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
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage q
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage q
admin
2010-09-25
42
问题
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)
Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1. For questions 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked [A], [B], [C] and [D]. For questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.
Pollution: A Life and Death Issue
One of the main themes of Planet under Pressure is the way many of the Earth’s environmental crises reinforce one another. Pollution is an obvious example--we do not have the option of growing food, or finding enough water, on a squeaky- clean planet, but on one increasingly tarnished and trashed by the way we have used it so far.
Cutting waste and clearing up pollution cost money. Yet time and again it is the quest for wealth that generates much of the mass in the first place. Living in a way that is less damaging to the Earth is not easy, but it is vital, because pollution is pervasive and often life-threatening.
Air: the World Health Organization (WHO) says three million people are killed worldwide by outdoor air pollution annually from vehicles and industrial emissions, and 1.6 million indoors through using solid fuel. Most are in poor countries.
Water: diseases carried in water are responsible for 80% of illnesses and deaths in developing countries, killing a child every eight seconds. Each year 2.1 million people die from diarrhoeal(痢疾的) diseases associated with poor water:
Soil: contaminated land is a problem in industrialized countries, where former factories and power stations can leave waste like heavy metals in the soil. It can also occur in developing countries, sometimes used for dumping pesticides. Agriculture can pollute land with pesticides, nitrate-rich fertilizers and slurry from livestock. And when the contamination reaches rivers it damages life there, and can even create dead zones off the coast, as in the Gulf of Mexico.
Chronic Problem
Chemicals are a frequent pollutant. When we think of chemical contamination it is often images of events like Bhopal that come to mind. But the problem is widespread. One study says 7~20% of cancers are attributable to poor air end pollution in homes and workplaces. The WHO, concerned about chemicals that persist and build up in the body, especially in the young, says we may "be conducting a large-scale experiment with children’s health".
Some man-made chemicals, endocrine (内分泌) disruptors like phthalates (酞酸盐) and nonylphenol--a breakdown product of spermicides (杀精子剂), cosmetics and detergents--are blamed for causing changes in the genitals of some animals. Affected species include polar bears--so not even the Arctic is immune. And the chemicals climb the food chain, from fish to mammals, and to us.
About 70,000 chemicals are on the market, with around 1,500 new ones appearing annually. At least 30,000 am thought never to have been comprehensively tested for theft possible risks to people.
At fast glance, the plastic buckets stacked in the comer of the environmental NGO office look like any others. But the containers are an unlikely weapon in one poor community’s fight against oil companies which they say are responsible for widespread ill-health caused by years of pollution. The vessels are used by a network of local volunteers, known as the Bucket Brigade, to gather air samples in neighborhoods bordering oil refineries, as part of a campaign to monitor and document air pollution which they believe is coming from the plants.
In South Africa, as in many developing and newly industrialized countries, legislation on air pollution has failed to keep pace with mushrooming industries. So local residents, like many in poor communities around the globe, have faced the problem of investigating their claim that industries on their doorsteps are making them sick.
Trade-off
But the snag is that modern society demands many of them, and some are essential for survival. So while we invoke the precautionary principle, which always recommends erring on the side of caution, we have to recognize there will be trade-offs m be made.
The pesticide DDT does great damage to wildlife and can affect the human nervous system, but can also be effective against malaria(疟疾). Where does the priority lie?
The industrialized world has not yet cleaned up the mess it created, but it is reaping the benefits of the pollution it has caused. It can hardly tell the developing countries that they have no right to follow suit.
Another complication in tackling pollution is that it does not respect political frontiers. There is a U.N. convention on trans-boundary air pollution, but that cannot cover every problem that can arise between neighbors, or between states which do not share a border. Perhaps the best example is climate change--the countries of the world share one atmosphere, and what one does can affect everyone.
For One and All
One of the principles that are supposed to apply here is simple---the polluter pays. Sometimes it is obvious who is to blame and who must pay the price, but it is not always straightforward to work out just who is the polluter, or whether the rest of us would be happy to pay the price of stopping the pollution.
One way of cleaning up after ourselves would be to throw less away, designing products to be recycled or even just to last longer.
Previous generations worked on the assumption that discarding our waste was a proper way to get rid of it, so we used to dump nuclear materials and other potential hazards at sea, confident they would be dispersed in the depths.
We now think that is too risky because, as one author wrote, "there’s no such place as ’away’, and there’s no such person as the ’other’."
Irritating Air
Despite recent improvements, however, the health problems are still there. A 2002 medical study, carried out by Durban’s Nelson Mandela School of Medicine and a U.S. university, found that an abnormally high 52% of students and teachers at a primary school bordering the Engen plant suffered from asthma(哮喘). It found that increases in air pollution tended to aggravate asthma symptoms in children.
The petrol producers do not dispute the findings but argue that researchers were unable to establish a causal link between air pollution and the high prevalence of asthma among the school population.
For the community, the next step is to take legal action. But, according to internationally recognized environmentalist Bobby Peek, targeting the companies would be difficult as it would be near-impossible to prove that illnesses suffered were caused by pollution coming from a particular plant.
Mr. Peek, who grew up beneath Engen’s stacks, says the activists are now considering taking action against the authorities. "We are now looking at suing the government on constitutional grounds, for failing to ensure our right to protection from a harmful environment as stipulated in the constitution," he said.
Legislative Change
A new batch(批) of environmental laws, the National Air Quality Management Act, has just been passed by the South African parliament to replace outdated 1965 legislation with fighter controls and tougher sanctions.
Martinus van Schalkwyk, the minister of environmental affairs and tourism, visited the south Durban basin earlier this year and said there were measures in place to improve the situation. "I share the anger and frustration of this community. It is long overdue," he told the South African Broadcasting Corporation.
The local authorities have also established a "Multi-Point Plan" for the area. They say it is a powerful model for tackling pollution and points to a 40% reduction in sulphur dioxide emissions in recent years.
What do local residents claim for?
选项
A、They are sick because of years of pollution.
B、They are sick because of industries on their doorsteps.
C、They are sick because of pesticides from agriculture.
D、They are sick because of air pollution.
答案
B
解析
根据题干信息词local residents定位到第一个小标题下的末句。即:当地居民声称他们门前的工业导致他们生病,故选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/wPz7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
We’veallusedthermometerstomeasuretemperaturebutsometimesweneedtomeasuretemperatureinplacesyoucan’tput
Thecommoncoldistheworld’smostwidespreadillness,whichisprobablywhytherearemoremythsaboutitthananyoftheothe
HitlerandhismenhadtheirhatredtowardsJewsandcolorpeople.Oursocietyisriddledwithsuchhatredbased【S1】_
FourMinutesthatGetYouHiredBayStateralwayswantstobeateacher.Withthehelpoffriendswhoteachatschool,shel
ScientistssaythewarmingoftheEarth’satmospherehasbeguntoaffectplantandanimallifearoundtheworld.Scientistsfrom
A、He’sfulfilledhisgraduationrequirements.B、Hewantstochangehisfieldofstudy.C、Heneedstogetbettergrades.D、Henee
OnaNovemberdayin1999,FrederickMiller,terminallyillwithlungandbraincancer,ateabowlofapplesaucelacedwithbar
A、She’samaid.B、Shesellsstovesandrefrigerators.C、She’sanapartmentmanager.D、She’sarealestateagent.C语义推断题女士在男士一家离
A、Paintalandscape.B、Giveanoralreport.C、Takeafinalexam.D、Buyseveralbooks.B事实细节题Martin博士谈到她的这门课没有期末考试,但是到学期末每个同学需要做
Afolkcultureissmall,isolated,cohesive,conservative,nearlyselfsufficientgroupthatishomogeneousincustomandracew
随机试题
影响气道阴力的主要因素是()
十二指肠溃疡好发部位是
患者,女,36岁。诊断为风湿热8年。门诊坚持每月肌注长效青霉素120万U。近日因受凉后感冒,出现发热、咽痛、流涕、心悸症状。来社区门诊看病。查体:T38.2℃,咽红,扁桃体Ⅱ度肿大,心率109次/分,无杂音,双肺音清,未及啰音。社区医院医生进一步处理包
中断合同分两种情况,即承包商中断合同和开发商中断合同。遇到下列情况时,承包商有权要求中止合同的是()。
唐代武则天“助脂粉钱二万贯”营造的卢舍那佛像是()的象征。
我们知道,法国国旗是由蓝、白、红三条纵向的色带组成的。实际测量可以发现,三条色带中蓝色带最宽,白色带最窄,红色带宽度居中。出现这种现象的原因是:
设A是n阶正定矩阵,证明:|E+A|>1.
Youaretowriteinnolessthan120wordsaboutthetitle"TheProportionofWomen’sIncometoMen’sIncome".Youshouldbasey
BiologyWhydoestheprofessormentionthewoodthrush?
A、HewaswonderingifthespeakerwasusedtolivinginAmerica.B、Hewastryingtoshowfriendlinesstothespeaker.C、Hewante
最新回复
(
0
)