Today’s Solutions: December 18, 2025

It’s difficult for us to consider the long-term, downriver consequences of the simplest of our actions. It isn’t because we’re indifferent; it’s because there are several complicated results to everything we do.

Take eating too much meat. When our bodies have more protein than they need, amino acids break the excess down into nitrogen, which we then pass into our sewage system, which makes it out to the ocean, where all that nitrogen has negative consequences. These include toxic algal blooms, oxygen-starved “dead zones,” and polluted drinking water.

Thankfully, for such a simple cause, there’s a simple solution: eat less meat.

Researchers from the University of California Davis found that eating less meat could reduce our nitrogen output in the waterways, especially among Americans.

Protein consumption in the United States ranks among the highest in the world. If Americans were to reduce their meat consumption to recommended levels, the country would reduce its nitrogen excretion rates by 12 percent.

“It turns out that many of us don’t need as much protein as we eat, and that has repercussions for our health and aquatic ecosystems,” says lead author Maya Almaraz, a research affiliate with the Institute of the Environment at the University of California, Davis. “If we could reduce that to an amount appropriate to our health, we could better protect our environmental resources.”

Coastal cities along the east and west coasts are liable to release the most nitrogen into the sea. This is detrimental to these areas where fishing is also an important industry. However, these areas could also easily reduce their burden on the ocean by simply choosing a healthier, more balanced diet.

“It’s interesting to think about possible ways to cut into those nitrogen losses beyond expensive technology,” says Almaraz. “Dietary changes are a healthy and cheap way to do it.”

Even the simplest of actions could benefit you and your environment in the long run.

Source Study: ESA — The impact of excessive protein consumption on human wastewater nitrogen loading of US waters – Almaraz – – Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment – Wiley Online Library

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

More US states and cities are boosting minimum wages in 2026. What does it me...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM As the federal minimum wage remains frozen at $7.25 an hour, unchanged since 2009, cities and states across ...

Read More

3 organization hacks for Type B brains that actually work

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Scroll through any productivity blog or time-management book, and you’ll find a familiar formula: rigid routines, detailed planners, ...

Read More

An easy hack to counteract the harmful health effects of sitting all day

Humans are not designed to spend the entire day seated. Nonetheless, billions of us do it at least five days per week, as Western ...

Read More

Ensuring no pet goes hungry: The rise of pet food banks in the UK

Pete Dolan, a cat owner, recalls the tremendous help he received from Animal Food Bank Support UK, a Facebook organization that coordinates volunteer community ...

Read More