Governments in China and India have already tried to limit the
number of fireworks set off during celebrations for the Lunar
New Year and Diwali to minimise dangerous air pollution.
And even Sydney in Australia, famous for its New Year firework
display, is considering replacing the pyrotechnics with drones
to reduce the risk of bushfires, according to reports in
Australian media last year.
One company hoping to capitalise on such a shift is
British-based Celestial, which puts on displays flying up to 300
drones in formation and says the technology is developing fast.
In a practice session seen by Reuters at an airfield in
Somerset, England, a drone swarm morphed into shapes such as a
walking toy robot, a dancer and a butterfly flapping its wings.
"Our goal ... is to supersede fireworks - We love fireworks but
they blow things up, they're single-use, they make things catch
on fire and they scare animals," Celestial co-founder John
Hopkins told Reuters.
"What we're trying to do is create something, creatively, more
interesting, green because we use renewable energy sources and
we don't scare the animals."
(Reporting by Stuart McDill; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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