一起听英语 35 有害的塑料制品
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    塑料的危害很大....

    Dan: Hello and welcome 6 Minute English from the BBC. I’m Dan Walker Smith

    and today I’m joined by Kate.

    Kate: Hello Dan.

    Dan: Now today Kate and I are talking about pollution.

    Kate: Yes, well pollution is the term for harmful waste which has been put into the

    environment, and which can be damaging to plants and animals.

    Dan: So I’m going to start the show today with a question, Kate; have you ever

    heard of the ‘Great Pacific Garbage Patch’?

    Kate: No, I’m afraid I haven’t; I’ve never heard of that.

    Dan: Well let me explain: Garbage is an American word for something we’ve

    thrown away. What we in the UK might call rubbish. And the Pacific

    Garbage Patch is an area of the Pacific Ocean where rubbish has collected. It

    was discovered in 1997, and is essentially a big floating soup of plastic

    garbage and bits of rubbish that have been thrown away on land and have

    ended up in the sea.

    Kate: Ooh that sounds absolutely horrible. I had no idea that anything like that

    existed.

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010

    Page 2 of 5

    Dan: Well this is the bit which is really scary: we don’t actually know the size of the

    garbage patch, but some people say it could be 600,000 square miles across –

    which is twice the size of France.

    Kate: What? Twice the size of France? That’s absolutely huge!

    Dan: And it could be bigger.

    Kate: That’s very frightening.

    Dan: So this week’s question for you Kate is: According to the United Nations, how

    many pieces of plastic are there in each square kilometre of the world’s oceans?

    Is it:

    a) 22,000 pieces of plastic

    b) 38,000

    c) 46,000

    Kate: Well, as I’d never heard of this problem before, I’m going to take a wild guess

    and, sadly, I think I’m going to guess the top number; 46,000 pieces of plastic.

    Dan: OK, well they’re all pretty big, but we’ll see if you’re right at the end of the

    programme.

    Kate: Now plastic pollution in the seas kills over a million sea birds and 100,000

    mammals and turtles each year.

    Dan: So here’s the Dutch marine biologist Jan van Franeker talking about the effects

    of plastic pollution on birds. You’ll hear the word litter, which is another word

    for rubbish. So what sort of litter have the scientists found in birds’ stomachs?

    Extract 1

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010

    Page 3 of 5

    Worldwide, there’s so many bird species that have litter in their stomachs. It varies

    from pieces from bottles or toys, parts from fishing nets, from ropes. Any sort of plastic

    really that is broken up and is floating around the ocean.

    Kate: OK, so the plastics they’re finding aren’t just things that might have been

    thrown into the sea, like fishing nets and ropes, but are actually things that

    have come from the land, like pieces of bottles and children’s toys.

    Dan: Apparently 80% of all the plastic found in the ocean is actually litter that’s

    been thrown away on land.

    Kate: And part of the problem is that most plastics aren’t biodegradable. What does

    the word biodegradable mean Dan?

    Dan: Well, if something biodegrades it means it breaks down naturally. So if a

    product isn’t biodegradable it won’t decompose or decay organically. And

    some plastic bags could last in the environment for up to a thousand years.

    Kate: Let’s hear the marine ecologist Richard Thompson talking about plastic

    packaging. Packaging is the protective covering used to transport products

    and display a company’s image. So let’s have a listen to the extract: what

    percentage of plastic produced each year is used for packaging?

    Extract 2

    I think we need to think very very carefully about the way that we use plastics in society.

    If we think that 100 million tonnes of plastic products are made every year, 40% of

    those are packaging materials that are mainly used once and then discarded.

    Dan: OK, so 40% of the world’s plastic is used as packaging material and then

    discarded. Can you explain what discarded means Kate?

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010

    Page 4 of 5

    Kate: Sure: well to discard something means to throw it away. So if the packaging

    is discarded, it means that people throw it away as rubbish or litter, rather

    than use it again.

    Dan: To lower the amount of plastic waste, scientists recommend the ‘three Rs’ for

    packaging. We can reduce the amount of packaging used on products; we can

    re-use packaging more than once, and we can recycle the materials used.

    Kate: And recycle means to process used materials into new products. So you can

    recycle old glass, paper and plastic products to make something new. Do you

    recycle, Dan?

    Dan: I’m actually very lucky, because where I live in London has a great recycling

    programme. So essentially every week we’ve got someone who comes round

    and collects all the paper and all the plastic and all the glass that I’ve used that

    entire week, which is fantastic.

    Kate: Oh that sounds great, you’re really lucky. Actually I’ve got the same thing: I

    have all my plastics and glass picked up outside my house, so I think certain

    places in the UK are doing quite well on the recycling front.

    Dan: And even if you can’t recycle, just try and reuse or reduce the amount of waste

    that you’re going to be producing.

    OK, we’re almost out of time, so let’s go over some of the vocabulary we’ve

    come across today:

    pollution

    garbage

    rubbish

    litter

    biodegradable

    6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010

    Page 5 of 5

    packaging

    to discard

    to recycle

    Dan: And finally Kate, let's go back to today's question. I asked you at the beginning

    of the show how many pieces of plastic there are in each average square

    kilometre of the ocean?

    Kate: And I went for c, 46,000.

    Dan: Well, depressingly Kate, you’re right. There are apparently 46,000 pieces of

    plastic, on average, in each square kilometre of the ocean.

    Kate: What? 46,000 pieces of plastic? That’s absolutely incredible! How sad, and

    think of the damage that must be doing to the sea life.

    Dan: But, hopefully, if we all try and reduce waste, and use less packaging, and

    recycle more, then maybe things will get better.

    So from all of us here at BBC Learning English, thanks for listening, and

    goodbye!

    Kate: Goodbye!

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