A policy briefing for the entire provincial power industry attracted over 21,000 concurrent online viewers via livestream. The Jiangsu Energy Regulatory Office organized the session on June 26 to explain the Standards for Determining Major Power Accident Hazards and the Regulations on Governance and Supervision, replacing traditional offline training with a livestream and joint expert format to overcome limitations in coverage and information loss across levels.

The event recorded over 107,000 likes and more than 7,500 interactive comments. The office noted that the level of participation and reach far exceeded expectations. The briefing aligned with work safety arrangements set by the National Energy Administration and the Jiangsu provincial government, serving as a concrete measure for the annual Work Safety Month.

Seven senior experts from the power industry took part in the joint lecture. They provided systematic explanations tailored to different areas such as grid operation, power generation safety, engineering construction, and equipment management. The sessions focused on key links—criteria for hazard determination, key investigation points, and governance pathways—and utilized typical case studies to analyze critical, difficult, and bottleneck issues. The briefing turned regulatory provisions into practical, operational benchmarks, targeting grassroots difficulties in making accurate assessments and implementing effective corrections.

The livestream also featured an educational film on power work safety and training videos from the National Energy Administration. Audience feedback indicated that the content was deeply relevant, directly addressed problems, and provided strong guidance, effectively remedying front-line gaps in hazard identification and standardized governance.

This outreach method reached all industry personnel, from corporate management to frontline teams and from the main grid to local stations. The office stated that the initiative aims to correct sloppy inspections and formalistic rectifications, and to raise standardization and normalization levels in hazard governance across the province.

Next, the office will further promote the implementation of the new regulations by combining ongoing training with supervision and inspection. The focus is to shift the center of safety governance downward and move risk prevention forward, laying a foundation for achieving zero major power safety hazards by the end of 2026 and completing the three-year campaign for fundamental improvement in power work safety.