Sugary Drinks: Orange Juice vs T-Rex (height in cans)
See how your sugary drinks habit scales when comparing orange juice to t-rex (height in cans). See how your daily sodas, juices or energy drinks stack up against sugar-intake limits, and visualize the total volume as hot tubs or water coolers.
Size My Sugary Drinks
240mL glass (no added sugar): 110 kcal, 21g sugar (84% WHO RDA)
Your Habit Scale
Time Period | Equivalent in T-Rex (height in cans) |
---|---|
1 Year | 21.9 T-Rexes |
5 Years | 109.5 T-Rexes |
25 Years | 547.5 T-Rexes |
How It's Calculated
- 1. Your input: 2 Orange Juice per day.
- 2. We assume each orange juice has a representative height of 12.0 cm.
- 3. This results in a total stacked height of 0.24 meters per day.
- 4. One t-rex is 4 meters (≈ 13.1 feet) tall.
- 5. The final result is found by dividing your total stacked height over time by the height of one t-rex.
Why It's Important
Your annual consumption is reaching monstrous new heights! Stacked one on top of the other, your soda cans (or equivalent bottles) would be as tall as 21.9 T-Rex(s). You’re constructing a fizzy skyscraper that could challenge a T-Rex or give a Wookiee a run for his money!
Why is this towering monument so mind-boggling? It transforms an everyday sip into an epic construction project. Each can or bottle is a brick in your personal skyscraper of indulgence, contributing to your overall sugar intake from beverages. This prompts thoughts about the health risks of high sugar consumption and the environmental impact of single-use containers.
Do you need help with your habit? See our list of international helplines and resources.
The Science Behind It
Sugary beverages—from sodas and energy drinks to juices and iced teas—are a primary source of added sugars in many diets. This calculator helps you understand your consumption by translating it into total sugar, calories, and tangible comparisons, based on nutritional data and health guidelines.
1. Free Sugars and Health Risks
The sugars in these drinks are "free sugars," which are rapidly absorbed by the body. Unlike sugars in whole fruit, they lack fiber, leading to quick spikes in blood sugar and insulin. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends limiting daily free sugar intake to just 25 grams to reduce the risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and dental cavities.
2. Fructose Metabolism and the Liver
Many sugary drinks are high in fructose (often from high-fructose corn syrup or sucrose). The liver is the primary site for fructose metabolism. When consumed in excess, especially in liquid form, fructose can overwhelm the liver, promoting the creation of fat (de novo lipogenesis). This contributes to elevated triglycerides and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
3. "Empty" Calories and Weight Gain
Liquid calories from sugary drinks are less satiating than calories from solid food. This means they often don't trigger the same fullness signals, making it easy to consume excess energy without realizing it. This contributes directly to a positive energy balance and weight gain over time.
4. Nutritional Data Accuracy
The calorie and sugar data for each beverage in this calculator are based on standard values from the USDA FoodData Central database. This ensures that the calculations for total calories, sugar grams, and RDA percentages are grounded in reliable, standardized nutritional information.
Sources:
- WHO Guideline: Sugars intake for adults and children. (2015)
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. FoodData Central.
- Malik, V.S., Popkin, B.M., Bray, G.A., Després, J.-P., Willett, W.C. and Hu, F.B. (2010). Sugar-Sweetened Beverages and Risk of Metabolic Syndrome and Type 2 Diabetes. Diabetes Care.
- Stanhope, K. L. (2016). Sugar consumption, metabolic disease and obesity: The state of the controversy. Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences.