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For Immediate Release:
2007-05-30
For More Information:
Contact Matt Elliott
(609) 394-8155 ext. 310

New Report: Global Warming Will Affect Every Corner of New Jersey

Trenton, NJ – As the New Jersey Legislature considers passage of a ground-breaking bill to cap global warming pollution, Environment New Jersey released a new report today detailing the impact of global warming across the state.  The report, “An Unfamiliar State: Local Impacts of Global Warming in New Jersey,” shows how life in New Jersey could be irrevocably altered by rising seas, severe flooding, health-threatening temperatures and air pollution, pest infestation, species decline and challenges to critical public infrastructure. 

“Without decisive action to cut global warming pollution, we face the prospect of a dramatically altered future that could completely change our way of life, and not for the better,” said Suzanne Leta Liou, Global Warming and Clean Energy Advocate for Environment New Jersey.  “The New Jersey Legislature has an opportunity of a lifetime to help solve this urgent problem by passing the Global Warming Response Act.” 

The Global Warming Response Act (A3301/S2114), introduced by Assemblywoman Linda Stender and Senator Barbara Buono, requires a mandatory reduction of the state’s global warming pollution to below 1990 levels by 2020 and 80 percent below current levels by 2050.  The bill passed unanimously through the Assembly and Senate environment committees, and has garnered 49 Assembly co-sponsors and 17 Senate co-sponsors.  Legislative leaders are now deciding whether or not to hold votes on the bill for final passage by the end of June, before the legislature breaks for the summer.

According to “An Unfamiliar State,” if global warming pollution across the world continues to rise, New Jersey will be a different place in 100 years.  Many of the impacts in New Jersey are projected to affect the mid-Atlantic region as a whole.   

Local impacts include:

The Shore: Inundated Boardwalks and Receding Beaches

    • North Wildwood could be turned into an island, separated from Wildwood Crest by shallow flooding from across New Jersey Avenue. 

    • Cape May Beach would face accelerated erosion, and on average, Shore beaches could retreat inland between 50 and 150 meters.

New York Metropolitan Area: Vital Transit Infrastructure Under Threat

    • Both tunnels to New York, PATH and subway stations, the New Jersey Turnpike, Newark and LaGuardia Airports and the shipping terminals at Port Newark and Port Elizabeth are subject to increasingly severe interruptions due to more tidal surge flooding and stronger storms.

Urban New Jersey: Heat-Related Deaths

    • In Newark, the number of “hot days” – days above 90 degrees F – could more than double by 2020, quadruple by mid-century. and rise to between 40 and 120 days per year by 2080.

Suburban New Jersey: Worsened Smog Pollution

    • Extended heat waves would enhance the conditions that lead to the formation of ground-level ozone, or smog – already a serious threat to public health across New Jersey.  In ten of New Jersey’s suburban counties, including Hunterdon, Ocean, Somerset and Mercer counties, smog-related deaths are predicted to increase between 3 to 10 percent above current levels by 2050. 

Highlands Corn and Pinelands Blueberries: Longer Growing Seasons, More Threats to Crop Health

    • Global warming could create or exacerbate risks – including pests, weeds and excess heat – that could pose serious challenges to corn farmers’ livelihoods in the Highlands.

    • As temperatures continue to rise, the southern range of the blueberry could move north.  Higher temperatures are also projected to increase evaporation of water from farm soils, leading to increased potential for drought and more extremes of heat and precipitation that could damage blueberry crops.

The Delaware River Valley: More Dangerous Floods

    • New Jersey has been getting wetter; the average annual precipitation during the 1971-2005 period was more than three inches higher than the average from 1895-1970.  The average annual precipitation from 2001-2006 was another inch higher still.  This level of precipitation will likely continue frequent flooding in the Delaware River Valley.

Camden: Water Supply at Risk

    • Camden could find increasing levels of salt water in its drinking water, since global warming-induced sea-level rise would push the salt front higher up the Delaware River.  If the salt front reaches the Camden area, the city may have to shut its water supply wells and find an alternate source of water.  If the salt front recedes higher, it could also affect the water supply in Philadelphia.

The Delaware Bay: Reduced Numbers of Migratory Birds

    • Earlier springs and warmer winters could alter the timing of migration for birds across the world, including the Red Knot, one of the most ambitious species of migratory birds on earth that stops in the Delaware Bay for spawning.

The Pinelands: More Attacks from the Southern Pine Beetle

    • Species are likely to decline in the Pinelands as their habitable range shifts northward out of the Pinelands region.  And as the climate warms and the habitable range of the destructive Southern Pine Beetle moves northward, wider beetle infestations could occur. 

The severity of the likely impacts of global warming will depend on how much global warming pollution the world emits in the years to come.  However, if the world begins to reduce emissions now – and achieve steep reductions in global warming pollution in the years ahead – we can still avoid the worst impacts of global warming.  To do its “fair share” to reduce emissions, the United States must stabilize emissions at or below today’s levels by the end of this decade, reduce emissions by at least 15 to 20 percent below today’s levels by 2020 and reduce emissions by at least 80 percent by 2050.

“While the Bush administration has resisted any serious efforts to tackle global warming, the New Jersey Legislature can lead the way for change,” said Leta Liou.  “The strongest global warming pollution cap in the nation is in the hands of our state leaders.  We must take swift action to pass this bill right away.”