The China Earthquake Administration (CEA; 中国地震局) is a public institution managed by the
State Council at the deputy ministerial level in charge of national earthquake disaster reduction work. It is currently managed by the
Ministry of Emergency Management.[1][2]
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).
General Office (Office for Policy Research) (办公室(政策研究室))
Bureau of Development and Finance (发展与财务司)
Bureau of Earthquake Monitoring and Forecasting (监测预报司)
Bureau of Earthquake Damage Prevention (Bureau for Regulations) (震害防御司(法规司))
Bureau of Earthquake Emergency Rescue (震灾应急救援司)
Department of Personnel, Education, Science, and Technology (Bureau of International Cooperation) (人事教育和科技司(国际合作司))
Party Committee (直属机关党委)
Discipline Inspection Team of CCDI in the China Earthquake Administration (Bureau of Supervision) (中央纪委驻中国地震局纪检组(监察司))
Office of the Welfare of Retired Personnel (离退休干部办公室)
Establishment
As a country stricken by two of the
world's ten most fatal earthquakes before the creation of CEA, China's first seismic monitoring stations were set up under the
Chinese Academy of Sciences. A national Earthquake Affairs Office (地震办公室)was created under joint administration of the National Science and Technology Commission (国家科学技术委员会) and Chinese Academy of Sciences after the
1966 Xingtai earthquake. A Central Task Force of Earthquakes (中央地震工作小组) under the
Central Committee 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.[4]