Câu hỏi: Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 35 to 42.
E-waste is being produced on a scale never seen before. Computers and other electronic equipment become obsolete in just a few years, leaving customers with little choice but to buy newer ones to keep up. Millions of tons of computers, TVs, smartphones, and other equipment are discarded each year. In most countries, all this waste ends up in landfills, where it poisons the environment – e-waste contains many toxic substances such as lead, mercury, and arsenic that leak into the ground.
Recycling is the ideal solution to the problem. E-waste contains significant amounts of valuable metals like gold and silver that make it attractive to recycle. In theory, recycling gold from old computers is more efficient – and less environmentally destructive – than digging it from the earth. the problem is that a large percentage of e-waste dropped off for recycling in wealthy countries is sold and diverted to the developing world, posing an increasing threat to the health of the people there. To address the problem of the international trade in e-waste, 170 nations signed the 1989 Basel Convention, an agreement requiring that developed nations notify developing nations of hazardous waste shipments coming into their countries. Then, in 1995 the Basel Convention was modified to ban hazardous waste shipments to poor countries completely. Although the ban hasn't taken effect, the European Union, where recycling infrastructure is well developed, has nearly written it into their laws. One law holds manufacturers responsible for the safe disposal of electronics they produce. Companies like Creative Recycling Systems in Florida, the USA, are hoping to profit from clean e-waste recycling. The key to their business is a huge, building-size machine able to separate electronic products into their component materials. As the machine' steel teeth break up e – waste, all the toxic dust is removed from the process. This machine can handle some 70,000 tons of electronics a year. Although this is only a fraction of the total, it wouldn't take many more machines like this to process the entire USA's output of high-tech trash.
Unfortunately, under current policies, domestic processing of e-waste is not compulsory, and while shipping waste abroad is ethically questionable, it is still more profitable than processing it safely in the USA. Creative Recycling Systems is hoping that the US government will soon create laws deterring people from sending e-waste overseas.
(Adapted from "Reading Explorer 4" by Paul MacIntyre and Nancy Hubley)
Which best serves as the title for the passage?
A. Waste Recycling: A Storm in a Teacup
B. Domestic Recycling: Pros and Cons
C. E-waste – An Export Commodity of the Future
D. E-waste – A Mess to Clear up
E-waste is being produced on a scale never seen before. Computers and other electronic equipment become obsolete in just a few years, leaving customers with little choice but to buy newer ones to keep up. Millions of tons of computers, TVs, smartphones, and other equipment are discarded each year. In most countries, all this waste ends up in landfills, where it poisons the environment – e-waste contains many toxic substances such as lead, mercury, and arsenic that leak into the ground.
Recycling is the ideal solution to the problem. E-waste contains significant amounts of valuable metals like gold and silver that make it attractive to recycle. In theory, recycling gold from old computers is more efficient – and less environmentally destructive – than digging it from the earth. the problem is that a large percentage of e-waste dropped off for recycling in wealthy countries is sold and diverted to the developing world, posing an increasing threat to the health of the people there. To address the problem of the international trade in e-waste, 170 nations signed the 1989 Basel Convention, an agreement requiring that developed nations notify developing nations of hazardous waste shipments coming into their countries. Then, in 1995 the Basel Convention was modified to ban hazardous waste shipments to poor countries completely. Although the ban hasn't taken effect, the European Union, where recycling infrastructure is well developed, has nearly written it into their laws. One law holds manufacturers responsible for the safe disposal of electronics they produce. Companies like Creative Recycling Systems in Florida, the USA, are hoping to profit from clean e-waste recycling. The key to their business is a huge, building-size machine able to separate electronic products into their component materials. As the machine' steel teeth break up e – waste, all the toxic dust is removed from the process. This machine can handle some 70,000 tons of electronics a year. Although this is only a fraction of the total, it wouldn't take many more machines like this to process the entire USA's output of high-tech trash.
Unfortunately, under current policies, domestic processing of e-waste is not compulsory, and while shipping waste abroad is ethically questionable, it is still more profitable than processing it safely in the USA. Creative Recycling Systems is hoping that the US government will soon create laws deterring people from sending e-waste overseas.
(Adapted from "Reading Explorer 4" by Paul MacIntyre and Nancy Hubley)
Which best serves as the title for the passage?
A. Waste Recycling: A Storm in a Teacup
B. Domestic Recycling: Pros and Cons
C. E-waste – An Export Commodity of the Future
D. E-waste – A Mess to Clear up
Chủ đề về E-WASTECâu nào sau đây là tiêu đề phù hợp nhất đối với đoạn văn?A. Việc tái chế chất thải: Việc bé xé ra toB. Việc tái chế trong gia đình: Mặt lợi và mặt hạiC. Chất thải điện tử - một loại mặt hàng xuất khẩu trong tương laiD. Chất thải điện tử - một mớ hỗn độn cần dọn sạchCăn cứ vào các thông tin trong bài:- "E-waste is being produced on a scale never seen before."
(Chất thải điện tử được sản xuất ra ở một quy mô chưa từng thấy trước đây.)- "Millions of tons of computers, TVs, smartphones, and other equipment are discarded each year. In most countries, all this waste ends up in landfills, where it poisons the environment – e-waste contains many toxic substances such as lead, mercury, and arsenic that leak into the ground."
(Hàng triệu tấn máy tính, tivi, điện thoại thông minh, và nhiều thiết bị khác bị vứt bỏ hằng năm. Ở hầu hết các quốc gia, tất cả chất thải đó bị đem ra bãi thải, nơi mà nó làm ô nhiễm môi trường - chất thải điện tử chứa rất nhiều chất độc hại như là chì, thủy ngân, Asen những chất mà rò rỉ xuống nền đất.)=> Căn cứ vào các thông tin trên, cùng với việc đọc qua đoạn một, ta chọn ngay được D vì tất cả đều tập trung vào vấn đề "chất thải điện tử-một mớ hỗn độn cần phải dọn sạch"
(Chất thải điện tử được sản xuất ra ở một quy mô chưa từng thấy trước đây.)- "Millions of tons of computers, TVs, smartphones, and other equipment are discarded each year. In most countries, all this waste ends up in landfills, where it poisons the environment – e-waste contains many toxic substances such as lead, mercury, and arsenic that leak into the ground."
(Hàng triệu tấn máy tính, tivi, điện thoại thông minh, và nhiều thiết bị khác bị vứt bỏ hằng năm. Ở hầu hết các quốc gia, tất cả chất thải đó bị đem ra bãi thải, nơi mà nó làm ô nhiễm môi trường - chất thải điện tử chứa rất nhiều chất độc hại như là chì, thủy ngân, Asen những chất mà rò rỉ xuống nền đất.)=> Căn cứ vào các thông tin trên, cùng với việc đọc qua đoạn một, ta chọn ngay được D vì tất cả đều tập trung vào vấn đề "chất thải điện tử-một mớ hỗn độn cần phải dọn sạch"
Đáp án D.