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
Five Eco-crimes We Commit Every Day Ask yourself this: how green am I really? You might think you are doing your bit for the
Five Eco-crimes We Commit Every Day Ask yourself this: how green am I really? You might think you are doing your bit for the
admin
2013-08-12
68
问题
Five Eco-crimes We Commit Every Day
Ask yourself this: how green am I really? You might think you are doing your bit for the environment, but even if you shun bottled water, buy local produce and reuse your plastic bags, chances are that you have some habits that are far more environmentally damaging than you realise.
1. Coffee
Take coffee. The average cup of black filter coffee is in fact responsible, for 125 grams of CO
2
emissions. Of this, two-thirds comes from production and most of the rest from brewing.
Choosing the instant coffee reduces that figure to around 80 grams. Yet that still means a six-a-day caffeine habit clocks up more than 175 kilograms of CO
2
each year. That’s the equivalent of a flight across Europe—from London to Rome, say. Add milk, and the methane(甲烷)produced by dairy cows means you increase your coffee’s climate-changing emissions by more than a third.
It doesn’t end there, though. The environmental group WWF has calculated that it takes 200 litres of water to produce the coffee, milk, sugar and cup for just one cup of regular takeout hot coffee. So if everyone ditched their pre-work coffee fix that would do wonders for the planet.
2. Toilet paper
Then there’s toilet paper. Like coffee companies, toilet paper manufacturers have long provided options for environmentally conscious consumers. Top of the list is 100 per cent recycled paper, which avoids much of the energy use and emissions associated with harvesting and processing new wood. Every kilogram of recycled tissue saves some 30 litres of water and between 3 and 4 kilowatt-hours of electricity. Since 1 kilowatt-hour of electricity is responsible for around 500 grams of CO
2
, that means a saving of 1.5 to 2 tonnes of CO
2
per tonne of tissue.
Recycled toilet tissue is most widely used in Europe and Latin America, but even there it still only accounts for 1 in 5 rolls. In the US it isn’t a common product. The average American gets through 23 toilet rolls each year, adding up to more than 7 billion rolls for the country in total. Of these, just 1 in 50 are from 100 per cent recycled fibres. As Greenpeace pointed out earlier this year, this not only wastes energy and water, it also puts additional logging pressure on old-growth forest in North America, forests which play a vital role in supporting native biodiversity.
The reason toilet roll made from new wood is preferred is quite simple: its long fibres produce the softest paper. Every time paper is recycled, the fibres become shorter, making for an increasingly rough bathroom experience. Recycled paper can’t compete on softness so some use of new wood by the toilet paper industry may be inevitable. Sourcing Forest Stewardship Council(FSC)approved toilet tissue will help to ensure that any new wood fibres that are added to the mix have come from sustainable forestry projects that protect, rather than threaten, old-growth forest ecosystems.
3. Fast fashion
Next on the list of everyday crime is fast fashion. In 1990, global textile production stood at 40 million tonnes. By 2005 that figure had risen to around 60 million tonnes. This surge in manufacture and consumption has been helped by fast-moving fashion trends and sweatshop price tags. As a result, much of the clothing we buy ends up being discarded long before it has worn out. In the UK, where the average item is worn for less than a third of its useful lifespan, more than a million tonnes of clothing are thrown away each year. The bulk of it ends up buried in landfill sites.
Even the global economic crisis appears to have had little impact on our love affair with fast fashion; UK clothing sales this summer were up 11 per cent on the same time last year. If we can’t entirely kick the habit, we can at least dispose of the evidence in a greener way.
At present, in the UK and US, only around a quarter of unwanted textiles are reused or recycled. Recycled textiles have many uses, from mattress(床垫)fillings to bags and shoes, but the truly green alternative is reuse. The energy required to collect, process and sell a reused item of clothing is only 2 per cent of the energy required to manufacture a new garment. Every kilogram of virgin cotton preserved by reusing second-hand clothing saves 65 kilowatt-hours of energy, equivalent to about 32.5 kilograms of CO
2
.
4. Laundry
Fast fashion has created textile mountains in many homes, yet the environmental cost of this excessive consumption has an even less conspicuous twin: the energy used to launder it all. Cleanliness has become a touchstone of domestic life since advertisers convinced us that our shirts must always be "whiter than white", our sheets should forever smell of spring flowers, and that to be dressed in freshly laundered clothes at all times is a badge of success. We live in a "wear once and wash" culture. In fact, only about 7.5 per cent of the average laundry load in the UK is thought to be heavily soiled. Much of the rest is made up of items that are stuffed into the washing machine simply because they are on the floor instead of in the wardrobe. This habit is shockingly wasteful in terms of water, detergents(洗涤剂)and energy.
One study found that over 80 per cent of the CO
2
emissions produced during the life cycle of a single blouse arose from cleaning and drying it. The percentage can be even higher for items made of cotton, as they tend to require far more energy-hungry drying.
It is easy to see how these emissions stack up. A full load in a washing machine uses around 1.2 kilowatt-hours of electricity per cycle and tumble drying clocks up a further 3.5 kilowatt-hours, resulting in over 2 kilograms of CO
2
emissions per wash. With four or five loads per household per week, the total annual emissions from each home can easily pass the half-tonne mark. That’s a significant proportion of the 10-tonne annual emissions of the average European. Line drying, washing at lower temperatures and ensuring full rather than partial loads will all help to reduce laundry emissions. For the largest cuts, simply washing less frequently is the way to go.
5. Food wastage
Of all the facets of overconsumption that plague both human society and the global environment, food wastage is the most shocking. US households throw away around 30 per cent of their food, worth $48 billion every year. Similar levels of wastage are seen in Europe. In the UK, some 6.7 million tonnes of food is binned annually. Most of this joins the layers of unwanted clothing in landfill sites, where it decays, emitting the powerful greenhouse gas methane. Potatoes top the pile, with 359,000 tonnes going uneaten each year. Bread and apples are not far behind. Meat and fish are next, accounting for over 160,000 tonnes. A staggering 4.8 billion grapes go the same way, as do 480 million yogurts. The annual cost to UK consumers of all this waste is £10 billion and the cost to the environment is the equivalent of an extra 15 million tonnes of CO
2
.
During the life cycle of cotton clothes, they emit more greenhouse gas because they need far more______
选项
答案
energy-hungry drying
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/ZP97777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Thinktwicenexttimesomeoneasksyoufor"fiveminutesofyourtime"itcouldcostyoumorethanyouthink.ABritishprofesso
Thinktwicenexttimesomeoneasksyoufor"fiveminutesofyourtime"itcouldcostyoumorethanyouthink.ABritishprofesso
A、BylearningEnglishalone.B、BylearningEnglishhardbeforetest.C、Bystudyingathersparetime.D、Bylearningalittlereg
He’slyingtherewithoutsayinganything;______(与其说他累了倒不如说他饿了).
IsCollegeReallyWorththeMoney?TheRealWorldEsteGriffithhaditallfiguredout.WhenshegraduatedfromtheUniversit
Itisoftenclaimedthatnuclearenergyissomethingwecannotdowithout.Weliveinaconsumersocietywherethereisanenorm
A、Shelostherkeyonherwayhome.B、Shelockedherselfoutofthehouse.C、Shewaitedforherhusbandforalongtime.D、Hera
A、1.B、2.C、3D、4B选项表明,本题与数字有关,故听音时应留意与数字相关的信息,做好笔记。对话中女士问男士的保险额(coverage)涵盖几个人,男士回答说就是他和他的妻子,也就是两个人,故答案为B)。
随机试题
取某药物1滴,加氯仿10ml,振摇,使溶解,取出2滴,加氯仿2ml与25%.三氯化锑的氯仿溶液0.5ml,即显蓝色,渐变成紫红色。该药物是
2015年6月,刘璋向顾谐借款50万元用来炒股,借期1个月,结果恰遇股市动荡,刘璋到期不能还款。经查明,刘璋为某普通合伙企业的合伙人,持有44%的合伙份额。对此,下列哪些说法是正确的?(2015年卷三第71题)
下列关于混凝土工程计量与支付的说法正确的是()。
民航自动气象观测设备各探测传感器安装在()。
用现金流贴现模型计算股票内在价值时,当计算的内在收益率小于必要收益率时,可以考虑购买这种股票。()
发行人运行不足3年的,应披露( )。
某企业生产的甲产品价目表上每件售价320元,若客户购买100件(含100件)以上可得到每件20元的商业折扣。2004年11月10日,某客户购买甲商品200件,协议规定的现金折扣条件为2/10,1/20,n/30,该企业于同年11月18日收到该笔款项,则应给
下列选项中,应以投放危险物质罪定罪处罚的有()(2012年一专一第45题)
已知学生的记录由学号和学习成绩构成,N名学生的数据已存入a结构体数组中。请编写函数fun,该函数的功能是:找出成绩最低的学生记录,通过形参返回主函数(规定只有一个最低分)。已给出函数的首部,请完成该函数。注意:部分源程序在文件PROG1.C中。
在“student”表中,“姓名”字段的字段大小为10,则在此列输入数据时,最多可输入的汉字数和英文字符数分别是()。
最新回复
(
0
)