Buzz Killer: Caffeine Pollutes. Can Bacteria Help?

5 Ways You Can Clean Up Your Caffeine Habit

Blogs
Coffee pours from a carafe into coffee cup
Caffeinated beverages, from coffee and tea to energy drinks, contribute to caffeine pollution, but there are ways to help clean up the problem. (Getty Images)

I love coffee. I love it so much that I don’t even want to tell you this: 

Caffeine is an emerging global pollutant. It enters our waterways through the wastewater system, and impacts water quality and marine life. And while coffee grounds are often used as a soil amendment, caffeine is a killer for emerging seedlings. 

There. I said it. I hate to be a buzz kill.

But there are things consumers can do to reduce the pollution; we list several of them below. And scientists are looking at innovative strategies for removing the contamination. 

Decaffeinating coffee waste

Researchers at the University of California, Davis, and University of Alabama are investigating how caffeine-addicted bacteria may be used as a cleanup crew for caffeine. Such pollution stems not only from the production and consumption of caffeinated beverages, but also pharmaceutical and nutritional supplements

Grad student Gabriel Subuyuj in the lab
UC Davis graduate student Gabriel Subuyuj measures in the lab how a bacterium he's studying grows using caffeine as the only carbon source. (Courtesy Gabriel Subuyuj)

Some bacteria can grow on caffeine and break it down. Gabriel Subuyuj, a UC Davis graduate student of microbiology in the lab of Professor Rebecca Parales, is studying which genes are necessary for bacteria to detect, regulate and break down caffeine. 

“Once better understood, the bacteria may be able to work as a pollution sensor to detect caffeine. It could also be used as a probiotic of sorts– essentially decaffeinating coffee waste as it eats it,” Subuyuj said.

The work is still in its beginning stages and years away from on-the-ground applications. In the meantime, Subuyuj says there are many ways people can reduce the environmental pollution that comes with their morning (and noon, and late afternoon) cup.

5 ways to clean up your caffeine habit

1) Stop drinking caffeinated beverages.

Since at least 90 percent of adults drink coffee, tea or energy drinks regularly, I imagine some of you are laughing (or crying) right now. So consider reducing your consumption, and move on to No. 2.

Students at a coffee shop outdoors in downtown Davis
Students gather at a coffee shop in downtown Davis. (Gregory Urquiaga/UC Davis)

2) Reuse and recycle.

Some businesses, artists and engineers are finding creative ways to reuse and recycle grounds. For example, companies in the United Kingdom are collecting coffee pulp and spent grounds to use in textiles, ink, aromatics, and biofuels. Coffee shops and manufacturers could partner with such companies to reuse their coffee waste.

3) Don’t dump spent grounds or leftover drink down the sink.

Compost or dispose of grounds in the trash rather than send caffeine down the drain and into the wastewater system.

4) Reduce plastic pollution, too.

The plastic and disposable cups that often go with caffeine habits is a different but related type of pollution we can reduce. Remember to bring your own cup to the café, or use one of the many low-waste techniques of brewing at home.

5) Support government funding to update sewage facilities. 

“Investing in outdated treatment plants is how we can actually solve it,” Subuyuj said. “In the U.S., outdated water treatment plants, especially in bigger cities, is the main source of caffeine entering waterways. That would also reduce other contaminants to the environment, like heavy metals and microplastics.”  

 

Subscribe to the Science & Climate newsletter

Media Resources

Kat Kerlin is an environmental science writer and media relations specialist at UC Davis. She’s the editor of the “What Can I Do About Climate Change?” blog. kekerlin@ucdavis.edu. @UCDavis_Kerlin

Primary Category

Secondary Categories

Environment Science & Technology Science and Climate

Tags