首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Paying for Nature A)How much are the birds of heaven worth? How about the lilies of the field? Or clean air and water, verdant f
Paying for Nature A)How much are the birds of heaven worth? How about the lilies of the field? Or clean air and water, verdant f
admin
2013-10-08
32
问题
Paying for Nature
A)How much are the birds of heaven worth? How about the lilies of the field? Or clean air and water, verdant forests and untouched grassland, healthy coral reefs and lush mangroves? By the environmentalist’s accounting, they’re invaluable because nature has a worth all its own. But to business, untouched nature typically hasn’t had a value—at least not one that could be put in a ledger.
B)Until now. Many greens—and a growing chorus of corporate suits—are arguing that nature in its own right provides economically valuable services that underpin(巩固)business. A virgin forest is pleasant to look at, of course, but it also prevents soil erosion and improves water quality at no cost—valuable if you happen to own a beverage plant downstream that depends on clean water. That same forest might provide a habitat for bees, which can pollinate(授粉)plants in surrounding cropland—a vital function if you run a coffee plantation nearby. By this reckoning, nature provides "ecosystem services" whose benefits for business are increasingly measurable in hard, cold dollar figures. "All the things that nature does for us fuel our prosperity," says Peter Kareiva, chief scientist for the Nature Conservancy(TNC), a Washington-based environmental group.
C)Until recently, the concept of ecosystem services was mentioned only in obscure scientific journals, the province of a few ecologists trying to figure out the dollar value of the atmosphere. But the threat of government action on carbon emissions, insistent shareholder pressure on green issues and growing concern over limited natural resources have prompted an increasing number of companies to examine their ecological numbers just as closely as they would any other part of their balance sheets. Last month, Dow Chemical took the trend to a new level, announcing a five-year, $ 10 million collaboration with TNC to eventually tally up the ecosystem costs and benefits of every business decision. The Michigan:headquartered company will look to make environmental factors part of its profit-and-loss statements—a move that could signal to other companies that nature can no longer be ignored. "Our planet’s natural resources are more and more under threat," says Dow CEO Andrew Liveris. "But protecting nature can be a profitable corporate priority and a smart global business strategy."
D)Historically, conservationists and corporations were usually on opposite sides of the environmental debate, and few greens wanted to see the nature they loved tainted by consideration of dollar figures. Yet as climate change emerged as a concern in the 1990s—and, with it, the accounting of carbon dioxide emissions—even the deepest green began to understand that nature’s value would really be understood only once it was quantified. A 1997 study in the journal Nature attempted to estimate the value of the planet’s ecosystem services: forests and oceans, air and climate regulation, even cultural and recreational benefits. The researchers came up with a very rough figure of $ 33 trillion—nearly twice the global gross national product at the time.
The Flowers of the Forest
E)More recently, scientists working for the UN’s Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and a just published study, "The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity," have drilled down to find hard numbers on specific natural services. Scientists from the World Wildlife Fund(WWF)looked at a coffee plantation in Costa Rica and found that flowers near forests received twice as many bee visits and twice as much pollen as flowers far from trees—meaning that extra bee pollination was worth an additional $62 000 a year, or 7% of the farm’s income. Razing those trees to allow cattle grazing would earn only $24 000 a year. "There’s a library of similar case studies that show the economic impact of nature conservation," says Taylor Ricketts, WWF’s director of conservation science. "We only value something when we measure it."
F)Dow and TNC have already been involved in a smaller ecosystem-services project in Sao Paulo, which helped lay the groundwork for their new partnership. Some 9 million people in the city get their drinking water from the nearby Cantareira system in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest. The forest has been under pressure from logging, agriculture and ranching for decades, and the resulting deforestation harms both water quality and the wildlife that depends on the forest. So Dow donated $1.5 million through its charitable foundation to support a joint effort with TNC and Sao Paulo water utilities to restore 865 acres of forest surrounding the Cachoeira reservoir. Not only will that money protect biodiversity, generate carbon credits and create green jobs for locals living near Cachoeira, but it should also cut the amount of sediment(沉淀物)flowing into the water system by over 60%. That will benefit people and businesses in Sao Paulo—including Dow.
G)The details of the larger collaboration between TNC and Dow are still being worked out, but Dow will donate $ 10 million to TNC over the next five years. In exchange, TNC scientists will apply scientific models, biodiversity analysis and ecosystem—services estimates to assess Dow’s business decisions. If Dow decides to build or expand a plant, TNC will be able to advise the company about the economic value of the ecosystem impacts of those plans, positive and negative. The partnership will begin with pilot programs at three Dow manufacturing plants—at least one of which will be in the US—but the ultimate aim is to make ecosystem services an essential part of Dow’s entire business model. Numbers are hard to come by, in part because the collaboration is meant to generate fresh data on ecosystem services, but Liveris sees that $ 10 million as an investment in Dow’s future—one he expects will pay off by preparing the company for the prospect of tighter environmental regulations and scarcer natural resources. "I think that in 10 years we’ll look back and wonder why we didn’t do this earlier," he says.
H)The Dow-TNC collaboration is just the latest piece of business news to suggest that environmental responsibility and corporate success aren’t always opposed. In 2007, Goldman Sachs released a landmark report showing that companies that were considered leaders in environmental, social and governance policies tended to outperform the general stock market and their peers. Other major international companies have begun experimenting with ecosystem services. SABMiller is working with TNC in Bogota to protect the basin that provides the Colombian capital with much of its drinking water. SABMiller’s Colombian subsidiary, along with several other Bogota businesses, has begun paying to protect the watershed and ensure a supply of clean water. So far they’ve spent about $ 700 000 and estimates that the investment will pay off—through reduced water-treatment costs— in four to five years. "In the past, the big concern for companies on the environment was just to avoid risk," says Glenn Prickett, TNC’s chief external-affairs officer and the point person for the Dow deal. "The difference is now they can look at nature as a source of business values. "
I)If it all sounds too good to be true—or too fuzzy—it’s because ecosystem services are just being defined as a concept. Services beyond water—like biodiversity—are harder to price, and corporations won’t stop pushing back against government environmental regulations they consider onerous. But in a world with a growing population and demand for resources, smart companies will learn to value ecosystem services, not just exploit them. "It’s not a choice to play a zero-sum game anymore," says Liveris. "The economy and the environment are interdependent." And they’re united by one color: green.
The final goal of the partnership between TNC and Dow is to add ecosystem services to Dow’s business model.
选项
答案
G
解析
同义转述题。题干给出的信息是大自然保护协会和陶氏化学公司合作的最终目标。题干中的final goal是对定位句中的ultimate aim的同义转述。由定位句可知,其最终目标是使生态系统服务成为陶氏化学公司整个商业模式中必不可少的一部分,与题干所给信息相符,因此可知信息出自G)段。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/3X27777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Organisedvolunteeringandworkexperiencehaslongbeenavitalcompaniontouniversitydegreecourses.Usuallyitisleftto【C
Market【C1】______donotcomenaturallytoChineseofficials.Forthepastfouryearstwohugediversion【C2】______havebeenunde
Market【C1】______donotcomenaturallytoChineseofficials.Forthepastfouryearstwohugediversion【C2】______havebeenunde
ApproachestoAdaptingtothesociety1.很多学生感觉毕业后很难融入社会2.分析这一问题产生的原因3.我的看法
Theshortergrowingseasonsexpectedwithclimatechangeoverthenext40yearswillendangerhundredsofmillionsofalreadypo
Theprogramwas______(如此有趣以至于孩子们眼睛直盯着屏幕).
A、Gettingrichquickly.B、Distinguishingoneself.C、Respectingindividualrights.D、Doingcredittoone’scommunity.B录音结尾提到,大部分
A、Thewomanenjoyedthemovieverymuch.B、ThewomansawahorrormovielastSaturday.C、Themanaskedthewomantobecarefula
Thescariestpartofbuyingausedcarisnotbeingcompletelysureofwhatconditionit’sin.Acarthat’sbeeninamajoracci
A、Thetraveltime.B、Thetravelroute.C、Themeetingtime.D、Thetrafficcondition.A女士说,如果有约会,她会把路上消耗的时间也弄清楚。故选A。
随机试题
多媒体技术的最直接、最简单的体现是()。
安全接地电阻值要求小于
以下关于细菌内毒素的说法正确的是
突发重大动物疫情应急组织体系不包括
关于复验,以下表述正确的是( )。
在下列情况下可以汇集成检验批的是()。
暂缓通过年审的导游人员,通过()后,方可重新上岗。
县级以上人民政府旅游主管部门有权对下列事项实施监督检查()。
从所给的四个选项中,选择最合适的一个填入问号处,使之呈现一定的规律性:
A、30B、20C、60D、0C选项均为数字,因此听音时应关注与数字相关的信息。题目问女士每周抽多少根烟。会话中,男士问女士是否把自己描述为重度吸烟者。女士回答说,她不会把每周抽3包20支装的烟称之为重度抽烟。由此可见,女士每周抽20x3=60根,
最新回复
(
0
)