Air Quality in Mines: Progress and Prospects of Legal Control (IV COORDINATION)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 464 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
"Exposure to respirable contaminants in mine atmospheres has long posed a serious hazard to miners. The control of these hazards, some of which can have sudden and catastrophic effects and some others, slow and long enduring consequences, has been a major concern for labor, management and government alike. This concern has manifested itself in four primary mechanisms of control -- (1) regulatory control through minimum standard setting by the passage of mine health and safety laws, (2) engineering control through design and operation of 'mines according to the best recommended practices, (3) medical control through periodic physical examinations, wearing personal protection devices, etc., and (4) legal and social control through workmen's compensation laws for occupation related health deterioration:-The respirable contaminants in mine atmo¬spheres are toxic and explosive gases, toxic and explosive dusts, diesel exhaust particu¬lates, radon progeny, etc. Perhaps the most important of all these and the most widely occurring in mine atmospheres is respirable dust, an inevitable product of fragmentation, a unit operation fundamental to all mining operations. In fact; the-most serious health hazard for workers in the mining and minerals processing industries is still the exposure to respirable dust, and solutions to the problem of respirable dust disease remain to be found.The 1969 Coal Mine Health and Safety Act and its provisions for the respirable dust standards in underground coal mines are briefly reviewed. An overview of the research accomplishments in meeting the standards is presented. The current state of knowledge on the effectiveness of the standards and the new and emerging problems are discussed. A brief summary of the research programs of the Generic Technology Center on Respirable Dust is presented.In general, underground mines are becoming increasingly safe. The mine atmospheric environment is definitely improving * Professor and Head, Department of Mineral Engineering,-The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA for the better. Significant progress has been made in lowering the dust levels in mines. It is generally agreed that mines are less dusty today than they were a decade ago. However, as long as the risks of occupation-related diseases are not completely eliminated, vigilance can hardly be relaxed, and the search for engineering solutions must be intensified."
Citation
APA:
(1988) Air Quality in Mines: Progress and Prospects of Legal Control (IV COORDINATION)MLA: Air Quality in Mines: Progress and Prospects of Legal Control (IV COORDINATION). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1988.