Stockpiled Pesticides Harming African People’s Environment Vast

游客2024-02-18  14

问题             Stockpiled Pesticides Harming African People’s Environment
    Vast quantities of obsolete pesticides have posed a serious danger to the environment and communities in Africa. In many countries the toxic chemicals have started to leak from corroding containers and are seeping into soil, groundwater, and rivers.
     Now a multimillion dollar international project is underway to rid the continent of the menace. The Africa Stockpiles Program (ASP) will soon send trained personnel to inventory pesticide stock piles and begin their safe export to Europe for incineration.
    Angela Mwandla, the program’s coordinator, says estimates of government-controlled stockpiles top 50,000 tons. ,private pesticide dumps could raise the figure significantly. But because some people are trying to conceal their dumps from the government, it makes it more difficult to make an official statistics for these private pesticide &imps.
    Nearly every African country grapples with the problem. Ethiopia is one of the worst off, with an estimated 3,000 tons of obsolete pesticides. Other countries are better, but this still poses a big problem for these countries.
    Mwandla, who is based in Nairobi, Kenya, says the cleanup program could take 15 years and cost about 250 million dollars ( U. S. ). And he is not so sure if the government would agree to spend so much time and expenses over this project.
    The program’s first phase -- estimated to cost 60 million dollars ( U. S. ) over six years -- will kick off in Ethiopia, Mall,Tunisia, Morocco, Tanzania, and South Africa. And if this works well, other countries will follow suit.
Problem Decades in the Making
    Africa’s stockpiles of poisonous chemicals have been accumulating over the past 40 years and longer. The problem has been spurred by poor training, weak controls, and aggressive marketing by chemical manufacturers, who sold countries more pesticides than they needed. Although the government has already started to pay attention to this problem, it will still take a long time to get this problem under control.
    The chemicals include brands such as DDT, and a range of organophosphate (有机磷酸脂的) pesticides used mainly for crop protection. And the effects of these pesticides will last over years even it becomes obsolete.
    Jan Betlem, a Dutch specialist in obsolete-pesticide elimination, painted a grim picture at a re cent media briefing in Nairobi, where the cleanup program was announced.
    He said many of the stockpiles were found in neglected buildings. Others were found in drums in grasslands, where they were covered by torn tarpaulins(防水油布) and plastic sheets or buried. All these, therefore, makes it more difficult for the work to carry on and makes this work lagging for longer periods.
    Many containers were corroding, adding spillage to the list of contamination problems.
    Toxins that have seeped into soils and groundwater have contaminated food, drinking water, and the air. And the immune system was greatly deteriorated after the people drink the contaminated water.
    Betlem has often found dead cats, birds, snakes, goats, and sheep inside and around buildings where corroded containers have started leaking. It is not unusual for children to play in the vicinity of the stockpiles. And therefore, this problem poses great danger to the health of tile children.
    The meat of animals grazing in such areas is sold in public markets, adding to the build-up of toxins in people.
    Betlem says pesticides are normally obsolete for their intended use after two years, but from the effects listed above, it is clear that they remain hazardous for a much longer period of time.
Prior Warning
    More than a decade ago, the UN Food and Agricultural Organization began warming African nations and others about the dangers of negligent pesticide use, which shows that a global attention has been paid to this increasing threat, especially in the developing countries.
    But the Africa Stockpiles Program springs mainly from an initiative started in 2000 by the World wide Fund for Nature (WWF).
    Together with the Pesticide Action Network, the environmental non-profit organizations lobbied governments, the United Nations, and pesticide manufacturers to start ASP.
    Mwandla, who is with the WWF’s Nairobi office, says ASP is a joint effort that involves the Global Environment Facility ( GEF), governments, non-governmental organizations, and pesticide manufacturers through their international federation called CropLife. He stresses that unless all sides pay more attention and effort to this problem, the effort will last longer.
    ASP’s major donors are the World Bank, on behalf of the GEF, and European governments. It has also been endorsed by the African Union’s ministerial conference on the environment. It shows that all sides have realized the, importance to work together to solve this problem.
Toxin Cleanup
    John Aston, representing CropLife at the media briefing in Nairobi, said there were no facilities in Africa capable of destroying the chemicals to internationally required standards.
    Pesticides need to be incinerated(烧弃) at temperatures of at least 1,650°F (900°C) to limit harmful emissions. It was therefore necessary to export the chemicals to facilities in places such as Wales and Finland, where they can be safely destroyed.
    He said the pesticide manufacturers were closely involved in the cleanup operation and in training people to properly handle and use the chemicals.
    In Ethiopia pesticide manufacturers have already helped to dispose of about 800 tons of obsolete material, even though many of the mountainous country’s approximately 900 stockpiles were held in practically inaccessible areas.
    Though many difficulties have been met in destroying the obsolete pesticides, it is very encouraging to see that great progress have been made by the efforts from all sides. [br] In the destruction of the chemicals, there were no facilities in Africa that have the capability of meeting ______.

选项

答案 internationally required standards

解析 先读一下题干,发现题目是要找到在非洲有能力销毁这些化学品的设备和机构。所以是属于毒素清除部分的。定位在第三个小标题下。那么我们可以在第一句话中看到there were no facilities in Africa capable of destroying the chemicals to internationally required standards。
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