In this lesson, we're going to look at three major environmental issues: pollution, endangered species,
deforestation, and energy consumption. Pollution is the act of putting harmful substances called pollutants into the environment. A harmful substance is one that has negative effects on plants, animals, or humans, causing destruction and health problems. Three major types of pollution are air pollution, water pollution, and soil contamination. The main sources of air pollution are power plants, factories, motor vehicles, and fumes, vapors, or gases from aerosol sprays. Breathing polluted air can lead to respiratory infections such as pneumonia, chronic conditions like asthma, and even lung cancer. In some areas, air pollution is visible, forming a layer called smog. Efforts to reduce air pollution include government regulations limiting emissions of dangerous chemicals, development of more fuel-efficient vehicles such as hybrids, and conversion to cleaner fuels like biodiesel, which is made from vegetable oil or animal fat.
Water pollution comes from sewage, oil spills, and litter not properly disposed of. It kills wildlife and creates a shortage of clean drinking water, causing illnesses such as diarrhea. Polluted water can be purified through filtration, chemical treatments, boiling, or desalination, which removes salt from ocean water. Improving waste treatment systems worldwide is essential because proper treatment can neutralize or remove over 90% of
pollutants. Chemical contamination usually comes from industrial waste, pesticides, and chemical fertilizers. Fertilizers aid plant growth, but factories must treat
hazardous waste, which is dangerous, flammable, corrosive, or toxic. Waste can be neutralized, recycled, or incinerated. Everyday consumers can support soil
conservation by buying organic food and supporting sustainable agriculture.
Endangered species and deforestation are closely linked. A species is a unique type of plant or animal. When the last member dies, the species becomes
extinct. Animals with very few remaining individuals are endangered. Natural phenomena such as disease, climate change, natural disasters, and predators contribute to extinction, but human activities, especially habitat destruction, are major causes. Habitat destruction is mainly due to land clearing for agriculture, urban sprawl, mining, and logging. Deforestation, the destruction of forests, contributes to global warming. Measures to curb deforestation include sustainable forest management, reforestation, creating preserves, prohibiting hunting, and captive breeding programs.
Energy consumption is another pressing environmental issue. Fossil fuels, including coal, petroleum, and natural gas, are non-renewable sources formed from ancient plant and animal matter through compression and chemical transformations. Coal is mined, while oil and gas are extracted by drilling and sent to refineries for purification. Burning fossil fuels generates energy but releases carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that drives global warming. As fossil fuel reserves are limited, renewable energy sources must be developed. About 19% of the world's energy comes from
renewable sources such as solar, wind, hydroelectric, biofuel, and geothermal power. Solar power uses panels to convert sunlight into electricity. Wind power uses
turbines, with clusters forming wind farms. Hydroelectric power relies on dams to convert water flow into energy. Ocean tides can also generate hydroelectric power. Geothermal energy harnesses the earth's heat. Governments encourage clean energy adoption through incentives such as tax breaks.
Reducing energy consumption can be achieved by using energy-efficient appliances, public transportation, carpooling, and video conferencing. Environmental conservation can be summarized in three R's: reduce, reuse, and recycle. Reduce by consuming less, turning off unused devices, and using items longer. Reuse by buying used items or creatively repurposing old ones. Recycle by separating materials like paper, plastic, metal, and glass for reuse. Implementing these practices helps protect the environment for future generations.
This concludes the listening material on business English lessons for speeches, meetings, negotiations, and phone calls, collected by Xiao Wu from Qicai.com. I hope you find it helpful!