首页
登录
职称英语
[originaltext]Interviewer: Hello, everyone. Welcome to our programme Worldly Wi
[originaltext]Interviewer: Hello, everyone. Welcome to our programme Worldly Wi
游客
2023-12-17
62
管理
问题
Interviewer: Hello, everyone. Welcome to our programme Worldly Wise. Today our attention turns to pollution. We are lucky to have with us here our guest, Miss Catherine White, the youngest woman director of the Environmental Protection Agency. Good morning, Miss White.
Catherine: Good morning.
Interviewer: Well, Miss White, nowadays, most people believe it is the air outdoors that presents us, particularly those most sensitive to unhealthy air, with the greatest risk. But according to your group’s recent research, there seems to be something different.
Catherine: Yes, our research shows that it is not the air outdoors that takes us the risk. However, it is actually the air inside our homes, schools, and other buildings that is most harmful.
Interviewer: Really?
Catherine: Really! According to a recent report made by my colleague, 50% of all illnesses is aggravated or caused by polluted indoor air. The indoor air is anywhere from 2 to 10 times more hazardous than the outdoor air. And the indoor air quality epidemic has become the nation’s number one environmental health problem.
Interviewer: Why is such a big problem not noticed before?
Catherine: Because it was not as serious as today. As a result of the energy crisis of the 1970s, with energy-efficiency in mind, today’s homes and buildings are built air-tight. Their air-tight construction keeps airborne pollutants trapped inside, and nature’s air-cleansing agents outside. Statistics for asthma problems began rising sharply around the same time that homes and buildings began to be built his way. In fact, a recent study found that the allergen level in super-insulated homes is 200% higher than it is in ordinary homes.
Interviewer: Besides the insulation of homes, is there anything else that worsens the indoor air?
Catherine: Yes, carpets, molds, mildews, fungi, dust mites, and many many others. A baby crawling on the floor inhales the equivalent of 4 cigarettes a day!
interviewer: But most people spend most of their time inside.
Catherine: Yeah. Some are over 90%. In this case, the indoor air is going to affect our health far more than the outdoor air. Virtually everyone is affected, especially asthmatics and others who are particularly sensitive to allergens and dirty particles in the air. Keep in mind that no home or building is immune to the indoor air quality epidemic. 6 out of 10 homes and buildings are "sick".
interviewer: Sick? Do you mean the air in the house is in bad quality?
Catherine: Not only bad, but it is hazardous to your health. And even the Environmental Protection Agency’s very own headquarters, constructed a few years ago, was determined to be "sick". Many EPA employees could not work inside the building without becoming sick. If the headquarters of the EPA can fall victim to the indoor air quality epidemic, the very government agency that is charged with finding solutions to this problem, then any home or building can be afflicted. In fact, every home and building is affected by the indoor air quality epidemic to one degree or another, regardless of how clean it may appear.
Interviewer: But if my house looks really clean, how did it become that way?
Catherine: Did you use aerosols, floor or furniture polish, bleach, bathroom cleaners, etc.? If so, these products give off harmful chemical vapors into the air. Most homes or buildings also have carpets, painted walls, chemically-treated fur nishings, dust, insects, moist or damp things, food, people, and...
Interviewer: People?!
Catherine: Yes, humans shed more than just about any other animal, but our skin flakes are small enough to float in the air, and are consequently inhaled by anyone who enters a room. About 80% of what you see floating in a ray of sunshine is dead human skin! This is not to mention other sources of airborne pollutants that we may bring indoors, such as cigarette smoke and pets. Even if you eliminate or prohibit a certain source of indoor air pollution from your home, such as pets, you may still be affected. Interviewer: So we’d better often stay outdoors.
Catherine: Maybe!
Interviewer: Thank you, Miss White. We have to stop here and next time she will give you some tips that can help you reduce the indoor pollution. Thanks for listening to our programme.
选项
A、School.
B、Clean house.
C、The Environmental Protection Agency’s headquarters.
D、None of the above.
答案
D
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3280734.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]Washington(dpa)-TheUnitedStates,nevershytolecturether
[originaltext]FreshterroristhorrorwasbroughthometotheUKyesterdayas
[originaltext]NewsItemTwo McDonald’sCorp.unveileda
[originaltext]NewsItemOne Tornadoessweptt
[originaltext]NewsItemOne Tornadoessweptt
[originaltext] WorldTradeOrganizationmembersapprovedaplanonSundaytoe
[originaltext] WorldTradeOrganizationmembersapprovedaplanonSundaytoe
[originaltext]INTERVIEWER:CattleraisingintheU.S.isbigbusiness,isn’tit
[originaltext]INTERVIEWER:CattleraisingintheU.S.isbigbusiness,isn’tit
[originaltext]INTERVIEWER:CattleraisingintheU.S.isbigbusiness,isn’tit
随机试题
ThenumberofimmigrantslivingintheUSAhasrisenby16percentoverthe
Themajorpartofmychildhoodwasspentinfightingoffterrorofthingswh
SomeSuggestionsforP
Kitchendutiesmayhavetraditionallybeenviewedaswomen’swork,butnota
Whatdoesthewomanmainlytalkabout?[originaltext]M:Today.asourgueston
BaekelandandHartmannreportthatthe"shortsleepers"hadbeenmoreorles
28岁妇女,原发不孕,进行性痛经5年,妇科检查:子宫大小正常,后倾,欠活动,后壁
房地产经纪人向新建商品房购房人解释客户《购房须知》中的风险提示时,应重点向购房人
2019年国家重大事件梳理 国家大事、新闻热点一直是公务员考试的热点,这也
在机坪供电中,以( )为单元设置机务用电配电箱。A.机型 B.机位
最新回复
(
0
)