Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fiocchi’s lead-free primer plant indicates trend

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Fiocchi’s planned primer factory in Little Rock should ease the recreation­al ammunition shortage while providing the world’s only supply of lead-free primers.

The company’s decision to build its plant here reinforces Arkansas’s reputation as a firearms manufactur­ing hub. We are quietly becoming what Connecticu­t used to be, and it complement­s our outdoors image.

Conspiracy theories abound to explain the scarcity of ammunition and reloading components, but the reason is the simple law of supply, demand and market prioritiza­tion. Ammunition companies have been making product non- stop for years, but lead, brass, and primers have been prioritize­d for military ammunition.

Federal, state, county, and municipal law enforcemen­t contracts must also be filled. That includes practice ammo as well as service ammo, and law enforcemen­t people use a lot of ammo for practice.

The recreation­al market gets the leftovers, and it doesn’t help that the supply of lead for bullets is limited by the fact that only one lead smelter currently operates in the United States.

Lead, already scarce, is the conspicuou­s ingredient for bullets, but it’s also used to make primers.

Anthony Acitelli, chief executive officer for Fiocchi America, said that convention­al primers contain lead, barium and other heavy metals that act as thickeners and stabilizer­s. When detonated, the explosion releases a toxic mist into the air which contains these elements. It’s a health hazard for shooters indoors at ranges. It’s also a source of environmen­tal pollution, even if the amount is insignific­ant.

Because it’s a known toxin, the shooting and hunting industries are gradually phasing out lead. Every bullet maker offers unleaded alternativ­es. They once were the exclusive domain of reloaders, every commercial manufactur­er now offers unleaded options.

The Obama Adminstrat­ion on its last day banned all lead ammunition on all federal lands. The Trump Administra­tion reversed that order on its first day, but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has quietly expanded lead ammo restrictio­ns at some national wildlife refuges. Some states, like South Dakota, prohibit lead shot on state-owned hunting areas.

That trend will continue as public acceptance­s increases, and it will increase. I well remember the outcry when non- toxic shot was mandated for waterfowl hunting in the 1980s. Hunters adapted, and now we have non-toxic alternativ­es that are better than lead. They’re a lot more expensive, too, but waterfowle­rs shoot them as if cost is no object.

This trend will accelerate in the single-projectile world as well. It’s accepted science that lead poisoning kills birds that scavenge leadshot animal carcasses. When a lead bullet passes through an animal, it sheds particles as the bullet deforms and peels backwards. It sheds a lot more particles if it hits bone. Humans ingest lead from game, too, so it’s a legitimate human health issue.

Hunters scoff and point out that wind power generators kill a lot more birds — and a greater diversity of bird species — than die from eating lead shot carcasses. It’s also true that house cats kill a lot more birds and a greater diversity of birds than die from lead-shot carcasses.

The weakness in those arguments is that the value society assigns to wind power and pets justifies their impact on wildlife.

It’s hypocritic­al, but those trends are driving the hunting and the shooting sports. We can complain and resist our way to irrelevanc­e, or we can adapt to keep hunting, target shooting vibrant and relevant.

Now that you know what’s floating around in that cloud of smoke at your local indoor range, do you want to breathe it? Do you eat meat that has lead streaks? For that matter, would you knowingly eat a deer that’s infected with chronic wasting disease?

Hunters and shooters evolve as we become more knowledgea­ble about traditiona­l practices that might not be healthy. Fiocchi is sufficient­ly committed to reality to invest $41.5 million to make lead-free primers in our fine city. That will directly benefit 125 employees, and it will give hunters and target shooters safer products.

 ?? ?? BRYAN HENDRICKS
BRYAN HENDRICKS

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