred to by its former name, National Earthquake Bureau (NEB) or National Seismic Bureau (NSB).
. An national Office of Earthquake Matters was created under joint administration of the National Science and Technology Commission and Chinese Academy of Sciences after the 1966 Xingtai earthquake
. A Central Task Force of Earthquakes (of the Chinese Communist Party) was created the day after a M7.4 earthquake struck Bohai Bay
on July 18, 1969.
In 1971, the State Council decided to create the National Earthquake Bureau (CNEB), predecessor to CEA, to replace the "Central Task Force". The State Council initially delegated administration of the CNEB to the Chinese Academy of Sciences. CNEB became directly administrated by the State Councile in 1975.
Following the recommendation from the CNEB, each province, autonomous regions and centrally administrated municipalities in PRC has established its own earthquake bureau since 1977. In 1985, these local bureaus were placed under dual leadership of the local government and the national bureau.
CNEB was renamed CEA in 1998.
State Council of the People's Republic of China
The State Council of the People's Republic of China , which is largely synonymous with the Central People's Government after 1954, is the chief administrative authority of the People's Republic of China. It is chaired by the Premier and includes the heads of each governmental department and agency...
of the People's Republic of China
People's Republic of China
China , officially the People's Republic of China , is the most populous country in the world, with over 1.3 billion citizens. Located in East Asia, the country covers approximately 9.6 million square kilometres...
.
Some English text use the name Chinese Seismic Bureau (CSB). In older text, it was also referred to by its former name, National Earthquake Bureau (NEB) or National Seismic Bureau (NSB).
Bureaus
CEA presently has nine bureaus, two of which directly under the control of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).- Administrative Office and Office of Policy Research
- Bureau of Development and Finance
- Bureau of Monitoring and Prediction
- Bureau of Earthquake Damage Protection
- Bureau of Earthquake Emergency Response and Relief
- Bureau of Personnel, Education, Science and Technology and Bureau of International Cooperation
- (Chinese Communist) Party Committee of Direct Subordinate Institutions
- Group of (CCP) Discipline and Surveillance, a Delegation of the Central Committee of Discipline and Surveillance (of the Chinese Communist Party) and Bureau of Surveillance
- Office of Welfare of Retired Personnel and Retired (CCP) Party Officials
Establishment of the CEA
As a country stricken by 2 of top 10 world's most fatal earthquakes before the creation of CEA, China's first seismic monitoring stations were set up under the Chinese Academy of SciencesChinese Academy of Sciences
The Chinese Academy of Sciences , formerly known as Academia Sinica, is the national academy for the natural sciences of the People's Republic of China. It is an institution of the State Council of China. It is headquartered in Beijing, with institutes all over the People's Republic of China...
. An national Office of Earthquake Matters was created under joint administration of the National Science and Technology Commission and Chinese Academy of Sciences after the 1966 Xingtai earthquake
1966 Xingtai Earthquake
The Xingtai Earthquake was a sequence of major earthquakes that took place between March 8 and March 29, 1966 in the area administered by the prefecture-level city of Xingtai in southern Hebei province, People's Republic of China....
. A Central Task Force of Earthquakes (of the Chinese Communist Party) was created the day after a M7.4 earthquake struck Bohai Bay
Bohai Bay
Bohai Bay is one of the three bays forming the Bohai Gulf, the innermost gulf of the Yellow Sea, in northeast China. It borders Hebei province and Tianjin Municipality...
on July 18, 1969.
In 1971, the State Council decided to create the National Earthquake Bureau (CNEB), predecessor to CEA, to replace the "Central Task Force". The State Council initially delegated administration of the CNEB to the Chinese Academy of Sciences. CNEB became directly administrated by the State Councile in 1975.
Following the recommendation from the CNEB, each province, autonomous regions and centrally administrated municipalities in PRC has established its own earthquake bureau since 1977. In 1985, these local bureaus were placed under dual leadership of the local government and the national bureau.
CNEB was renamed CEA in 1998.
Local administrations
Presently, the following provincial earthquake administrations are established:- Beijing Earthquake Administration (北京市地震局)
- Tianjin Earthquake Administration (天津市地震局)
- Hebei Earthquake Administration (河北省地震局)
- Shanxi Earthquake Administration (山西省地震局)
- Inner Mongolia Earthquake Administration (内蒙古地震局)
- Liaoning Earthquake Administration (辽宁省地震局)
- Jining Earthquake Administration (吉林省地震局)
- Heilingjiang Earthquake Administration (黑龙江省地震局)
- Shanghai Earthquake Administration (上海市地震局)
- Jiangsu Earthquake Administration (江苏省地震局)
- Zhejiang Earthquake Administration (浙江省地震局)
- Anhui Earthquake Administration (安徽省地震局)
- Fujian Earthquake Administration (福建省地震局)
- Jiangxi Earthquake Administration (江西省地震局)
- Shandong Earthquake Administration (山东省地震局)
- Henan Earthquake Administration (河南省地震局)
- Hubei Earthquake Administration (湖北省地震局)
- Hunan Earthquake Administration (湖南省地震局)
- Guangdong Earthquake Administration (广东省地震局)
- Guangxi Earthquake Administration (广西省地震局)
- Hainan Earthquake Administration (海南省地震局)
- Chongqing Earthquake Administration (重庆市地震局)
- Sichuan Earthquake Administration (四川省地震局)
- Guizhou Earthquake Administration (贵州省地震局)
- Yunnan Earthquake Administration (云南省地震局)
- Tibet Earthquake Administration (西藏自治区地震局)
- Shaanxi Earthquake Administration (陕西省地震局)
- Gansu Earthquake Administration (甘肃省地震局)
- Qinghai Earthquake Administration (青海省地震局)
- Ningxia Earthquake Administration (宁夏自治区地震局)
- Xinjiang Earthquake Administration (新疆自治区地震局)