The Bergen Record

New Jersey a leader in reducing plastic bag pollution

- Your Turn Jennifer M. Coffey is the executive director of the Associatio­n of New Jersey Environmen­tal Commission­s. Ed Potosnak is the executive director of the New Jersey League of Conservati­on Voters.

New Jersey’s Plastic Pollution Reduction Act is an absolute success. In less than a year from the law’s May

2022 implementa­tion, ghost plastic bags fell off the top 10 list of most common litter items collected in cleanups. On average, Americans use 500 single-use plastic bags annually. In New Jersey, we drasticall­y reduced our plastic consumptio­n by cutting an average of 594 plastic bags per person and took a giant leap toward clean, reusable commerce.

Polystyren­e food containers, commonly referred to as Styrofoam, were also banned along with plastic bags. Polystyren­e leaks cancer-causing pollutants into food when heated, resulting in a toxic bouillabai­sse of chemicals in your coffee, soup, and alongside your side of fries. New Jersey’s residents and environmen­t are safer and healthier because of the Plastic Pollution Reduction Act.

A recent comprehens­ive national study by Environmen­t America, cited by the World Economic Forum, recognizes New Jersey’s plastic bag ban as the most effective of the 10 states in America with such bans.

“A sample of 160 New Jersey grocery stores reported plastic bag consumptio­n data to the New Jersey Food Council (NJFC), a grocery store industry group, before and after the ban was in place, suggesting sampled grocery stores saved 55 million bags per month in total, which translates to

343,750 plastic bags saved per store per month and ~11,500 plastic bags saved per store per day,” according to the Environmen­t America report.

The bottom line is: The Garden State is home to the most successful and strongest Plastic Pollution Reduction Act in the country. New Jersey’s law is the product of citizen action and more than 180 local ordinances that banned plastic bags and other single-use items. New Jersey is now cleaner, greener, and healthier because we are drasticall­y reducing plastic pollution.

Plastic is, however, a big-money business. As we transition away from fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy and electric vehicles, the fossil fuel industry is working to reinvent and reinvest itself in the creation of more single-use plastic. The fossil fuel industry sees plastics as a key revenue savior. That explains the recent shenanigan­s of a plastic bag advocacy industry group that produced its own report and, without any scientific citations, sought to discredit the effectiveness of New Jersey’s Plastic Pollution Reduction Act. Since we’re the most effective, they’re coming for us. New Jersey is smarter than that, though.

Garden State residents can see the difference. There are phenomenal­ly fewer plastic bags stuck in trees and clogging storm sewers than there were before 2022. And we’re not done yet.

We’re going to continue to advance policies to improve public health and protect our environmen­t by reducing excessive packaging, making it easier to reuse and refill containers and bottles, and most importantl­y of all hold plastic polluters responsibl­e. We now have microplast­ics in the food we eat, the air we breathe, the water we drink, and in every habitat on land and sea where scientists look. Enough is enough.

For the sake of our children and grandchild­ren, New Jersey is going to hold polluters responsibl­e and continue to lead the way toward a plastic pollution-free future.

If you see any stores that you believe are not in compliance with the plastic bag ban or other aspects of New Jersey’s Plastic Pollution Reduction Act, please report it to 877-Warn NJDEP.

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 ?? Jennifer M. Coffey and Ed Potosnak Guest columnists ??
Jennifer M. Coffey and Ed Potosnak Guest columnists

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