
Trump tariffs' explosive problem: 99% of fireworks made in China
Ninety-nine per cent of consumer fireworks and 90 per cent of professional display fireworks come from China. Even the most impressive July 4 displays — on the National Mall in Washington and Macy's show in New York — are reliant on Chinese imports.
'These large signature events — probably 75 to 80 per cent of the product for those shows is manufactured in China,' said Julie Heckman, director of the American Pyrotechnics Association. 'The rest is going to come from Spain, Italy, France and Japan.'
Heckman said planned displays in Washington and New York may be 'shortened' in 2026 to cut costs if the 30 per cent tariff remains. She said shows in small American towns could be cancelled altogether, especially if tariffs are returned to the 145 per cent rate imposed by Trump earlier this year.
'If the tariffs increase again to triple digits, small towns aren't going to be able to afford a show,' Heckman said.
Fireworks for this year's displays were mostly purchased before Trump's tariffs hit, meaning the shows are largely going ahead as planned.
But Lauren Collar, 43, a second-generation firework seller from Missouri, said her family business had to absorb the costs of tariffs this year and predicts shortages in 2026. 'We prepare an order 12 to 18 months in advance,' she said. 'We're uncertain what to do. You could see smaller communities not even shooting fireworks, because they just can't afford it.'
Collar said it would take US manufacturers 'a decade' to set up pyrotechnics factories like those in China and even then most of the raw material would be imported and subject to tariffs. 'We're hopeful that the administration will understand our special circumstances and maybe we can get a partial exemption,' she said.
Firecrackers were invented in the city of Liuyang, central China, during the Tang dynasty. By stuffing a concoction of charcoal, sulphur and saltpetre into hollowed-out bamboo stalks, Chinese artisans discovered that they could create a satisfying bang. More than 1,200 years later, the province of Hunan still makes fireworks for the rest of the world.
For defenders of Trump's protectionist agenda, the simple answer would be to scrap the 1970s health and safety laws that effectively ended small-scale manufacturing in the US, allowing America's firework industry to compete once again with China.
But even if these protections were weakened, it is not clear whether Americans would be willing to work in factories adopting Chinese health and safety standards. 'Fireworks are all made by hand. Very little automation is involved,' said Heckman. 'You're dealing with explosive compositions that are highly sensitive to heat, high humidity and friction. It's a very dangerous job.'
Fireworks manufacturing is a dangerous business, and accidents are common
YANG HUAFENG/CHINA NEWS SERVICE/VCG VIA GETTY IMAGES
Earlier this month, nine people were killed in Hunan province by an explosion at a fireworks factory and accidents in China are fairly common.
America's pyrotechnicians are hoping Trump's trade war with China will end soon. 'The firework industry is the most patriotic industry in the United States and wants nothing more than to be a significant component of helping America celebrate our 250th anniversary in 2026,' Heckman said. 'But the firework industry needs some relief … in these tariffs to make it happen.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BreakingNews.ie
an hour ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump to speak by phone
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin have said they will speak by phone on Thursday. It will be their sixth publicly disclosed chat since Mr Trump returned to the White House this year. Advertisement Neither leader offered any immediate details on the topic. Their previous publicly known call came on June 14, a day after Israel attacked Iran. Their resumed contacts appeared to reflect both leaders' interest in mending US-Russian ties that have plummeted to their lowest point since the Cold War amid the conflict in Ukraine. Emergency services work to extinguish a fire following a Russian attack in the Donetsk region of Ukraine (Ukrainian Emergency Service via AP) Thursday's call follows the Pentagon's confirmation that it is pausing shipments of some weapons to Ukraine as it goes about a global review of US military stockpiles. Advertisement The weapons being held up for Ukraine include air defence missiles, precision-guided artillery and other equipment. The details on the weapons in some of the paused deliveries were confirmed by a US official and former national security official familiar with the matter. On Tuesday, Mr Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron held their first direct telephone call in almost three years.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Both corners of the Trump-Musk cage match are dishing to MARK HALPERIN about Elon's implosion... and the depth of the president's heartbreak
Grab the popcorn — or maybe just your Tesla key fob and a MAGA hat — because the long-teased ego cage match between and has entered the Thunderdome. And if you're feeling déjà vu, you're not alone.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Warning issued over card scam hitting Apple and PayPal
It looks like a real sale from a big brand, until your credit card details are stolen. An alarming wave of online scams is sweeping the US, targeting shoppers with fake websites designed to mimic major retailers. These sites are crafted to steal your payment information without delivering a product, often luring shoppers in through social media links, fake ads, or even top Google search results. Cybersecurity experts from the Silent Push say thousands of these fake storefronts are active, many operated by organized criminal groups based in China . 'Our team has found thousands of domains spoofing various payment and retail brands in connection to this campaign, including: PayPal , Apple, Wayfair, Lane Bryant, Brooks Brothers, Hermes, Omaha Steaks, Michael Kors, and many, many more peddling everything from luxury watches to garage doors,' they say. Cybercriminals have copied images, layouts, and text from real retailers to appear convincing, sometimes with only a single swapped letter in the web address. They also use fake Google Pay or Apple Pay buttons , or logos for Visa, MasterCard, and PayPal, to make the fraudulent checkouts more believable. Once users land on one of these sites, they're pressured with 'limited-time' deals and countdown timers, classic bait to rush purchases. The FBI warns that these scams are becoming more sophisticated, especially around peak shopping seasons. 'A site you're buying from should have HTTPS in the web address,' the agency said. That's a basic sign of a secure site; it encrypts data, so your payment details stay private. Silent Push was tipped off by Mexican journalist Ignacio Gómez Villaseñor, who discovered fake stores targeting Mexico's 'Hot Sale 2025,' a Black Friday-style event . When shoppers search for a deal, they are more likely to land on a scam site first, like 'Wrangler jeans' or 'discount handbags.' Domains like (a misspelled version of Harbor Freight) and were among many found to be operating under this network. As Gómez Villaseñor noted, 'This simulation is done to gain user trust and steal your information without raising immediate suspicion.' The scale of the scam is staggering. Despite efforts to take down many of these sites, thousands remain live as of June 2025, according to Silent Push. Traditional takedown methods are being overwhelmed by the sheer number of new scam domains popping up each week. The consequences are costly. According to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), Americans lost $16.6 billion to internet scams in 2024, a 33 percent increase from the year before. That includes nearly 860,000 complaints, a dramatic rise from the early 2000s when the center averaged just 2,000 reports per month.