The Planet in 2011 今天的地球
The Planet in 2011 今天的地球
英語學(xué)習(xí)點(diǎn): Conservation Vocabulary 環(huán)保詞語
This coming Sunday is World Environment Day. So what is the state of the planet in 2011?
This time last year, engineers in the USA were still battling to stop the largest oil spill of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico.
A year on, engineers are trying to prevent a different kind of ocean leak – a radiation leak.
Following the nuclear meltdown at Fukishima in Japan, scientists are struggling to stop contaminated water from reaching the sea.
But for many environmentalists the key challenge remains climate change.
收聽與下載
According to the International Energy Agency, carbon emissions reached a record level last year. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is aiming for greenhouse emissions to peak by 2020, but there are growing doubts about whether the necessary curbs will be implemented.
A recent report by the charity Oxfam highlights the impact global warming will have on food security. Food prices could almost double in the next twenty years, with climate change the main cause.
But there is one good piece of news for conservationists, relating to deforestation. According to the think-tank Chatham House, global illegal logging has fallen by nearly a quarter since 2002.
That fits nicely with the theme for this year's World Environment Day: "Forests - Nature At Your Service".
Glossary 詞匯表 (收聽發(fā)音, 請(qǐng)單擊英語單詞)
- oil spill 石油泄漏
- radiation leak 輻射泄漏
- nuclear meltdown 核泄漏
- contaminated (被)污染的
- environmentalist 環(huán)保人士
- climate change 氣候變化
- carbon emissions 碳排放
- curb 控制
- greenhouse (gas) emissions 溫室氣體排放
- global warming 全球變暖
- food security 食品安全
- conservationist 保護(hù)自然人士
- deforestation 砍伐森林
- illegal logging 非法砍伐