Facing water shortages and escalating fertilizer costs, farmers in developin

游客2024-03-11  5

问题     Facing water shortages and escalating fertilizer costs, farmers in developing countries are using raw sewage(下水道污水)to irrigate and fertilize nearly 49 million acres of cropland, according to a new report—and it may not be a bad thing.
    While the practice carries serious health risks for many, those dangers are outweighed by the social and economic gains for poor urban farmers and consumers who need affordable food.
    " There is a large potential for wastewater agriculture to both help and hurt great numbers of urban consumers," said Liqa Raschid-Sally, who led the study.
    The report focused on poor urban areas, where farms in or near cities supply relatively inexpensive food. Most of these operations draw irrigation water from local rivers or lakes. Unlike developed cities, however, these areas lack advanced water-treatment facilities, and rivers effectively become sewers(下水道).
    When this water is used for agricultural irrigation, farmers risk absorbing disease-causing bacteria, as do consumers who eat the produce raw and unwashed. Nearly 2. 2 million people die each year because of diarrhea-related(与腹泻相关的)diseases, according to WHO statistics. More than 80% of those cases can be attributed to contact with contaminated water and a lack of proper sanitation. But Pay Drechsel, an environmental scientist, argues that the social and economic benefits of using untreated human waste to grow food outweigh the health risks.
    Those dangers can be addressed with farmer and consumer education, he said, while the free water and nutrients from human waste can help urban farmers in developing countries to escape poverty.
    Agriculture is a water-intensive business, accounting for nearly 70% of global fresh water consumption.
    In poor, dry regions, untreated wastewater is the only viable irrigation source to keep farmers in business. In some cases, water is so scarce that farmers break open sewage pipes transporting waste to local rivers.
    Irrigation is the primary agricultural use of human waste in the developing world. But frequently untreated human waste harvested from lavatories is delivered to farms and spread as fertilizer.
    In most cases, the human waste is used on grain crops, which are eventually cooked, minimizing the risk of transmitting water-borne diseases. With fertilizer prices jumping nearly 50% per metric ton over the last year in some places, human waste is an attractive, and often necessary, alternative.
    In cases where sewage mud is used, expensive chemical fertilizer use can be avoided. The mud contains the same critical nutrients.
    "Overly strict standards often fail," James Bartram, a WHO water-health expert, said. "We need to accept that fact across much of the planet, so waste with little or no treatment will be used in agriculture for good reason. " [br] What do we learn about James Bartram’s position on the use of human waste for farming?

选项 A、He echoes Pay Drechsel’s opinion on the issue.
B、He challenges Liqa Raschid-Sally’s conclusion.
C、He thinks it the only way out of the current food crisis.
D、He deems it indispensable for combating global poverty.

答案 A

解析 推理判断题。从定位句看出,世界卫生组织水健康专家吉姆斯·巴特拉姆认为,使用微处理或未处理废料进行农业生产是有充分理由的,因为它是由我们这个星球面临的现实情况决定的,可见,他与之前裴伊·德拉塞尔类似,都是对这件事持肯定态度的;另外,从文章结构考虑,该段为总结段,用于再次强调文章的主旨,故答案为A)。
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