Firecracker sellers see brisk sales on the eve of Deepavali
The Hindu
MADURAI
The enthusiasm over bursting crackers on Deepavali has only gained momentum after two years of low-key celebrations as firecrackers sellers saw brisk business on Sunday.
Outlets selling branded firecrackers as well as smaller shops have been set up across the city including Simmakal, Arasaradi, Koodal Nagar, Tamukkam, Moondrum Avadi saw brisk business on the eve of Deepavali.
R. Logesh Kumar, a second generation cracker seller, who has set up a stall on Kamarajar Salai, said that over 75% of the crackers are green. “By green, it means they do not have the banned chemical – barium nitrate. But the quantity of production has reduced at least by 35% than the previous years due to the overall hike in prices of raw materials,” he said and added that the prices have increased by 30%.
Seconding him, B. Kailasanathan, a firecracker unit owner of 20 years in Sivakasi, said that prices of raw materials such as aluminium powder, potassium nitrate, even fuel and scrap paper have hiked and thereby affected the production cost. “Moreover, producing green crackers costs higher than the banned ones,” he said and added that the labour force has also shrunk as many involved in making noise-making crackers were out of work.
Despite this, Mr Kumar said that the footfall of customers have not dipped, though rains have affected sales a bit.
The new varieties of crackers this year are the ‘reverse chakra,’ that spins in clockwise and anti-clockwise directions unlike the usual ones, five-coloured ‘peacock’ flower pots and drone – a type of cracker that flies to a short height.
Another seller, Y. Manoj said that flower pots priced between ₹200 and ₹1,070, chakras sold for ₹60 to ₹420 and sparklers that cost ₹29 to ₹389 were the top-sellers like every year while children were interested in the plastic toy guns.
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