The State of New Jersey is at various states of drafting policies that impact the state's water supplies for drinking, the ecology and the economy.
In most cases, strengthening revisions are DECADES overdue. NJ Environmental Federation is pushing for updates and stronger policies that protect our water resources:
NJEF is working to ensure the State of New Jersey considers options that include
Running Out of Water
Uncontrolled growth and sprawl is moving the state towards complete "build out". According to the New Jersey Clean Water Council, it is anticipated that New Jersey will be in a severe water deficit by 2020.
According to Joseph Maraziti, a former chairman of the State Planning Commission, this is not a future problem; this is a problem we have today. Some local areas of the state are already running dry due to overdevelopment and an inability to recharge ground and surface waters.
Additional Resources
Climate Change and Water Fact Sheet (pdf, 127 Kb)
Unregulated Contaminants Fact Sheet (pdf, 151 Kb)
Precautionary Principle Fact Sheet (pdf,103 Kb)
Bottled Water Power Point (pdf, 690 Kb)
Drinking Water Testing and RTK Fact Sheet (pdf, 133 Kb)
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Salt Water Intrusion
Coastal areas are starting to see the severe effects of over pumping water and overdeveloping the land. Several years ago, Cape May was forced to build a desalination plant as salt was intruding their freshwater wells. This was the result of over pumping to meet the growing population demands. Keansburg is now considering this as well. These plants create rate shock, utilize tremendous amounts of energy, as well as produce toxic brines that harm aquatic life.
New Jersey needs more sustainable options if we want to ensure our water is safe, plentiful, and affordable in the future.
Sustainable Energy Choices for New Jersey
Future energy choices will have a dramatic impact on the state's water supplies. Currently: