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阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,主要讲的是如何在全球保护生物多样性的同时,确保土著社区的权益得到保护,并强调了土著社区在保护生物多样性方面的重要作用。

1 . In the late 19th century Yellowstone became the first great National Park, described as America’s “best idea.” But the park was devastating for the Native Americans who had lived or hunted within their borders and who were displaced.

The U. S. has taken one small step to compensate by returning the National Bison Range to its Native owners as a first step. Next, at the 2021 UN Biodiversity Conference, the government should ensure new conservation plans support Indigenous (本土的) and local communities for their conservation achievements.

In 2016 biologist Edward responded to the biodiversity crisis by calling for half of Earth to be left to wilderness, birthing the“30×30”campaign to protect 30 percent of Earth’s land and sea surface by 2030. Backed by many scientists, major conservation organizations, the target is likely to be adopted by the CBD.

Critics argue that the “30×30” initiative, aimed at conservation, could become a tool for exploitation (剥削). They claim it may unjustly burden those least responsible for environmental issues like climate change and biodiversity loss. There’s concern that powerful entities could use the proposal as an excuse for seizing land from disadvantaged groups. Indigenous territories, which host 80% of Earth’s remaining biodiversity, are particularly at risk of being targeted in the name of protection. Tragically, the very communities that bravely protect nature against exploitation could face displacement, with estimates suggesting up to 300 million people could lose their homes.

There is a way to do global conservation right. Indigenous communities are as good as or better than governments at protecting biodiversity and already conserve a quarter of Earth’s land surface. The CBD needs to ensure that they get secure rights to their territories, as well as the resources to defend them.

The National Park could lead the way in this effort by helping rescue nature and its most passionate defenders from the militarized (军事化) conservation model it pioneered one and a half centuries ago. That is a crucial step toward a relief for the incredible life forms that share our planet, as well as their Indigenous guardians.

1. What does the underlined word “devastating” in paragraph 1 mean?
A.innovativeB.beneficialC.promisingD.disastrous
2. Which of the following is true about the“30×30”campaign?
A.A biologist’s advocate to conserve nature.
B.CBD’s ambition to empower Indigenes.
C.The compensation made by the United States.
D.An excuse to seize land from dominant groups.
3. What is an ideal way to handle global conservation?
A.Precautions against reducing Pygmy people to poverty and misery.
B.Relying on the governments to displace locals from their homeland.
C.Militarized conservation model pioneered by the United Sates.
D.Returning the land in the care of the Indigenous communities.
4. Which of the following is the best title of the passage?
A.Conservation or Modernization?
B.Where Is the Next Yellowstone?
C.Protect Biodiversity’s Protectors.
D.Government as Nature’s Guardian.
昨日更新 | 6次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省合肥市合肥第一中学高三最后一卷(三模)英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。一项新的研究表明,遵循可持续饮食,也被称为“全球健康饮食”对你的健康和地球都是双赢的。

2 . Following a sustainable diet, also known as a “planetary health diet”, includes whole grains, fruits, nuts, green vegetables, and olive oil, can be a win-win for your health and the planet, according to a new research.

The new research conducted by scientists from the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health has revealed that people who eat more environmentally sustainable food have a 25percent lower risk of mortality (死亡) compared to those with a less sustainable diet, like eggs, the red and processed meat. The findings show that the participants with a good planetary health diet had a reduced risk of all causes of death measured in the study.

The study involved over 100,000 participants in the USA, with a 30-year check-up period. According to Linh Bui, the PhD candidate at Harvard, the research team integrated data on the health outcomes of specific foods and their environment al impact, creating a Planetary Health Diet Index (指数), and gave the participants scores based on their diets. Using this, they assessed the relationship between the scores and the participants’ health outcomes. “The results confirmed our previous hypothesis (假设) that a higher Planetary Health Diet score was associated with a lower risk of death,” said Bui. The people with the highest Planetary Health Index scores had a 25per cent lower overall risk of death than those with the lowest scores.

The environmental impact of the foods was evaluated by factors such as water use, land use, package, pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions. The researchers hope that the eco-index can be used as a simple tool for policy makers and public health services to improve human health and tackle the climate crisis.

However, they acknowledge that the index does not take into account certain challenges that people may have in following a sustainable diet, such as health conditions of the subjects and what cultures they come from. They hope that further research will address these barriers,   as well as relationships between foods and diseases tailored to particular countries.

1. What did the new research find about a sustainable diet?
A.It is a double-edged sword.
B.It can reduce the risk of death.
C.It is mainly composed of greens.
D.It is less friendly to the environment.
2. What does paragraph 3 mainly talk about?
A.The approaches adopted in the study.
B.New confirmation about the results.
C.Supporting evidence for the theory.
D.Potential benefits of the research.
3. How was the environmental impact of the foods determined?
A.By analyzing their elements.B.By measuring their nutrition.
C.By examining their packaging.D.By assessing their eco-footprint.
4. What might further research aim to deal with?
A.Individual preferences.
B.Prospective food access.
C.Culture-based healthy food.
D.Sustainable food alternatives.
昨日更新 | 13次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省合肥市高三下学期最后一卷英语试题
语法填空-短文语填(约190词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是新闻报道。详细描述了中国如何将自然环境融入城市生活,通过具体的例子和数据展示了中国在城市绿化和公园建设方面的努力和成果。
3 . 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

From pocket parks to forest parks, China is bringing nature closer to urban life. From 2021 to 2022, Shanghai has transformed 62 woodlands into leisure spaces,     1     open up forests for visitors to walk through nature and get closer to wildlife. A growing number of companies and universities have chosen to “open their gates” and share their greenery, thus     2     (provide) more space for visitors to relax. In Nanning, Guangxi, parks are not only for relaxation.     3     (play) of traditional Yong Opera, a very popular local opera, are     4     (regular) staged in the People’s Park.

Parks can do good for the environment too. Take Beijing’s Central Green Forest Park as an example. The park     5     (reach) carbon-neutral (碳中和) since it was opened in 2020. This means that     6     the park’s facilities produce carbon dioxide, the plants there can absorb more to make up. It also fully reuses rainwater and creates green energy, such as solar energy,     7     (supply) the park.

As cities in China become     8     (green), “park cities” are becoming a reality. The concept of a park city     9     (introduce) by President Xi Jinping in 2018. It suits people’s need for a better living experience and is a people-centered concept that takes the form of     10     improved natural environment in all aspects.

2024-05-23更新 | 108次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省阜阳市皖江名校联盟高三下学期模拟联考最后一卷英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了种树造福人们的Jadav Payeng的故事。30多年前,Jadav Payeng开始在他出生地印度阿萨姆邦附近的一个贫瘠的沙洲上种树,而当时他的初衷是为了帮助快被晒死的被冲上岸的蛇,给它们提供荫凉。上游河流被村民改道,从而造成了一系列严重的后果,却也只有Jadav Payeng付诸行动开始种树。终于,30年后的今天,一切发生了改变,这都得益于Jadav Payeng种下的树。

4 . More than 30 years ago, Jadav Payeng started planting trees on a barren sandbar (贫瘠的沙洲) near his birthplace in India’s Assam region. That day, the then-16-year-old noticed many snakes washed up on the sandbar after a flood. They were dying due to heat exposure at a rapid rate. “How can I help them?” Then he had an idea: Trees can provide shade for them!

Jadav lives on an island, Majuli, which is in the middle of the Brahmaputra River. It begins at the base of the Himalayas, at the meeting of a fan of rivers that drain (流走) snowmelt. At one time, villages upstream had redirected the river, creating more forceful currents around the island and carrying away the soil, thus damaging the natural habitats of its wildlife. As a consequence, much of the island became barren sand, and an entire community was at risk of being displaced.

Jadav also noticed that nobody was doing anything about it besides watching their part of the world disappear. So, he started to put his idea into action — every day, one or two or three at a time. He took notes of how they grew, harvested their seeds, grew saplings (树苗) in his hut and planted before going off to work.

Now that once-barren sandbar is a 1,360-acre forest, home to many animals: deer, Bengal tigers, Indian rhinoceros and even a group of 100 elephants that visit every year. There are now native grasses that have taken root in the shade and varieties of native trees grown from seeds that have washed ashore. But most importantly, the island that is also home to a few hundred people is holding its own against the bad weather. Standing beside one of the first trees he planted 30 years ago, Jadav tells us: “It’s a little thing, something anyone can do.”

1. What was Jadav’s original aim to plant trees?
A.To save the snakes from heat exposure.B.To protect the snakes from extinction.
C.To produce materials to stop flooding.D.To use the leaves to create more shades.
2. What primarily made Majuli a barren island?
A.Villagers’ ignorance of ecology.B.Villagers’ redirecting the river.
C.The extreme weather conditions.D.Loss of wildlife’s natural habitats.
3. Which of the following can best describe Jadav?
A.Frank and learned.B.Subjective yet reliable.
C.Determined and careful.D.Smart but hot-tempered.
4. What is Paragraph 4 mainly about?
A.What the forest means to the wildlife.B.How ecology benefits the human kind.
C.How Jadav feels about his simple deeds.D.What difference Jadav’s efforts have made.
2024-05-23更新 | 43次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省阜阳市皖江名校联盟高三下学期模拟联考最后一卷英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述Furci意识到真菌对地球上生命的重要性后通过写指南、成立基金会等方式来呼吁人们关注并保护真菌。她和其他环保组织的行为甚至促使智利通过了一项保护真菌的法律。

5 . In 1999, Giuliana Furci, founder and founding director of the Fungi (真菌) Foundation, developed a deep interest in fungi. They were everywhere, and the 20-year-old took particular joy in the variety of mushrooms: small and button-shaped; tall and umbrella-like; round with red caps topped with white flakes. Some were commonly found in people’s diets, for they were rich in nutrients such as vitamin, fiber, minerals and protein.

But Furci also quickly realized that these fungi went largely ignored in Chile, where there were few guidebooks and an almost total lack of policies and resources to protect them from over-harvesting and other human activities. Determined to correct this, Furci wrote a field guide and set up the Fungi Foundation—a nonprofit dedicated to fungi conservation. In her guide, special attention went to the role of fungi in the ecosystem.

“Life on the planet wouldn’t exist without fungi,” said Greg Mueller, a mushroom conservation expert. “Because of their relationship with forests and trees, we can’t survive without fungi. In terms of the health of the planet, they’re incredibly important to humans and the overall ecosystem.” Fungi can break down plants and animals, thus cycling nutrients and increasing their availability in the soil. They are also important contributors to the soil carbon stock through the same process. What’s more, fungi have been found to help degrade (降解) various pollutants, such as plastic. And mycelium (菌丝体), which is the root structure of mushrooms, is now being used to replace unsustainable materials, such as plastic and animal-based products.

Because of these, exploration of fungi was expanded at a faster pace. However, some were already listed as critically endangered. In 2010, Furci took an even bigger step—with other environmental nonprofits, she put forward a proposal for the government to systematically assess how large new developments such as housing, dams, and highways affect fungi. In 2012, a law was passed and Chile became the first country in the world to protect fungi by law.

1. What can we learn about Furci from the first two paragraphs?
A.She enjoyed collecting mushrooms.
B.She was fond of cooking mushrooms.
C.She worried about the situation of fungi.
D.She had a habit of writing field guidebooks.
2. What is Paragraph 3 of the text mainly about?
A.The life on earth without fungi.
B.The importance of fungi on earth.
C.The relations between trees and fungi.
D.The practical uses of fungi in the future.
3. How did Furci protect the ecosystem?
A.By writing free instructions on plants.
B.By starting a non-profit ecotourism company.
C.By raising awareness of the importance of fungi.
D.By passing laws to ban over-harvesting mushrooms.
4. Which of the following best describes Furci’s work?
A.Ground-breaking.B.Debatable.
C.Romantic.D.Unmatched.
2024-04-15更新 | 70次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省池州市普通高中高三下学期教学质量统一监测(二模)英语试题(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约410词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是说明文。文章讲述了中国电动公交车的取得的巨大进步,保护了环境,减少了碳排放量。

6 . There are two distinctive types of electric buses making their way along Nanjing Xi Lu, one of Shanghai’s busiest roads. The first is a fleet of blue trolleybuses that serve bus route number 20, a line set up by a British-run transport company in 1928. They use poles to receive electricity from wires overhead and have kept the route running in this way for nearly a century. But while the historic electric buses are a reminder of Europe’s past technological innovation, the new buses traveling alongside them are symbols of China’s contemporary net-zero ambition. These modern electric buses powered by lithium batteries (锂电池) , were introduced in Shanghai in 2014. They offer a smoother ride, especially during starts and stops. Widely used across China, these buses are key to the country’s EV transition and are influencing the global shift towards green transportation.

The most recent data available shows that China in 2018 was still the second largest source of carbon dioxide emissions in the global transport sector, responsible for 11%, and behind only the United States, which accounted for 21%. After around two decades of government support, China now boasts the world’s largest market for e-buses, making up more than 95% of global stock. At the end of 2022, China’s Ministry of Transport announced that more than three-quarters (77% or 542, 600) of all urban buses in the country were new energy vehicles. The speed of this transition was remarkable.

So far, however, the Chinese cities with the most successful e-bus introduction — such as Shenzhen, Beijing and Shanghai — all have moderate weather and are relatively flat. To take its e-bus campaign to the next level, China faces challenges. For one thing, it is difficult to bring fleets to cities such as Hong Kong, which — like London — have double-deckers. These two-storeyed vehicles are “very hard” to electrify, because they are heavier, use more energy, and so need bigger batteries, reducing the number of passengers they can carry. Cold weather is a problem, too, as it can make a battery’s charging time longer and its range shorter. The reason China has not achieved 100% electrification for its buses is its northern regions, which have cold winters, says Xue Lulu, a transportation expert at the World Resources Institute China.

1. How does the author describe the two types of electric buses in the first paragraph?
A.By contrasting their historical significance and technological advancements.
B.By highlighting their roles in protecting the environment and lasting use.
C.By focusing merely on their technical details and performance.
D.By explaining their operational challenges and requirements.
2. What do the numbers in paragraph 2 mainly show?
A.The global impact of carbon dioxide emissions.
B.The progress of China in reducing CO2 emissions.
C.The different emission levels of China and the USA.
D.The need for more government support in e-bus market.
3. What factor contributes to the slow adoption of electric buses in China’s northern regions?
A.Poor winter weather conditions.B.Lack of transportation experts.
C.Short charging time of the battery.D.Heavier and bigger bus bodies.
4. Which column is the text most probably taken from?
A.Worklife.B.Culture.C.Travel.D.Earth.
2024-04-09更新 | 103次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省淮北市高三第一次质量检测(一模)英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。本文主要介绍了Julia Georgallis在她的书中介绍了一种奇特的环保方式,用圣诞树来烹饪菜肴。

7 . If you haven’t taken down your Christmas tree yet, no worries. Here’s an idea: have you ever thought about eating it?

Julia Georgallis has some recipes. Over the last five years, she’s been preparing carefully for Christmas dinners in London with a friend. “How can we make something sustainable around Christmas time? What can we cat? What’s the thing that no one eats and that somehow represents Christmas? And then we just decided on Christmas trees,” Georgallis says.

She turned it into a book, How to Eat Your Christmas Tree. And her idea is that it’s not that odd. Some people enjoy Christmas wine. Some people like to go shopping and most people can get behind saving the planet.

“What I aimed for this book to do, really, was to get people thinking about the odd ways that they can be more sustainable in their daily lives,” Georgallis says.

“Eating Christmas trees isn’t going to save any animals in danger or freeze any ice caps. But if we start to think about everything that we do as a whole, then that builds up, you know, and that helps,” she says.

Most of the recipes in her book use the needles from the tree. “You’d use the needles like a herb,” she says.

“And different Christmas trees kind of have different flavors. They’re quite subtle, but they do have different flavors. So fir (冷杉), which is a really popular choice of Christmas trees, gives people better feeling and atmosphere. And then you have pine, which is a little bit more delicate.”

A warning: some Christmas trees are poisonous if eaten — like cypress and cedars. And be sure your tree wasn’t sprayed with pesticides (杀虫剂) and other chemicals. “So if you have any doubt that your Christmas tree might not have been grown to eat, then maybe don’t eat it,” Georgallis says.

And, of course, don’t even think about eating your artificial tree!

So, with all those instructions and with the appropriate tree, what could we cook? Well, Georgallis’ book has all sorts of recipes for different foods and drinks. Let’s open up the world’s cuisine with simple ingredients!

1. What’s the main purpose of Georgallis’ book?
A.To tell people not to buy real trees.B.To inspire people to be more eco-friendly.
C.To teach people how to enjoy Christmas wine.D.To encourage people to throw away odd traditions.
2. Which of the following might Georgallis agree with?
A.Artificial trees can also be cooked.
B.Eating Christmas trees does good to saving animals.
C.Different trees have different features and tastes.
D.All Christmas trees have their own ways to be cooked.
3. What may be talked about following the last paragraph?
A.Tips for choosing Christmas trees.B.Warnings for cooking Christmas meals.
C.Comparison between real and artificial trees.D.Recipes for different foods with Christmas trees.
4. Where is this text most likely from?
A.A diary.B.A novel.C.A scientific report.D.A lifestyle magazine.
2024-03-08更新 | 55次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届安徽省六安市高三上学期质量检测考试模拟预测英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了聚合物科学家如何致力于解决塑料废物问题,通过重新设计聚合物的结构以实现其可回收性。

8 . People have come to understand the enormous impacts-beneficial as well as harmful- plastics have on human lives and the environment. As polymer (聚合物) scientists committed to inventing sustainable solutions for real-world problems, we set out to tackle the issue of plastic waste by rethinking the way polymers are designed so we could make plastics with recyclability built right in.

Everyday items including milk jug, grocery bags, and takeout containers are made from a class of polymers called polyolefins. These plastics are really durable (耐用的) because the chemical bonds in those polymers are extremely stable. In a world set up for disposable (一次性的) items, durability is no longer a design feature but rather a design drawback. Imagine if half the plastics used today were recyclable through twice as many processes as they are now. Also conventional recycling requires careful sorting of all the collected materials, which can be challenging with so many different plastics. For example, separating paper from metal doesn’t require complex technology, but sorting a container from a milk jug of a different polyolefin is difficult to do without the occasional mistake.

In a study published in Science in October 2023, we described a series of polymers with only two building blocks-one soft polymer and one hard polymer-that behave like polyolefins but could be chemically recycled. Connecting two different polymers multiple times until they form a single, long molecule (分子) creates what’s called a multiblock polymer. By changing how much of each polymer type goes into the multiblock polymer, our team produced a wide range of materials with properties that covered all polyolefin types.

Using the same strategy but by adding hydrogen, we could disconnect the polymers back into their building blocks and easily separate them to use again. When we made new polymers out of these recycled plastics, they performed just as well as the original materials even after several rounds of chemical recycling. So we were able to create materials with similar properties of the plastics the world relies on. We believe this work is a step toward more sustainable plastics.

1. What is paragraph 2 mainly about concerning plastics?
A.Their multiple uses.B.Their chemical properties.
C.Their recycling challenges.D.Their classification criteria.
2. A key factor of producing diverse multiblock polymers is ______.
A.mixing building blocks with long molecules
B.integrating chemicals into the two polymers
C.combining two different multiblock polymers
D.adjusting the percentage of the two polymers
3. Which is a feature of multiblock polymers?
A.They are made from sustainable materials.
B.They can be recycled by adding hydrogen.
C.Their reliability outperforms traditional plastics.
D.Their properties change with rounds of recycling.
4. Which of the following might be the best title?
A.Designing for RecyclingB.Classifying Plastic Waste
C.Replace Plastics with PolymersD.Technology Creates the Future
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文章大意:本文是说明文。文章介绍了澳大利亚研究人员发现的一种能够降解塑料的甲虫幼虫体内的酶,并详细描述了这些“超级蠕虫”如何帮助减少塑料废物。

9 . Researchers in Australia have identified enzymes (酶) in the body of certain beetle larvae (甲虫幼虫) that can degrade or break down plastic. In a study published in Microbial Genomics, they write that these “superworms” could help reduce plastic waste in the future.

“Superworms are like mini recycling plants, cutting up the polysyrene (聚苯乙烯) with their mouths and then feeding it to the bacteria in their stomach,” said Chris Rinke from the University of Queensland in Australia. “The breakdown products from this reaction can then be used by other microbes to create high-value chemicals.”

In the study, scientists divided beetle larvae into three groups, feeding one group wheat bran, one polystyrene and one nothing. Over three weeks, they monitored their growth. “We found that superworms fed a diet of just polystyrene not only survived, but even had marginal weight gains,” said Rinke. “This suggests the worms can get energy from the polystyrene, most likely with the help of their stomach bacteria.”

On the other hand, the plastic-fed worms gained much less weight and were overall much less healthy than the bran-fed ones, though better off than the starvation group. After three weeks, some larvae were also set aside to grow into beetles, according to the study. About 93% of the bran-fed larvae formed adult worms, while about 67% of the plastic-fed larvae and 10% of the starved larvae formed adult worms.

The researchers investigated the superworm’s stomach bacteria to find the specific enzymes linked to plastic degradation, writes Fionna M. D. Samuels for Scientific American. The enzyme that degrades the polystyrene appears to live with the stomach bacteria, not the worm itself.

Polystyrene is one of the most common plastics used today. But it’s not very chemically reactive, and breaking it down with industrial recycling methods takes high heat. So, researchers have been looking for plastic-degrading enzymes and bacteria for years.

Further research will still need to be done to figure out how to employ these worms, bacteria and enzymes in recycling facilities.

1. What does Chris Rinke compare superworms to?
A.Small plants.B.Beetle larvae.C.Stomach bacteria.D.High-value chemicals.
2. What does the underlined word “marginal” mean in Paragraph 3?
A.Few.B.Tiny.C.Obvious.D.Normal.
3. What is the sixth paragraph intended to show?
A.The damage of plastic to life.
B.Possible causes of plastic pollution.
C.Researchers’ efforts over the years to recycle plastic.
D.The necessity of finding out a way to degrade plastic.
4. What is the purpose of the text?
A.To report a new way to recycle plastic.B.To call on people to reduce plastic waste.
C.To explain how larvae can degrade plastic.D.To introduce the findings of a new research.
2024-03-04更新 | 93次组卷 | 4卷引用:2024届安徽省六安市高三上学期质量检测考试模拟预测英语试题
完形填空(约240词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇记叙文。物理学家Méndez Galain制定了一个计划,帮助乌拉圭实现了98%的电力来自可再生能源。

10 . Back in 2007, Uruguay had a serious problem with no obvious answer: The economy was growing very fast, but there wasn’t enough energy to power the rapid _________.

Then Ramón Méndez Galain, a physicist, started _________ different potential paths for Uruguay’s energy future. Finally, he wrote a plan that Uruguay could almost entirely _________ renewable energy. There would be less _________ and it would be the most economical choice Uruguay could make in the long run.

Méndez Galain’s plan was built around two simple _________ about his country. First, while there wasn’t a domestic (国内的) supply of coal or oil, there was a great deal of _________. Second, that wind blew over a country that was known for _________ grassland. His plan for Uruguay’s energy future was to _________ the empty grassland into hundreds of wind farms.

To solve the problem of how to pay for all those wind farms, Méndez Galain came up with a variation on a(n) _________ used by some electric plants in neighboring Brazil, in which state owned power plants handled energy generation, while __________ companies were in charge of power distribution and customer service. Méndez Galain’s plan changed the relationship to the __________, so that private companies would be in charge of setting up and __________ the wind farms, while the state-owned power companies would distribute that energy to its customers.

The strategy worked __________ well. Just within a few years, Méndez Galain had __________ what he had set out to do: 98% of Uruguay’s __________ comes from renewable sources.

1.
A.declineB.growthC.consumptionD.program
2.
A.buildingB.blockingC.repairingD.seeking
3.
A.rely onB.find outC.refer toD.give up
4.
A.riskB.powerC.pollutionD.benefit
5.
A.factsB.theoriesC.answersD.principles
6.
A.waterB.lightC.windD.ice
7.
A.tendedB.undevelopedC.protectedD.limited
8.
A.breakB.putC.sendD.turn
9.
A.toolB.softwareC.imageD.approach
10.
A.responsibleB.weakC.privateD.profitable
11.
A.publicB.oppositeC.richD.powerful
12.
A.managingB.sellingC.abandoningD.starting
13.
A.hardlyB.relativelyC.unexpectedlyD.rarely
14.
A.forgottenB.achievedC.apologizedD.approved
15.
A.incomeB.foodC.supplyD.electricity
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