Experts in the food industry are thinking a lot about trash these days. Food

游客2023-07-07  9

问题     Experts in the food industry are thinking a lot about trash these days. Food waste has been a serious problem for restaurants and grocery stores—with millions of tons lost along the way as crops are hauled hundreds of miles, stored for weeks in refrigerators and prepared on busy restaurant assembly lines.
    Restaurants, colleges, hospitals and other institutions are compensating for the rising costs of waste in novel ways. " We have all come to work with this big elephant in the middle of the kitchen, and the elephant is this ’ It’s okay to waste’ belief system," said Andrew Shackman, president of LeanPath, a company that helps restaurants cut back food waste.
    Freshman students at Virginia Tech were surprised this year when they entered two of the campus’s biggest dining halls to find there were no cafeteria trays. "You have to go back and get your silverware and your drink, but it’s not that different," said Caitlin Mewborn, a freshman. "It’s not a big deal. You take less food, and you don’t eat more than you should. " Getting rid of trays has cut food waste by 38 percent at the cafeterias, said Denny Cochrane, manager of Virginia Tech’s sustainability program.     Before the program began, students often grabbed whatever looked good at the buffet(自助餐), only to find at the table that their eyes were bigger than their stomachs, he said.
    That same phenomenon often happens at Oregon’s Portland International Airport. Busy travelers often discard half-eaten meals into trash cans, adding dozens of tons of waste that the airport must pay the city to haul away. Now the airport is working on a three-year-old program to install food-only trash cans. The food waste is collected in biodegradable(能生物降解的)bags and given to the city to use as compost(堆肥), said Stan Jones, environmental protection manager at the airport.
    Besides being environmentally friendly, the changes may save the airport money. It costs about $ 82 to have one ton of trash hauled from the airport to the city landfill. But food waste costs about $ 48 a ton to haul. Last year, the airport was able to separate 165 tons of food from the trash stream, which would add up to $ 5,600 in hauling fees alone. [br] The program operated at Virginia Tech______.

选项 A、does not work on freshman students
B、has cut food waste at the cafeterias
C、makes students take more food at the buffet
D、makes students eat less than they should

答案 B

解析 事实细节题。本题考查有关弗吉尼亚科技大学运作项目的细节。原文第三段提到,弗吉尼亚科技大学运作的项目就是取消食堂里的餐具托盘,这使得学生不得不回去取自己的餐具和饮料,冈而吃的比以前少,浪费也随之减少。B)中和定位句都出现了cut food waste,故为答案。A)“对大一新生不起作用”和C)“使得学生从自助餐取走的食物更多”均和原文意思相反,故排除;D)“使学生比他们应该吃的要少”是对原文“you don’t eat more than you should”意思的曲解,原文的意思是这种措施使得学生不会多拿他们吃不完的食物,这一点从第四段中的“their eyes were bigger than their stomachs”也可以得到印证,故排除。
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