摘要:SummaryUnderground coal mining has been known as a significant source of fugitive greenhouse gas emissions. Past analyses of these emissions in India used deterministic emission factors and predominantly focused on methane emissions with reporting of CO2emissions remaining limited to a few sites. This study addresses these gaps via field measurements on 108 underground mines (out of a total 338) to evolve greenhouse gas reporting in this sector. Results show large heterogeneity across “degrees” of mines as categorized by the Indian government. In addition, CO2emissions are found to be significant in shallower mines of lower gassiness. Overall, the emissions from underground mining have reduced from 2.6 to 8.3 Mt-CO2e to 1.3–3.6 Mt-CO2e during 1980–2019. These emissions might remain significant by 2050 under a 2–2.5°C constraint or may decline below 100,000 t-CO2e under a 1.5°C constraint. We also discuss several generalizable outcomes and approaches to make inventories in this sector more robust.Graphical abstractDisplay OmittedHighlights•GHG inventory estimates are presented for Indian underground coal mining•CO2– in addition to CH4– may be significant in terms of fugitive emissions•Overall emissions have reduced because of a declining trend in underground mining•Generalizable approaches to improve estimates are discussedEnergy resources; Energy policy; Energy management; Energy Modeling