The 50% Reduction and What It Means for Mining
The reduction of the workplace exposure limit for respirable crystalline silica from 0.05 to 0.025 mg/m3 represents a 50 per cent tightening that will affect virtually every mining operation in Australia. Silica is present in the host rock of most metalliferous ore bodies, in sandstone and granite quarry products, in coal mine roof and floor strata, and in the concrete and engineered materials used for underground infrastructure. Every activity that breaks, crushes, drills, or processes silica-bearing material generates respirable crystalline silica dust. At the current WES of 0.05 mg/m3, many mining operations already struggle to maintain compliance, particularly during drilling, blasting, crushing, and longwall operations. A 50 per cent reduction to 0.025 mg/m3 means that operations currently at or near the existing limit will immediately be non-compliant under the new WEL, and operations currently well below the limit may find that previously acceptable exposure levels now exceed the new threshold. Mining PCBUs should conduct baseline silica monitoring across all potentially exposed work groups now, before the December 2026 commencement date, to identify which operations require additional controls.
Dust Suppression and Ventilation Upgrades
Dust suppression and ventilation are the primary engineering controls for silica in mining, and both will require upgrading at many operations to achieve compliance with the 0.025 mg/m3 WEL. For drilling operations, water injection through the drill string is the most effective source control, with water pressures and flow rates needing to match the drilling conditions — higher pressures for harder rock and larger diameter holes. Blast pattern design can influence post-blast dust generation through optimised fragmentation that reduces the proportion of fine material requiring secondary breakage. For crushing and screening operations, water spray suppression at feed points, crusher discharge, screen decks, and transfer points must be designed to achieve effective wetting without creating material handling problems. Enclosed crusher and screen installations with dust extraction and baghouse filtration provide the highest level of dust control but require significant capital investment. For underground operations, ventilation quantities in production and development areas must be sufficient to dilute airborne silica below the WEL at the worker breathing zone, and auxiliary ventilation design must account for dust generation rates from each activity. Where engineering controls alone cannot achieve compliance, they must be supplemented by respiratory protection programs.