首页
登录
职称英语
As the world’s urban population gets bigger, cities are struggling to provid
As the world’s urban population gets bigger, cities are struggling to provid
游客
2024-08-07
9
管理
问题
As the world’s urban population gets bigger, cities are struggling to provide the basic services that their residents need. One of the most pressing problems is public transport. Now let’s look at the crisis facing the city of London.
In no time in history has there been such a mass migration of people from countryside to city as is happening now.
By the year 2030, it’s estimated that more than two thirds of the world’s population will be living in cities, twice as many as today. This means that the problems faced by cities today—overcrowding, poor housing, unemployment, poverty, and lack of food and water will be twice as bad in the this century, unless we find solutions soon.
Another crucial issue facing cities today is how to provide good transport links to service the commercial, cultural and leisure needs of their inhabitants. Today, many of the world’s major cities are already struggling to cope with out-of-date transport infrastructures.
How they will cope with the additional demands placed on them has not yet been addressed.
London is a good example of the problems facing many major urban centres. It was the world’s first megacity and the first with a population of a million people. Its expansion was made possible by the invention of the steam engine, which, among other things, powered the world’s first underground railway.
Today, London has one of the world’s most extensive transport systems. But, because it was the first city to build a railway network, much of the infrastructure—the trains and buses, the tracks and tunnels—is now hopelessly out-of-date, and needs urgent modernization.
London’s future success depends very much on transport. The city lies at the heart of Britain’s road and rail networks and problems in London can rapidly affect other areas of the country. On an average morning, over ground trains bring passengers to stations on the outskirts of the city, and they then continue their journeys by underground, bus or taxi.
Over a million people travel into central London every day from outside the city. They, and the people who live in London, want a public transport system that is frequent, safe, reliable, affordable and environmentally friendly. What they often get, however, falls far short of that ideal.
Commuters complain about delays, unreliability, cost and pollution, while businesses worry a-bout the problems their staff have getting to work on time. Companies also face high costs for delivering goods and services in a city where congestion means that cars today travel at the same speed as horse drawn carriages did in the last century.
Yet car ownership continues to grow. The proportion of London households that own a car grew from just over 10 per cent in the early 1950s to over 60 per cent today. 20 per cent of house-holds now own two or more cars.
As the city has become increasingly congested and polluted, there has been a growing realization that action is needed. However, precisely what should be done is hotly debated. Some people have called for cleaner fuels and strict controls on exhaust emissions. Others say more effort must be put into persuading people not to use their cars, perhaps by charging people to drive into London. There does seem to be agreement on one thing, though—that until London’s public transport system is improved, people will continue to use their cars.
This raises the all important questions of where the money is going to come from. Until about 10 years ago, most public transport in Britain was owned and paid for by the government. But in the last decade, most train and bus networks have been privatized.
The government says that the private sector should take most, but not all, of the responsibility for public transport. In London, the underground railway system known as the "Tube" is likely to be where this policy is first put into practice. The government admits that it cannot afford to modernize the Tube system alone. Instead, it wants to form a partnership with private companies, so that they provide some of the money. [br] The government used to pay for most public transport.
选项
答案
Transport
解析
文中第六段开头,London’s future success depends very much on transport,即伦敦未来的成功在很大程度上取决于它的交通。crucial至关重要的。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3709846.html
相关试题推荐
ThenovelofATaleofTwoCitiesisaboutastorythathappenedinthetimeof
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200yea
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200yea
ThomasMalthuspublishedhisEssayonthePrincipleofPopulationalmost200yea
随机试题
Womenworkerswearhats______theirhairgetscaughtinthemachine.A、ifB、inc
ScientistsWeighOptionsforRebuildingNewOrleansAsexper
MyfriendbegantolayitonthickwhenItoldhimaboutmynewjob.Theunderli
下列关于结算机构职能的说法,不正确的是()。A、结算机构对于期货交易的盈亏结算是指持仓盈亏结算B、期货交易一旦成交,结算机构就承担起保证每笔交易按期履
TheHumanBrainThebrainisthemostcomplexorganin
审计委员会应按()向董事会报告审计工作情况,并通报高级管理层和监事会。A.月
简述现代企业人力资源管理各个历史发展阶段的特点。
下列情况下,能加大神经细胞动作电位幅度的是( )。A.延长刺激持续时间 B.
下列关于发票开具的说法,错误的是()A.填开发票单位如有特殊要求,可以自行扩大
甲地轮船公司,在乙地码头拟对该公司油轮的货油舱进行散装液体污染危害性货物的过驳作
最新回复
(
0
)