FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: Caryn Shinske (609) 984-1795 |
DEP Encourages Participation in America Recycles Day Events to Help Boost New Jersey Recycling Rates (16/P109) TRENTON – In an effort to boost residential recycling rates statewide, the Department of Environmental Protection is encouraging communities across New Jersey to participate in activities for the national America Recycles Day tomorrow, Commissioner Bob Martin announced.
“The Christie Administration has ambitious goals in place to achieve recycling milestones and demonstrate New Jersey’s leadership in protecting the environment,” Commissioner Bob Martin said. “That’s why America Recycles Day is an important reminder that Reduce, Reuse, Recycle remains the guiding principle in how we can keep our communities clean while curtailing the amount of waste going to landfills. Everyone should do their part.” In 1987, New Jersey established the Statewide Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Act, with an ambitious goal for the municipal solid waste stream to achieve a 50 percent recycling rate. The act also required New Jersey’s 21 counties to develop recycling plans requiring the recycling of at least three designated recycling materials, in addition to leaves, as well as other recycling strategies and provisions. To date, the state recycles 13 million tons of material every year. Those efforts generate far-reaching environmental and economic impacts, besides reducing the need for new landfills and incinerators. In 2006, for example, New Jersey saved more than 235 trillion BTUs of energy — the equivalent of nearly 2 billion gallons of gasoline, and the amount of energy that would be required to power more than 2 million homes for one year. Additionally, a study by the Northeast Recycling Council and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency found that recycling employs approximately 27,000 people and adds almost $6 billion annually to New Jersey’s economy. Nationally, recycling employs almost 500,000 people and generates more than $105 billion every year. To learn more about recycling in New Jersey, visit: http://www.nj.gov/dep/dshw/recycling/ For tips on how to reduce waste production, visit: http://www.nj.gov/dep/dshw/recycling/source_red.htm For information on what each of New Jersey’s 21 counties recycles, visit: http://www.nj.gov/dep/dshw/recycling/design_recy_county.pdf |
|