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
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Australia’s Growing Disaster Far
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below. Australia’s Growing Disaster Far
admin
2019-06-10
76
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13 which are based on Reading Passage 1 below.
Australia’s Growing Disaster
Farming is threatening to destroy the soil and native flora and fauna over vast areas of Australia. What price should be put on conservation?
Australia’s National Greenhouse Gas Inventory Committee estimates that burning wood from cleared forest accounts for about 30 per cent of Australia’s emissions of carbon dioxide, or 156 million tonnes a year. And water tables are rising beneath cleared land. In the Western Australian wheat belt, estimates suggest that water is rising by up to 1 metre a year. The land is becoming waterlogged and unproductive or is being poisoned by salt, which is brought to the surface. The Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) reckons that 33 million hectares have been degraded by salination. The federal government estimates the loss in production from salinity at A$200 million a year. According to Jason Alexandra of the ACF, this list of woes is evidence that Australia is depleting its resources by trading agricultural commodities for manufactured goods. In effect, it sells topsoil for technologies that will be worn out or redundant in a few years. The country needs to get away from the ’colonial mentality’ of exploiting resources and adopt agricultural practices suited to Australian conditions, he says.
Robert Hadler of the National Farmers’ Federation does not deny that there is a problem, but says that it is ’illogical’ to blame farmers. Until the early 1980s, farmers were given tax incentives to clear land because that was what people wanted. If farmers are given tax breaks to manage land sustainably, they will do so. Hadler argues that the two reports on land clearance do not say anything which was not known before. Australia is still better off than many other developed countries, says Den Graetz, an ecologist at the CSIRIO, the national research organisation. ’A lot of the country is still notionally pristine,’ he says ’It is not transformed like Europe where almost nothing that is left is natural.’ Graetz, who analysed the satellite photographs for the second land clearance report, argues that there is now better co-operation between Australian scientists, government officials and farmers than in the past.
But the vulnerable state of the land is now widely understood, and across Australia, schemes have started for promoting environment friendly farming. In 1989 Prime Minister Bob Hawke set up Landcare, a network of more than 2000 regional conservation groups. About 30 per cent of landholders are members. ’It has become a very significant social movement,’ says Helen Alexander from the National Landcare Council. ’We started out worrying about not much more than erosion and the replanting of trees but it has grown much more diverse and sophisticated.’
But the bugbear of all these conservation efforts is money. Landcare’s budget is A$110 million a year, of which only A $6 million goes to farmers. Neil Clark, an agricultural consultant from Bendigo in Victoria, says that farmers are not getting enough. ’Farmers may want to make more efficient use of water and nutrients and embrace more sustainable practices, but it all costs money and they just don’t have the spare funds,’ he says.
Clark also says scientists are taking too large a share of the money for conservation. Many problems posed by agriculture to the environment have been ’researched to death’, he says. ’We need to divert the money for a while into getting the solutions into place’. Australia’s chief scientist, Michael Pitman, disagrees. He says that science is increasingly important. Meteorologists, for example, are becoming confident about predicting events which cause droughts in Australia. ’If this can be done with accuracy then it will have immense impact on stocking levels and how much feed to provide,’ says Pitman. "The end result will be much greater efficiency.’
Steve Morton of the CSIRO Division of Wildlife and Ecology says the real challenge facing conservationists is to convince the 85 per cent of Australians who live in cities that they must foot a large part of the bill. "The land is being used to feed the majority and to produce wealth that circulates through the financial markets of the cities,’ he says. One way would be to offer incentives to extend the idea of stewardship to areas outside the rangelands, so that more land could be protected rather than exploited. Alexander agrees. ’The nation will have to debate to what extent it is willing to support rural communities,’ she says. ’It will have to decide to what extent it wants food prices to reflect the true cost of production. That includes the cost of looking after the environment.’
Questions 1-8
Look at the following statements (Questions 1-8) and the list of people below.
Match each statement with the correct person, A-G.
Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.
NB You may use any letter more than once.
List of People
A Jason Alexandra B Robert Hadler
C Dean Graetz D Helen Alexander
E Neil Clark F Michael Pitman
G Steve Morton
Weather research can help solve conservation problems.
选项
答案
F
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/LsAO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
His______oftheassignedpageswasitselfamuchtoolengthysummary;byallaccounts,ifhewishestosucceedbythestandards
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationiscertainlyaviableoption,Linebutshouldberegardedonlyasthat--anopt
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationiscertainlyaviableoption,Linebutshouldberegardedonlyasthat--anopt
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationiscertainlyaviableoption,Linebutshouldberegardedonlyasthat--anopt
Allmammalsrequiresleep;itisanessentialpartoflife.Forgiraffes,twohoursaLinedayisenough.Forbats,thatnumber
Directions:Eachofthefollowingreadingcomprehensionquestionsisbasedonthecontentofthefollowingpassage.Readthepas
ThispassageisadaptedfromTheAmericanRepublic:Constitution,Tendencies,andDestinybyO.A.Brownson,1866.Thean
ThispassageisadaptedfromTheAmericanRepublic:Constitution,Tendencies,andDestinybyO.A.Brownson,1866.Thean
Metis,theinnermost______ofJupiter,completesafullrevolutionaroundthisgiantplaneteverysevenhours.
Mostseismologistsassumethatfollowingamajorearthquakeanditsaftershocks,thefault(abreakinEarth’scrustwherepress
随机试题
试论侦查与强制措施。(中山大学2009年研)
党的思想路线中,最核心的内容是
关于处方书写说法错误的是
班级常规管理建立的检查监督系统,包括以下检查监督方式()
马赛克留给中国大众的印象,或是广泛使用在建筑外墙、卫浴装修中的装饰建材,或是图像被模糊成一个个小格子,少有人想起它的艺术属性。其实在西方,镶嵌艺术历史悠久,尤以镶嵌壁画最多。近现代,镶嵌艺术在墨西哥、西班牙、俄罗斯、美国、日本等国都有杰出展现。每个国家因应
英国剑桥大学专家称,早期人类的大脑比现代人类更大,而且现代人类比早期人类身材矮小10%。这项研究颠覆了此前的理论——现代人类伴随着进化变得更高、更强壮。科学家称,这种人类进化衰减性出现在过去一万年左右,很可能是由于农业的出现导致的,农业耕作出现之后,人类受
去年4月,股市出现了强劲反弹,某证券部通过对该部股民持仓品种的调查发现,大多数经验丰富的股民都买了小盘绩优股,而所有年轻的股民都选择了大盘蓝筹股,而所有买了小盘绩优股的股民都没买大盘蓝筹股。如果上述情况为真,则以下哪项关于该证券部股民的调查结果也必定为真?
Youmaysaythatthebusinessofmarkingbooksisgoingtoslowdownyourreading.(31)probablywill.That’soneofthe(32)fo
Youwillhearanotherfiverecordings.Fivepeoplearetalkingabouttheirreasonsforjoiningaparticularcompany.Foreac
Whatistheminimumnumberofmatchesyoucanremovefromthisdiagramtoleavejust2squares?
最新回复
(
0
)