Bright Lights, Dark Cloud: Examining the Environmental Effects of Fireworks
Part 1: Pittsburgh’s Environmental Record–and “The Smoky City’s”
Love of Fireworks
On Saturday, October 4, 2008, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania celebrated its 250th birthday in a climax
of a fireworks display, thirty minutes long and launched from 17 different locations around the city, including barges floating on Pittsburgh’s three rivers and off of downtown skyscrapers.
Pittsburgh loves its fireworks.
I’ve noticed that after every Pirates game, whether the outcome is good or bad, there are fireworks. Steelers games. Community events. And now, Pittsburgh’s 250th birthday warrants the biggest blast of them all. How many folks out there have actually watched fireworks for thirty straight minutes? Since Pittsburgh’s 250th birthday celebration, I have. Your neck hurts!
In the official press release about the event from Zambelli Internationale, Pittsburgh set a record of 17 firework launch positions, “the largest in the country.” The site also describes a formidable array of effort: 40 professional pyrotechnicians and nearly 40,000 fireworks went into Pittsburgh’s big day.
Personally, while I was watching the spectacular displays, after a while I stopped being awed by the visual splendor and noticed my mind wandering to this thought: “what exactly is in those thick black clouds of firework byproduct eclipsing downtown?”


