FFS - the amount of carbon produced by a few bonfires is minuscule compared to the carbon produced by perfectly natural wildfires across the world or by people driving to work or by the generation of energy
We have no control over wildfires but we do over burning bonfires to celebrate something that happened in 1605.
I am sure we have all seen bonfires full of old mattresses, plastic barrels, painted doors and general stuff that shouldn't be on a bonfire as the article below puts it it would be considered fly tipping at any other time of the year and i bet if the council took all the fly tipping they collect in a year to a field and burnt it on November the 5th there would be a Spanish inquisition, maybe its time to start looking at only allowing organised bonfires.
Part of a Guardian article -
We can still celebrate bonfire night without burning toxic waste
Dioxins released when we set fire to our junk on Guy Fawkes night are entering the food chain
There is no better antidote to the extreme civilisation which afflicts us than burning things and blowing things up. I'm all for it. Though with certain qualifications.
One of the better rules that gets upended on fireworks night is the law prohibiting fly-tipping. At all other times of year, most householders would no sooner drag their old sofas into the park and set light to them than torch their neighbour's car. But build a community bonfire and it becomes a magnet for people who can't be bothered to take their junk to the dump. Old furniture, skirting boards covered in paint, treated outdoor timber: the whole lot goes on – and goes up. And no one seems to care. The practice seems to be acceptable even in the most unlikely places.
At a children's event run by a community garden group last weekend, I saw that the bonfire had been stacked with old painted boards. The group that runs it, which emphasises its green credentials, boasts that the garden was created on land reclaimed from a "toxic waste-filled old garage site". So let's celebrate by burning toxic waste.
Dioxins and furans are created when substances containing chlorine are burnt at low temperatures. They are extremely toxic. They can cause cancer and disrupt the endocrine (hormone-producing) system. They can affect the development of foetuses and babies. They are persistent and they bioaccumulate, meaning that they build up in fatty tissue faster than they can be broken down or excreted.
https://www.theguardian.com/environ...ate-bonfire-night-burn-toxic-waste-guy-fawkes