Effective 1 December 2026

Workplace Exposure Limits (WEL) in Australia: a guide for mobile equipment operators

From 1 December 2026, Workplace Exposure Limits replace Workplace Exposure Standards for airborne contaminants. This guide explains what's changing, what it means for dusty and diesel-heavy work environments, and where operator cabin air quality fits as an engineering control.

Scope: Airborne contaminant exposure limits for Australian mining, construction, and industrial workplaces.

Overview

What Are Workplace Exposure Limits?

Replaces

WES

Applies from

1 December 2026

Enforceability

Hard limits

A WEL is a limit, not a guarantee of safety — some workers can be affected below it. That's why the law requires you to eliminate or minimise exposure so far as is reasonably practicable, not simply stay under the number.

A Workplace Exposure Limit (WEL) is the maximum airborne concentration of a contaminant, such as dust, fume, gas, vapour, or mist, that a worker may be exposed to. Many of these contaminants can't be seen or smelled, but can still be present at harmful levels.

Australia is moving from Workplace Exposure Standards (WES) to Workplace Exposure Limits. The change follows a national review of the WES against current health evidence, the first since 2003, and a decision to rename them "limits" to make clear they are values that must not be exceeded, in line with international terminology.

Until 1 December 2026, PCBUs must keep complying with the WES list. From that date the WEL list applies nationally, following implementation into Commonwealth, state, and territory WHS laws.

The detail

What's Changing in the Move to WEL

Most limits carry over unchanged, but the review revised some values, added limits for new contaminants, and updated how additional health risks are flagged. Check the WEL list against the substances you actually use or generate.

The new 8-hour limits for the five most relevant to enclosed cabins:

Crystalline Silica

0.05 mg/m³

was 0.05

Under Review

Respirable Coal Dust

1.5 mg/m³

was 1.5

Limit Retained

Diesel Particulate Matter

0.01 mg/m³

was not listed

New Limit

Hydrogen sulfide (H₂S)

10 ppm

was 10

Limit Retained

Sulfur dioxide (SO₂)

0.25 ppm

was 2

↓ 8× lower

Diesel particulate matter gets a workplace limit for the first time — 0.01 mg/m³, where no standard existed before. For diesel-heavy operations, that’s the single most significant change to plan around.

The three types of limit

Each WEL is expressed as one or more of three limit types. Knowing which applies matters, because each is measured differently.

TWA
Time-weighted average. The average airborne concentration over a standard 8-hour working day.
Note: A TWA can't be traded up for shorter shifts.
STEL
Short-term exposure limit. The average over a short period (typically 15 minutes), to guard against acute effects.
Peak
Peak limitation. A maximum concentration that must not be exceeded at any moment, for contaminants with immediate effects.

Several contaminants relevant to heavy industry, including respirable crystalline silica, are subject to further impact analysis before their limits are finalised. Until that's complete, their existing WES values continue to apply. This is a reason to review exposure early rather than wait for final numbers.

Notations

New sensitiser and ototoxicity flags

The old sensitiser notation is split into DSEN (skin) and RSEN (airways). A new OTO notation flags contaminants that can increase hearing-loss risk. It is relevant where exposure happens alongside noise, as it often does in machine cabins. Carcinogenicity notations are removed. Cancer hazard is now referenced via safety data sheets and HCIS rather than the exposure list itself.

Separately, a defined group of non-threshold genotoxic carcinogens is listed with no assigned limit. For these, the duty is to eliminate exposure so far as is reasonably practicable, not manage it to a number.

What you should do

Three Steps to Prepare

Safe Work Australia frames preparation as three steps. Working through them now, during the transition period, gives you time to put controls in place before the limits become enforceable.

1 Identify the Hazard

Consult the WEL list for the airborne contaminants you use or generate, and check whether any limits relevant to you have changed.

2 Assess the Hazard

Ensure no worker is exposed above the relevant limit. Where exposure is uncertain, carry out air monitoring to determine the actual concentration.

3 Control the Hazard

Eliminate or minimise risk so far as is reasonably practicable using the hierarchy of controls, then review that those controls work as intended.

For the full contaminant list, current limit values, and your jurisdiction's implementation timing, refer to Safe Work Australia and your WHS regulator. The rest of this page covers where cabin air quality fits into "Step 3 - Control the hazard".

Scope

Who Do Workplace Exposure Limits Apply To?

WEL applies to any workplace where people may be exposed to airborne contaminants generated by work processes. In heavy industry, that frequently means mobile equipment operators working inside enclosed cabins in dusty or diesel-heavy environments, where contaminants like respirable dust, crystalline silica, and diesel particulate are part of daily operation.

If your operators spend shifts in machine cabins near drilling, loading, hauling, crushing, or fixed plant, cabin air quality is a relevant part of how you manage their exposure.

Industries this may include:

Mining

Construction

Tunnelling

Manufacturing

Processing plants

Workshops

Heavy equipment

Quarries

Civil works

Agriculture

Landfill

OPerator Cabin review

What to Review Across the Operator Cabin System?

Mobile equipment cabins can help separate operators from the external work environment, but cabin performance depends on the complete system condition. A cabin should be reviewed as a system.

01

Cabin Sealing

Damaged seals, poor door fitment, cable penetrations, or unsealed gaps can allow contaminated air to enter the operator enclosure.

02

Fresh Air Intake

Fresh air intake location and filtration can affect the quality of air supplied into the cabin.

03

Cabin Pressurisation

Positive pressure can help reduce contaminant ingress when the cabin is properly sealed and the system is maintained.

04

HEPA Filtration

High-efficiency filtration can support reduction of fine particulate entering or circulating inside the cabin.

05

CO₂ Monitoring

CO₂ visibility helps review ventilation and enclosed cabin air quality, especially when cabins are sealed or recirculating air.

06

Monitoring & Alarms

Operators and maintenance teams need visibility when system performance changes or drops outside expected operating conditions.

07

Filter Maintenance

Filter condition, replacement intervals, and correct installation affect long-term system performance.

08

Service Records

Commissioning, servicing, filter replacement, and maintenance records can support ongoing review and risk management.

A cabin air quality system may support airborne contaminant exposure control, but it does not replace site-wide risk assessment, exposure monitoring, administrative controls, respiratory protective equipment, health monitoring, or duty holder verification.

How we help

Supporting the cabin side of your exposure control

Pressurisation is one of the most effective engineering controls for reducing the contaminants that reach an operator inside the cabin. BreatheSafe's system is built on four pillars that work together. Each one helps maintain filter efficiency, extend filter life, and give the operator consistent protection through the shift.

Four pillars of BreatheSafe air pressurisation system

Blue circular gauge icon showing a white pressure meter, representing measurement or monitoring

Positive Pressure

Diagram of a dual HEPA air filtration system showing fresh air intake and return air circulation.

Dual HEPA Filtration

Diagram of cabin sealing system with airflow arrows and components on a blue background.

Cabin Sealing

Digital health monitoring system icon representing data analysis and real-time health tracking.

Air Quality Monitoring

Site concern
How BreatheSafe supports it
Dust or particulate entering operator cabins
Cabin pressurisation and HEPA filtration options to reduce particulate ingress
Limited visibility of cabin system performance
Monitoring and alarm options for operators and maintenance teams
Retrofitting existing mobile equipment
Machine-specific fitment guidance matched to equipment and site conditions
Ongoing maintenance requirements
Filter replacement guidance and servicing support to maintain performance
Customer-led review and documentation
Commissioning and maintenance records to assist your own exposure review

Take it with you

Mobile equipment cabin review checklist

Run through these with your fleet in mind. Anywhere you can't tick the box is a useful starting point for a conversation

0 / 0
Checklist complete — all areas reviewed
Have airborne contaminants been identified for the work process?
Which machines operate in dusty or contaminant-heavy areas?
Are operator cabins sealed and maintained?
Is fresh air filtered before entering the cabin?
Can the cabin maintain positive pressure during operation?
Are HEPA or high-efficiency filters used where appropriate?
Are filters inspected and replaced on a defined schedule?
Do operators receive alerts when system performance drops?
Is CO₂ monitored inside enclosed cabins?
Are commissioning, servicing, and maintenance records available?
Has the cabin system been reviewed as part of the broader exposure control process?

Spotting gaps? Send us your fleet details and we'll help you work through them.

Frequently Asked Questions: Workplace Exposure Limits

When do Workplace Exposure Limits take effect?

The WEL list applies from 1 December 2026, following implementation into WHS laws. Until then, the WES list continues to apply, with the transition period ending 30 November 2026.

What's the difference between WES and WEL?

WEL is the renamed and reviewed version of WES. The name change signals that these are enforceable limits that must not be exceeded. The review also revised some limit values, added contaminants, updated advisory notations, and set non-threshold genotoxic carcinogens apart on a separate list.

What are the three types of exposure limit?

An 8-hour time-weighted average (TWA), a short-term exposure limit (STEL) averaged over a short period, and a peak limitation that must not be exceeded at any moment. A contaminant may have one or more of these.

Does WEL apply to mobile equipment cabins?

WEL applies to airborne contaminants in workplaces broadly. Mobile equipment cabins are one relevant area, because operators may be exposed to dust, silica, or diesel particulate during work. Cabin air quality is one way to manage that exposure.

How does cabin air quality fit into WEL compliance?

Cabin air quality is a documented engineering control within your site's broader exposure strategy. BreatheSafe provides the pressurisation, filtration, and monitoring systems, commissioning and service records that support you evidence that control. Site-wide compliance remains your duty-holder process, we make the cabin part of it defensible.

Does cabin pressurisation reduce operator exposure to dust?

Yes, absolutely. A properly sealed, pressurised cabin with HEPA filtration significantly reduces contaminant ingress for the operator. Performance depends on correct installation and maintenance which is exactly what our commissioning and service support is built around.

Review your fleet before the 2026 deadline

Send us your machine details and site conditions. We'll help review suitable cabin pressurisation, HEPA filtration, monitoring, and maintenance options for your fleet.