Does drinking ice water burn calories?
By razor123
@razor123 (979)
India
September 2, 2008 10:58am CST
For anyone trying to lose weight, this question is an exciting one! If you simply want to know if your body burns calories warming up the water, the answer is yes. But if you want to know if drinking a lot of ice water can help you lose weight, or keep weight off, this "yes" needs to be qualified with some calculations.
Ice water won't replace a healthy diet, but it will burn a few extra Calories.
First of all, calories are case-sensitive. There are calories and then there are Calories. Calories with a big "c" are the ones used to describe the amount of energy contained in foods. A calorie with a little "c" is defined as the amount of energy it takes to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius.
What most people think of as a Calorie is actually a kilo-calorie: It takes one Calorie to raise the temperature of 1 kilogram of water 1 degree Celsius. So when you drink a 140-Calorie can of cola, you are ingesting 140,000 calories. There is no cause for alarm, because the conversion applies across the board. When you burn 100 Calories jogging a mile, you are burning 100,000 calories.
So, considering that the definition of a calorie is based on raising the temperature of water, it is safe to say that your body burns calories when it has to raise the temperature of ice water to your body temperature. And unless your urine is coming out ice cold, your body must be raising the temperature of the water. So calories are being burned.
Let's figure out exactly what you're burning when you drink a 16-ounce (0.5 liter) glass of ice water:
The temperature of ice water can be estimated at zero degrees Celsius.
Body temperature can be estimated at 37 degrees Celsius.
It takes 1 calorie to raise 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius.
There are 473.18 grams in 16 fluid ounces of water.
So in the case of a 16-ounce glass of ice water, your body must raise the temperature of 473.18 grams of water from zero to 37 degrees C. In doing so, your body burns 17,508 calories. But that's calories with a little "c." Your body only burns 17.5 Calories, and in the grand scheme of a 2,000-Calorie diet, that 17.5 isn't very significant.
But let's say you adhere to the "eight 8-ounce glasses of water a day" nutritional recommendation. In 64 ounces of water, there are 1,892.72 grams. So to warm up all that water in the course of a day, your body burns 70,030 calories, or 70 Calories. And over time, that 70 Calories a day adds up. So, while you definitely shouldn't depend on ice water consumption to replace exercise or a healthy diet, drinking cold water instead of warm water does, in fact, burn some extra Calories!
3 people like this
4 responses
@regal_aeros (2605)
• Singapore
17 Dec 08
AWESOME!!
i have been drinking lots of cold water, considering the climate over here (SUMMER).
I hope my body works exactly like the way you calculate it out =)
One can only hope *hee*
Thanks for the tip.
@chiyosan (30183)
• Philippines
22 Oct 08
i have heard about this but i guess it still is not proven... i have consumed a lot of water recently and it helped me burn calories or flush out excessive fats since i did not go on a special diet but have just increased my water intake; the water is lukewarm by the way...
i guess everything depends on how our body would react to some thing.
@padu19 (1441)
• India
2 Sep 08
that was a good information.. Even am trying to reduce my weight.. I rarely drink warm water.. aM addicted to cold water, so can't help it.. Now that i have some use due to cold water too!!
@tismesara (113)
• United States
7 Sep 08
the bad thing about it, from what i have been told by a physician, is that you dont absorb the cold water as well as room temp water.
just something fyi!!!!