Saving Lives in the Smoke: A New Approach to Firefighter Safety

Saving Lives in the Smoke: A New Approach to Firefighter Safety

Saving Lives in the Smoke: A New Approach to Firefighter Safety

Firefighters battle more than flames; smoke filled with toxins poses an invisible, long-term threat to their health. In this interview, BreatheSafe’s General Manager of Engineering and Product, Tommi Perkins, shares how innovations are helping protect those on the frontline. 

Q: Tommi, wildfire fighting is one of the most demanding jobs in the world. From BreatheSafe’s perspective, what are the primary health challenges facing these professionals?

Tommi Perkins: Wildfire firefighters have an incredibly strenuous task, often working up to 24 hours straight in high-temperature and high-smoke conditions. For a long time, smoke from wood fires was presumed relatively safe, but research has proven this is not the case. The smoke contains a dangerous mix of gases and particulates, with studies identifying up to 31 carcinogens.

The challenge is that prolonged exposure to these fine particulates and gases, which is an industry given, causes significant and permanent lung damage. This can lead to cancers, COPD, and other serious respiratory illnesses. Many in the industry still believe they can’t burden firefighters with PPE because of the risk of overheating in a high-intensity, remote environment, but modern medical research is now highlighting the massive damage being done to firefighters’ lungs.

While wearing heavy PPE in the field can be impractical, we can still protect firefighters by creating a clean and safe breathing environment inside the enclosures of their vehicles and heavy machinery, where many are either operating or taking a moment’s respite.

Q: So, how does BreatheSafe’s general solution, used in mining and construction, translate to this unique environment?

Tommi Perkins: The approach is very similar. The solution is to protect the entire enclosure rather than just the person, and it’s a tried and tested method. We can isolate any enclosure from the outside air, like a dozer cab or a crew transport vehicle, by creating positive pressure inside. By delivering high volumes of purified, clean air into the space, the internal air is constantly pushed out. This ensures that none of the gases, dust, or ash from the outside environment can make its way into the enclosure.

The only way for air to get inside is through our filtration system. This creates a safe environment where firefighters can step in, take off their heavy gear, and cool down, confident that the air they are breathing is purified and safe.

Q: Firefighting poses some very specific risks that mining might not. What modifications or additions have you made to address the reality of flames, heat, and embers?

Tommi Perkins: You’re right, the threat of flying embers is a key concern. Our solution for firefighting equipment, such as dozers that are literally pushing burning trees, includes a spark arrestor and a pre-cleaner to extinguish embers and remove heavy ash and soot before it reaches the air filter. We also use heat-resistant and flame-retardant filters to ensure that the system can withstand high-temperature air.

Another critical modification we’ve made addresses the issue of heat. The last thing you want to do is introduce 176°F (80°C) air straight into the cabin onto an already hot and uncomfortable crew. We have designed a system that mixes the incoming air with the machine’s already cooled air from the air conditioning system before it passes through multiple stages of filtration. This ensures the air introduced is safe to breathe and also helps the firefighter cool down, as well as continuously filtering the air inside the cabin. The process of mixing and cooling the incoming air before it is moved into the enclosure is actually part of a patent-pending system.

Q: What about the types of vehicles and machinery used in firefighting? Can you provide solutions for all of them?

Tommi Perkins: Yes, we can. We have designed systems for a wide range of vehicles, from frontline dozers and fire engines with huge cabs to emergency crew transports and even light support vehicles. While a lot of fire equipment has sufficient excess power for our systems, a key challenge is that these vehicles are not built with adequate sealing, unlike modern mining equipment.

The industry is also poorly addressed right now. I’ve seen some existing proposed solutions, which filter the air in the space immediately around them, like a home room purifier, which means they’re only targeting air already inside the cabin and not necessarily in the breathing zone of the crew. There is nothing right now that provides a comprehensive solution. Our unique approach of filtering all incoming air and then mixing it with the air inside the cabin is something no one else has done yet.

Wildfire smoke is a silent threat to firefighters’ health. BreatheSafe’s cabin protection systems provide clean, cooled air and a safe space to recover—so our frontline heroes can keep breathing safely.

Lung Diseases in Heavy Industries: COPD, Silicosis, and More

Lung Diseases in Heavy Industries: COPD, Silicosis, and More

Lung Diseases in Heavy Industries: COPD, Silicosis, and More

What Are Occupational Lung Diseases?

In heavy industries like mining, construction, and manufacturing, some of the most serious health risks aren’t always visible, and that’s exactly why they’re often ignored. Dust, diesel particulates, and microscopic contaminants may be out of sight, but their long-term impact on lung health is severe and irreversible.

From COPD and silicosis to black lung and progressive massive fibrosis, these diseases can develop silently over years of exposure. By the time symptoms appear, the damage is often permanent.

This article examines the most prevalent lung diseases affecting industrial workers, the symptoms to look out for, and how BreatheSafe’s filtration and pressurisation systems help prevent exposure before it occurs.

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

Causes narrowing and inflammation of airways, and damages air sacs (alveoli), making it difficult to breathe out.

Symptoms include:

  • Persistent cough with mucus

  • Shortness of breath during physical activity

  • Wheezing or chest tightness

Long-term exposure to fine dust, fumes, and diesel particulates is a major cause in industrial settings.

Silicosis

Caused by inhaling fine crystalline silica dust, commonly found in rock, sand, concrete, and mine dust. Leads to scarring (fibrosis) of lung tissue due to inhaled silica dust, which reduces lung capacity over time.

Symptoms include:

  • Persistent cough

  • Chest pain

  • Shortness of breath

In advanced cases, it may develop into Progressive Massive Fibrosis (PMF), a severe and debilitating condition marked by large scarring of lung tissue.

Miner’s lung with silicosis and tuberculosis (Basque Museum of the History of Medicine and Science, Spain)

By Museomed – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12223787

Black Lung Disease (Coal Workers’ Pneumoconiosis)

Results from long-term inhalation of coal dust and cause the accumulation of coal dust in the lungs, triggering chronic inflammation and fibrosis.

Symptoms include:

  • Chronic coughing

  • Breathlessness

  • Lung scarring

Can progress to Progressive Massive Fibrosis (PMF) in severe or prolonged cases.

Progressive Massive Fibrosis (PMF)

An advanced stage of silicosis or black lung that causes large, severe scars to form in the lungs, leading to major breathing impairment.

Symptoms:

  • Severe, permanent shortness of breath

  • Reduced lung capacity

  • Poor quality of life and limited treatment options

PMF is not a standalone exposure disease but a complication of advanced dust diseases.

Lung slice from a coal worker, showing black pigmentation and fibrotic scarring caused by prolonged inhalation of coal dust and silica particles.

Dr. Yale Rosen, https://www.flickr.com/photos/pulmonary_pathology/5187845054/, CC BY-SA

How to Actively Prevent Lung Disease?

Preventing lung disease in industrial environments starts with clean air. Using high-efficiency filtration systems like HEPA H14, maintaining positive pressure in cabins and rooms, and monitoring air quality in real time are key steps. These measures help reduce workers’ exposure to harmful dust and gases, lowering the risk of long-term conditions such as COPD, silicosis, and black lung.

Operator Cabins – BreatheSafe System

What it does:
BreatheSafe system filters and pressurises air in mobile machinery like excavators, dozers, trucks, and drills.

Key features:

  • HEPA H14 filtration removes 99.995% of harmful dust (carbon filter optional for gas removal)

  • HEPA Panel Return Air Filter scrubs and filters the internal air
  • Positive pressure keeps contaminants out

  • Real-time monitoring of CO₂, PM2.5, airflow, and cabin pressure

Why it matters:
It protects machine operators at the source of exposure and helps your site meet safety standards for air quality.

BreatheSafe system fitted to a JCB loader 436HT

Enclosed Workspaces – RoomSafe System

What it does:
RoomSafe protects crib rooms, control rooms, and workshops from harmful dust and gases.

Key features:

  • HEPA H14 pressuriser filters incoming air (optional carbon module for gas removal)

  • Positive pressure prevents contaminated air from entering

  • Power HEPA recirculation filter captures internal dust and improves airflow.

Why it matters:
RoomSafe creates a clean-air zone where workers can safely rest, work, and recover — even in high-dust environments.

RoomSafe system fitted to a TBM control room

Conclusion: Dust Is Invisible — But the Risk Isn’t

Diseases like COPD, silicosis, black lung, and progressive massive fibrosis develop over time, often with no early symptoms. But by the time they’re diagnosed, the damage is often permanent. Fitting a proper air filtration and pressurisation system is one of the most effective ways to reduce workers’ exposure to harmful dust and airborne contaminants. When combined with real-time air quality monitoring and regular maintenance, these systems help create safer breathing environments, whether in machine cabins or enclosed workspaces. This not only protects worker health but also helps sites comply with modern occupational air quality standards.

BreatheSafe Dual HEPA filtration system 

RoomSafe Dual HEPA filtration system