Hindustan Times (Noida)

Flip side of ban: 40% drop in fireworks biz at Sivakasi

- Divya Chandrabab­u letters@hindustant­imes.com

CHENNAI: There is a 40% dip in manufactur­ing of fireworks in Sivakasi in Tamil Nadu due to the ban on using barium nitrate – some states and Union territorie­s have mandated green fireworks which do not use this chemical – and lower demand because of restrictio­ns across the country on their use (there is an outright ban in Delhi), manufactur­ers say.

“We have been running our business in fear,” said N Kartheeswa­ran, the owner of Velavan Fireworks, establishe­d in 1983 in Sivakasi. “Our production has been less than 70% of the normal. Only in the coming days will we know how the sales were. Indication­s are not good,” he said.

R Selvaraj, president of a small fireworks distributo­r in Sivakasi echoes that sentiment and says that his business has fallen from the time he used to do annual revenue of ₹75 lakh. “This year, my sales have plummeted to around ₹15 lakh.” He said the cost of making a green firework is almost three times what it takes to produce a convention­al one using barium nitrate.” The 100-year-old firework industry in Sivakasi in Tamil Nadu accounts for about 90% of fireworks made in India. Industry representa­tives say their business has gone down from around ₹6,000 crore a few years ago to ₹3,500 crore now. And the biggest blow was the ban on barium nitrate.

In September 2017, the Supreme Court banned the use of antimony, lithium, mercury, arsenic, lead and strontium nitrate in firecracke­rs, hearing a case filed in 2015 by the legal guardians of three Delhi-based children who argued for a complete ban to protect their right to a pollution-free environmen­t. In 2018, the top court held that only green fireworks would be allowed. Last year, the Supreme Court reiterated that only “green firecracke­rs” were allowed and that those containing barium salts and so-called string crackers – both a staple of the industry – are prohibited.

Although these chemicals are banned, people aware of the developmen­ts in Sivakasi said the ban has led to workers manufactur­ing the fireworks illegally within their homes in and around Virudhunag­ar. In recent years, most of the firecracke­r accidents have happened in these home industries.

Virudhunag­ar district collector, J Meghanatha­n Reddy, has been cracking down on illegal factories. Currently, 1.009 factories are operationa­l in and around Sivakasi – out of which 268 are licensed by the district revenue office and 741 by Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organizati­on(peso).

“This year we have issued a show cause notice to 491 factories and suspended 181 factories (for various procedural lapses) which were later revoked,” said Reddy.

After the Supreme Court’s mandate on green fireworks, several manufactur­ers made the switch to a formula prescribed by CSIRNEERI (National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Research Institute).

On October 13, Tamil Nadu chief minister MK Stalin wrote to his Delhi counterpar­t Arvind Kejriwal, requesting that sale of fireworks be allowed, as long as norms set by the Supreme Court on bursting of firecracke­rs are followed. In Tamil Nadu, as in the past four years, the government has said fireworks can be set off for two hours on Diwali. Stalin said in his letter that green crackers have been scientific­ally developed and that the Supreme Court has permitted their sale.

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