International Development Grant

Migrant Labour Occupational Health and Safety

Project Number: CA-3-A032870001

Status: Terminating

Country/Region:

China 100.00%

Maximum Contribution: $4,842,073.00

Start Date: June 19, 2008

End Date: August 01, 2013

Duration: 5.1 years

Project Description

This project supports Chinese reforms to increase workplace safety standards and enforcement reduce the number of workplace accidents and illnesses and increase access to treatment for injured female and male migrant workers. The focus is on two key industries: construction (predominantly male migrants) and textile or garment manufacturing (predominantly female migrants) with some activities involving the mining sector. Training workshops and site visits provide Chinese government employer and worker representatives with Canadian best practices on occupational health and safety issues in line with the International Labour Organization and UN conventions. The project is located in Chongqing a municipality of 30 million people in Western China that attracts large numbers of migrant workers. The project focuses on: the right of workers to know about hazards and how to perform their work safely; the right to participate in assessing for health and safety in the workplace; and the right to refuse dangerous work. The project is managed by a consortium composed of the Foundation for International Training; Equitas – International Centre for Human Rights Education; and St. Mary's University – CN Center for Occupational Health and Safety.

Progress & Results Achieved

Results as of October 2011 include: in the construction sector 1.5 million migrant workers now have access to awareness training resources and services related to occupational health and safety including legal aid services for female migrant workers free medical examinations and free labour rights protection consultations. In addition during 2010-2011 Canadian occupational health and safety practices were integrated at all 744 coal mines located in the Chongqing area. The sector has become an example of good practice for the entire country. Over 500 other mines located outside of Chongqing have already replicated this model. These new health and safety practices are having considerable impact: compared with over 500 mining casualties reported in 2008 in Chongqing mines the annual coal miners’ death rate dropped by 40% by March 2010 (300 cases reported) and by 63% by March 2011 (183 cases reported).

Key Information

Executing Agency:
FIT - Foundation for International Training

Reporting Organization:
Global Affairs Canada

Program:
OGM Indo-Pacific

Last Modified:
September 19, 2025

Development Classifications

DAC Sector:

Human rights 100%

Aid Type: Donor country personnel

Collaboration: Bilateral

Finance Type: Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation

Selection Mechanism:
Pre-APP

Policy Markers
Level 1 Gender equality
Level 1 Participatory development and good governance
Major Funding (>$1M)
Budget Breakdown
2007-04-01 to 2008-03-31 $4,842,073 CAD
Geographic Information
000
Project Number: CA-3-A032870001