CHERRY HILL, NJ — Cherry Hill, like other towns in New Jersey, used to go through a lot of plastic bags. But a state ban is keeping about 22.7 million of them out of the trash every year in the township, according to a recent study.
Those bags would stretch 3,943 miles laid side by side and require 114,458 gallons of oil to produce, according to the report from Environment America — a national network of 30 state environmental groups.
The statistics are based on Cherry Hill’s estimated population of 76,723 residents.
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It’s been nearly two years since New Jersey banned stores and supermarkets from handing out single-use plastic bags to their customers, and the debate over the ban’s effectiveness continues to rage. Read more: Is New Jersey’s Plastic Bag Ban Working? Studies Give Mixed Reviews
Gov. Phil Murphy signed the ban into law in 2020. It became active in May 2022. Learn more about what is allowed — and what isn’t — on the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection’s website.
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Supporters of the ban have said it is reducing pollution and litter, arguing that New Jersey isn’t the only state with a bag ban — and they’re working all across the nation. Ten states had single-use plastic bag bans in effect last year, with Colorado and Rhode Island joining the list on the first day of 2024.
New Jersey’s ban prevents 2.7 billion million bags from entering the trash stream each year — enough to circle the Earth 19.11 times, according to Environment America.
Other environmental advocates have agreed that the bag ban is working in New Jersey.
“It is obvious that New Jersey’s well-designed single-use plastic bag ban has successfully reduced plastic bag use and associated litter and pollution,” said JoAnn Gemenden, executive director at the New Jersey Clean Communities Council.
“When I drive around or go shopping, it’s rare for me to see a single-use bag blowing in the wind or discarded in a shopping cart,” Gemenden said. “Because of this law, New Jersey has considerably less visible litter.”
Critics have countered that plastic bag bans are a burden on businesses and their customers — and they aren’t nearly as effective as their supporters claim.
A recent study said that since the state is now relying on heavier reusable bags — most of which are made of non-woven polypropylene — three times more plastic (by the pound) is being produced than before the ban. Researchers also said that greenhouse gas emissions from the production of those bags have skyrocketed by 500 percent compared to 2015 levels.
The study comes from Freedonia Custom Research — a market-research firm. Advocates have bashed the analysis, pointing out that it was paid for by a group that “represents the interests of U.S.-based manufacturers and recyclers of plastic bags.”
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