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Councillors back call for quieter fireworks

Friday, 30 January 2026 13:55

By Kieran Molloy - Local Democracy Reporter X @KMolloyLDR

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Cardiff Council has passed a motion urging the UK and Welsh governments to make fireworks quieter.

The motion, passed on Thursday, urges both governments to limit the maximum noise level of fireworks sold to the public for private displays.

It suggests a reduction of 120dB to 90dB and restricting displays on council land or transitioning council-run events on council land “silent/low-noise alternatives”.

Cllr Dilwar Ali, who forwarded the motion, said “fireworks have long been part of our culture” but there is “great misuse of high-visibility fireworks in our city”.

The Labour member cited the impact the noise created by fireworks has on animals, children, and the neurodivergent.

The councillor for Llandaff North clarified the motion does not call for an “outright ban” but rather “reasonable proportional reform”.

Decibels work on a logarithmic scale meaning that a 30dB reduction would reduce the volume by approximately 87.5%.

While supporting the spirit of the motion, both Conservative and Liberal Democrat members criticised its technical detail.

Cllr Rodney Berman (Liberal Democrat) said of the proposed noise reduction: “We just do not think that is at all workable.”

The councillor for Penylan also feared that by restricting displays on council land to silent or low-noise alternatives it would “drive displays more into people’s back gardens, where they’re less regulated”.

In the open debate, Conservative member Joel Williams called the reduction “effectively a ban on private firework sales”.

He added: “It’s time to go back to the drawing board. Let’s get this right.”

The motion was passed, without amendments, with 52 councillors voting yes, one voting no, and 18 abstaining.

Other items in the motion include promoting public awareness campaigns to educate residents about the impact of fireworks on animal welfare, vulnerable people and wildlife, encouraging advance advertising of public firework displays, working with local retailers to promote quieter and low-noise fireworks, and supporting enforcement with local police and trading standards to monitor and report illegal or underage sale and use of fireworks.

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