Fireworks are about to ruin our air quality, and the heat won't helping

Every year, AQMD issues a particle advisory around Independence Day thanks to fireworks, and the heatwave could extend our unhealthy air.

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First come the fireworks, then comes the thick blanket of smog. Air quality officials are once again issuing a particle advisory for SoCal this Independence Day, but our summer heatwave could mean our unhealthy air will stick around longer. July 4th week is typically the worst of the year for air quality in the L.

A. basin . The flashy shows leave behind dust, metal and soot that can be dangerous to your health .



All of that will mix with an ozone advisory , which brings its own smog. “You can pretty much guarantee we're going to be towards the upper end of what we see for ozone levels,” said Scott Epstein, who oversees air quality assessments for the South Coast Air Quality Management District, the agency that monitors our air quality. “And then on the fourth and fifth of July, most years, that's when we record the highest fine particle levels.

It can be even higher than what you'd see around a wildfire.” The particle advisory for the L.A.

basin begins Thursday evening through the early afternoon on Friday, according to AQMD. Epstein said the coast will clear up first, but particles from fireworks could stick around longer in inland areas. Pollution from the fireworks could taper off Friday afternoon, just in time for the smog levels to peak in the mid afternoon.

The National Weather Service warned of “dangerously hot conditions” through next week with temperatures between 100 and 110 degrees in some areas. According to Epstein, that heat worsens smog levels. “H.