this post was submitted on 31 Jul 2025
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Not all your actions are equally meaningless. If you take short showers the lower demand for water and gas/electricity won't do much but for certain alternatives a critical mass is needed and adding your weight to that mass can matter. Take diary for example, soy milk has existed for ages but the increased demand the last 20 years result in increased supply. Same goes for alternative meats. More people biking increases the need for infrastructure, if enough people make that decision that will change road design which will in turn result in it being less attractive to drive. Same with public transport.
Climate laws and regulations will have a much more traceable impact, but the untraceable results of your individual action also has an impact.
If you care about having a large impact without large sacrifices there are articles online that go deeper into this.
Please explain to me how personal (urban) use could ever produce substantive changes in resource management and climate change. I'd love to see it.
Let's use California water as a case study. In a dry year, urban use is 11 % and agriculture use is 61%. Explain to me how collective action by all the urbanites to reduce water consumption by 90% would meaningfully move the needle on water management.