
Open your pantry, and you’ll likely find it: a teetering mountain of “reusable” heavy-duty blue and green shopping bags. Most of them arrived with curbside grocery orders you never asked for, and you’ll likely never use them all
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Trenton NJ, Nearly three years after New Jersey implemented one of the nation’s strictest plastic bag bans, reports suggest the policy has had significant “backfire” effects. While the law successfully removed billions of thin, single-use bags, it has led to a dramatic increase in total plastic consumption and greenhouse gas emissions due to a reliance on heavier, “reusable” bags.
Key Reasons the Ban is Facing Criticism
Critics and recent studies point to several unintended consequences that have complicated the ban’s environmental goals:
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Tripled Plastic Consumption: A 2024 study by the Freedonia Group found that while total bag volume dropped by 60%, the total weight of plastic consumed for bags nearly tripled. This is because the “reusable” bags provided at checkout are made of much thicker non-woven polypropylene (NWPP), which uses roughly 15 times more plastic than the banned thin bags.
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Greenhouse Gas Spike: The production of these heavier bags is more resource-intensive. The same study estimated a 500% increase in greenhouse gas emissions related to bag production compared to 2015 levels.
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The “Reusable” Bag Glut: Many shoppers forget their bags and purchase new ones during each trip, leading to a surplus of thick bags at home. In order to have a positive environmental impact, these bags must be reused at least 16 times, but research suggests most are discarded or misplaced after only 2 or 3 uses.
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Grocery Delivery Challenges: Because New Jersey also banned paper bags at large grocery stores, delivery and pickup services are forced to use heavy reusable bags for every order, causing massive accumulation in customers’ homes.
Legislative Response
As of February 2025, some New Jersey lawmakers are pushing to address these issues:
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Repeal Efforts: Assemblyman John Azzariti Jr. introduced legislation (A5338) to repeal the ban on single-use plastic and paper bags, citing the “unintended consequences” that negate environmental benefits.
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Paper Bag Reintroduction: Other proposed bills, such as Senate Bill 964, aim to allow grocery stores to use paper bags specifically for delivery and curbside pickup to reduce the pile-up of heavy plastic totes.
NJ Bag Ban: 3-Year Reality Check
| Category | Pre-Ban (2021) | Post-Ban (2025) |
| Thin Plastic Bags | High Volume | Eliminated (In Large Stores) |
| Total Plastic Weight | Baseline | 3x Increase (due to heavy reusables) |
| Paper Bags | Allowed | Banned (at large grocers) |
| Household Clutter | Low | Significant “Bag Glut” |
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the next thing these libtards will come up with is that 3 ply toilet paper requires too many trees and NJ will only allow one ply…… which would require us to fold it 4x and use MORE
This is obviously an AI generated FAKE article.
It is settled science that central planners are never wrong.
“Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”
Thomas Paine, 1776
No research. Just thinking out loud.
I actually have the answer to this!
Both of my parents were scientists so sometimes I have the urge to experiment with things. I left an ordinary paper bag outside in the elements for about four years.
Other than the fact that it was a little bit dirty being outside so long, the paper bag was basically untouched, meaning that I was able to open it up and use it like it was brand new. There was no degradation to it at all.
Try Hinge