Today’s Solutions: December 20, 2025

Restaurants in California are banding together to fight climate change in an intriguing way. Concerned eateries can sign on to the Restore California Renewable Restaurant program, which pledges to add a 1% surcharge to diners’ bills and then use the money to incentivize farmers to implement more carbon-friendly food production practices.

The payments would go to projects helping farmers and ranchers move away from conventional farming practices, such as monoculture crops, chemical fertilizers, leaving bare ground exposed, and heavy plowing, to renewable practices that include minimal soil disturbance, cover-cropping, crop rotation, adding compost, and planting perennial crops/trees. For every ton of carbon removed from the atmosphere, farmers receive $10. Apart from drawing down tons of greenhouse gases each year, these changes also have the added benefit of creating better, healthier, tastier food for diners to enjoy.

The surcharge is voluntary, which means that diners can opt out, but as more people look for ways to make a difference in the fight to protect the environment, it seems likely to catch on.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Try this simple breathing exercise to rid yourself of cold hands and feet

Do you often find that your hands and feet are colder than the rest of your body? This can be perplexing, especially when gloves ...

Read More

Roman jars reveal the secrets of ancient winemaking

Archaeologists are still putting the full story of human history together. From the discovery of a Viking shipyard in Sweden to the Sistine Chapel ...

Read More

Cancer detection breakthrough revealed via butterfly-inspired imaging

In the world of sensory perception, other creatures frequently outperform humans. A research team has created an imaging sensor that looks into the elusive ultraviolet ...

Read More

Advancements in vision restoration: CRISPR gives hope to patients 

In a revolutionary development, CRISPR gene editing emerged as a beacon of hope for people suffering from genetic blindness. The results of a Phase ...

Read More