Why DPM Is the Defining Underground Mining Health Challenge
Diesel particulate matter is the single most significant occupational health challenge in Australian underground mining because diesel-powered loaders, trucks, and utility vehicles are the dominant equipment types in underground operations, and the enclosed nature of underground workings concentrates DPM in the breathing zone of every underground worker. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies diesel engine exhaust as a Group 1 carcinogen, the highest classification indicating sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in humans. Epidemiological studies in underground mining populations have demonstrated a dose-response relationship between cumulative DPM exposure and lung cancer risk. The introduction of Australia's first workplace exposure limit for DPM at 0.1 mg/m3, measured as elemental carbon, creates a binding legal threshold where none previously existed. Many underground mining operations currently exceed this limit in active development headings, production areas, and workshops where diesel equipment operates. The compliance challenge is compounded by the finite ventilation capacity of underground mines, where increasing air volumes to dilute DPM requires larger fan installations, wider airways, and more complex ventilation circuits.
Ventilation-Based DPM Control Strategies
Ventilation remains the primary engineering control for DPM in underground mines, and achieving compliance with the 0.1 mg/m3 WEL will require many operations to increase ventilation quantities in active work areas. The fundamental relationship is straightforward — DPM concentration equals DPM generation rate divided by ventilation air volume — but the practical application is constrained by the physical geometry of the mine, the number and size of diesel engines operating simultaneously, and the cost of moving additional air underground. Ventilation optimisation strategies include re-evaluating ventilation circuit design to maximise primary airflow to active work areas, installing booster fans in critical headings, and reducing leakage through ventilation control devices. Auxiliary ventilation design for development headings must account for the DPM output of the specific vehicles operating in the heading, with forced ventilation being preferred over exhaust systems because it delivers fresh air to the face where operators work. Variable speed drive fans that adjust air volume based on real-time DPM monitoring provide energy-efficient ventilation that responds to actual demand rather than running at maximum capacity continuously. Where ventilation alone cannot achieve WEL compliance, it must be supplemented by engine-based controls and operational strategies.