John Adams famously proposed in his July 3, 1776 letter to his wife, Abigail, that American independence should be celebrated “with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.”
Two hundred fifty years later, he was remarkably accurate.
This year, organizers of the Washington, D.C., Independence Day celebration have announced plans for “the largest fireworks show in history,” with 851,000 aerial shells, surpassing the current Guinness World Record of 811,000 shells. That’s roughly ten times the size of the annual Macy’s display in New York City.
Americans now ignite more than 322 million pounds of fireworks each year, nearly all imported from China (.. yes, tariffs apply). That naturally raises a question environmental lawyers appreciate:
How do Fireworks fit into Environmental Law?
Surprisingly, the answer is that they are one of the few activities that regulators have intentionally chosen to treat with remarkable restraint.
A Brief Spike in Air Pollution
The environmental impact of fireworks is real, but also very short lived.
A 2015 study by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration analyzed data from 315 air quality monitoring stations across the country and found that concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) increased an average of 42% during the evening of July 4. The highest readings typically occurred between 9:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., with air quality generally returning to normal by midday on July 5.
Some monitors exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 24 hour standard, but the spike is localized and fleeting, not the sort of sustained pollution that environmental regulations are typically designed to address.
The Chemistry Behind the Colors
The spectacular colors come from chemistry that every environmental lawyer recognizes.
Strontium compounds create brilliant reds. Sodium produces yellow. Barium creates green, and copper compounds, especially copper chloride, produce those vivid blues that many fireworks enthusiasts consider the most impressive.
When a shell explodes, those compounds become tiny airborne particles along with residue from potassium perchlorate, charcoal, sulfur, and black powder. Because the explosions occur hundreds of feet overhead, much of that material disperses before reaching ground level.
Environmental Law Makes Room for Tradition
What is perhaps most interesting is what environmental law does not do.
Federal regulations administered by the Consumer Product Safety Commission and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives primarily regulate fireworks for safety, limiting explosive composition, packaging, transportation, and storage. They do not regulate fireworks because of air emissions.
At the state level, the focus is similarly on preventing injuries and fires, not reducing particulate emissions. Every state except Massachusetts allows some form of consumer fireworks, although the rules vary considerably.
In environmental law, this is unusual. We are accustomed to regulating activities that emit pollutants. Fireworks are one of the notable exceptions.
The Clean Air Act’s “Exceptional Events”
The Clean Air Act provides perhaps the best illustration.
EPA regulations recognize that certain pollution events are extraordinary and should not determine whether an area complies with federal air quality standards. Wildfires, dust storms, and volcanic activity are classic examples.
Fireworks celebrating Independence Day can qualify as well.
Under EPA’s “Exceptional Events” rule, states may exclude July 4 air quality data from regulatory determinations if they demonstrate that the elevated particulate levels resulted from holiday fireworks rather than ongoing pollution sources.
For example, EPA approved Rose Park, Utah’s request to exclude monitoring data after scientific analysis showed that more than 75% of the particulate matter originated from fireworks residue rather than ordinary emissions.
The policy reflects a practical judgment: a few hours of elevated particulate matter should not trigger long term regulatory consequences.
Water Pollution Matters Too
Environmental regulation does not disappear entirely.
Fireworks launched over bays, rivers, or oceans can create concerns under the Clean Water Act because shells, paper, and other debris eventually fall into the water.
In places such as San Diego, permits require post display cleanup and other best management practices to minimize debris entering coastal waters. Environmental organizations have successfully used the Clean Water Act to ensure permit compliance where aquatic resources could be affected.
In other words, environmental law generally targets the tangible environmental impacts, not the celebration itself.
A Rare Example of Regulatory Restraint
Environmental lawyers spend much of their time discussing expanding regulation. Fireworks offer an interesting counterexample.
The law recognizes that fireworks produce temporary emissions. Regulators know the chemistry. They understand the particulate impacts and smoke that may impact individuals with lung diseases like asthma or COPD. And the loud, explosive sounds can lead to sensory overload. Yet they have largely concluded that the environmental effects are brief enough, and the cultural significance important enough, that the proper response is measured oversight rather than sweeping regulation.
That balancing of competing interests is, after all, what good environmental law is supposed to do.
So, as you gather with family and friends this Fourth of July, enjoy the fireworks, and perhaps impress everyone by explaining why one of America’s oldest traditions is also one of the more fascinating examples of environmental regulatory restraint.
In the interest of full disclosure, I don’t represent any fireworks manufacturers. But I do appreciate a well executed copper chloride blue. Happy Fourth of July!