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
When officials in New York City began to piece together how Superstorm Sandy had managed to flood the subway last October, they
When officials in New York City began to piece together how Superstorm Sandy had managed to flood the subway last October, they
admin
2016-03-10
21
问题
When officials in New York City began to piece together how Superstorm Sandy had managed to flood the subway last October, they found that the storm had driven a bundle of lumber from a construction site right through a plywood(夹板)barrier built around one of the entrances to the South Ferry subway station. It was a seemingly random act of violence, but in reality, the barriers probably never stood a chance. With a standing-water height of up to 1.5 metres at Battery Park on Manhattan’s southernmost tip, the rising tide skirted(绕过)a second plywood blockade and poured over a waist-high concrete wall at another entrance.
Preparing for hurricanes is hard. But the fact that core infrastructure in a global metropolis such as New York was protected by plywood should trigger alarms. South Ferry is a reminder of just how ill-prepared New York was for a storm of this magnitude—and it underscores the scale of the challenge ahead.
It wasn’t supposed to be this way. New York City has engaged scientists while working to reduce emissions and prepare for a warmer world. In 2008, Mayor Michael Bloomberg created the New York City Panel on Climate Change, and in August the city council gave the panel a permanent place in its long-term planning process. PlaNYC, a planning document that offers a vision of what the city will look like in 2030, includes a comprehensive chapter on climate change. But none of this prepared the city for Sandy. Nor could it have—the surge that Sandy brought ashore was off the charts.
Legions(大批)of scientists are now assessing what happened and projecting future risks. The latest, and perhaps best, estimate, based on models by researchers at Princeton University in New Jersey and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, is that the storm surge at Battery Park was a l-in-500-year event. But the size of a surge is not the only measure of a dangerous storm, nor is Battery Park the only location that matters. Scientists also know that the baseline(基线)is changing with the climate. All of which leaves the city, its residents and businesses in the unenviable position of rebuilding in the face of an uncertain future.
As this process unfolds, several lessons can be learned from Sandy in many places, premises erected under newer building codes survived the storm with only limited damage at ground level. A new generation of waterfront parks and developments also weathered the storm quite well, showing that there are ways to manage the risks of occasional flooding. But given the predicted sea-level rise and the likelihood of more powerful storms in the future, a more comprehensive strategy is clearly needed.
Some positive signs have emerged. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is updating the city’s flood maps, and the city has announced steps to strengthen its building codes. As directed by Congress last year, the agency will also be incorporating long-term climate projections, including for sea-level rise, into its rate structure for the federal flood insurance programme. Until now, the programme has served as a government subsidy for risky coastal development—so risky that private insurance companies refused to enter the market.
One of the big questions facing the region is whether to spend billions of dollars on a storm-surge barrier. Scientists and engineers should clearly include a barrier in their analysis, but a surge is just one of many threats posed by many kinds of storm. Moreover, how fast New York bounces back will depend not only on damage to infrastructure but also on the strength of social networks and the general health of the communities affected. Farther afield, as sea levels rise, coastal cities will have little choice but to learn to live with more water than they are used to today.
The author suggests that coastal cities faced with climate change should be______.
选项
A、optimistic
B、insensitive
C、adaptable
D、contemplative
答案
C
解析
推断题。由题干中的coastal cities定位至最后一段。该段最后一句提到coastal cities will havelittle choice but to learn to live with more water than they are used to_today,即海滨城市别无选择,只能学会在比当今更多的水环境中生活,即学会适应越来越多的水环境,因此作者的建议是海滨城市应该具有很强的适应性,因此选择[C]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/Bb7O777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
______isthemostimportanteconomicactivityinCanada.
Whenschoolstartseachyear,themostimportantquestiononthemindsofparentsandchildrenis,whowillmyteacherbe?Thec
Whenschoolstartseachyear,themostimportantquestiononthemindsofparentsandchildrenis,whowillmyteacherbe?Thec
Wheredoesmoralitycomefrom?ThroughoutthehistoryofWesterncivilizationthinkershaveusuallyansweredeitherthatitcome
UsingMindMapstoDevelopOurWritingBesidesreadingmore,thinkingmuch,seekingmuch,usingmindmapsisalsoanimport
TheGesturalTheoryofLanguageTheinitiallanguageinhominidswasgestural,andcommunicationusingthehandswasactual
NowadaysvisitstoprestigiousuniversitieslikePekingUniversityaregainingpopularity.Alargenumberofpeoplebelievesuch
Farmersinthedevelopingworldwouldhatepricefluctuations.Itmakesthemhardtoplanahead.Butmostofthemhavelittle【M
ThefollowingaretheindividualdifferencesthataffectthesecondlanguageacquisitionEXCEPT______.
TheSeattleTimesCompanyisonenewspaperfirmthathasrecognizedtheneedforchangeanddonesomethingaboutit.Inthene
随机试题
黏性土料的碾压试验作()关系曲线。
A碧绿B黄绿高档西湖龙井叶底()色
公务员任免与升降是实现——的保证。
超薄皮片移植适用于
氯化钠等渗当量是指
根据政府采购法律制度的规定,采用邀请招标方式的,采购人应当从符合相应资格条件的供应商中随机邀请()以上的供应商,并以投标邀请书的方式,邀请其参加投标。
某科室里有老李和小陈两个人,老李平时做事按部就班,小陈做事非常积极,有时做完了自己手头上的工作还会去帮助同事做些杂事,老李说小陈做事高调,小陈很郁闷,如果你是小陈的同事。你会怎么做?
如果2006年1-10月份中国固定资产投资中利用外资共2995.2亿元.国家预算内资金比2005年同期增长了33.1%,则2005年1-10月份国家预算内资金为()。
党领导人民探索社会主义建设道路,经历艰辛和曲折,在理论和实践上取得了一系列重要成果。其理论成果的重要意义在于()
VBA中,如果没有显式声明或使用符号来定义变量的数据类型,则变量的默认类型为
最新回复
(
0
)