首页
登录
职称英语
The second little pig was unlucky. He built his house from sticks. It was blo
The second little pig was unlucky. He built his house from sticks. It was blo
游客
2025-01-20
23
管理
问题
The second little pig was unlucky. He built his house from sticks. It was blown away by a huffing, puffing wolf, which promptly gobbled him up. His brother, by contrast, built a wolf- proof house from bricks. The fairy tale could have been written by a
flack
for the construction industry, which strongly favours brick, concrete and steel. However, in the real world it would help reduce pollution and slow global warming if more builders copied the wood-loving second pig.
In 2015 world leaders meeting in Paris agreed to move towards zero net greenhouse-gas emissions in the second half of this century. That is a
tall order
, and the building industry makes it even taller. Cement-making alone produces 6% of the world’s carbon emissions. Steel, half of which goes into buildings, accounts for another 8%. If you factor in all of the energy that goes into lighting, heating and cooling homes and offices, the world’s buildings start to look like a giant environmental problem.
Governments in the rich world are now trying to promote greener behaviour by obliging developers to build new projects to "zero carbon" standards. From January 1st 2019 all new public-sector buildings in the European Union must be built to "nearly zero-energy" standards. All other types of buildings will follow in January 2021. Governments in eight further countries are being lobbied to introduce a similar policy.
These standards are less green than they seem. Wind turbines and solar panels on top of buildings look good but are much less productive than wind and solar farms. And the standards only count the emissions from running a building, not those belched out when it was made.
Those
are thought to account for between 30% and 60% of the total over a structure’s lifetime.
Buildings can become greener. They can use more recycled steel and can be prefabricated in off-site factories, greatly reducing lorry journeys. But no other building material has environmental credentials as exciting and overlooked as wood.
The energy required to produce a laminated wooden beam is one-sixth of that required for a steel one of comparable strength. As trees take carbon out of the atmosphere when growing, wooden buildings contribute to negative emissions by storing the stuff. When a mature tree is cut down, a new one can be planted to replace it, capturing more carbon. After buildings are demolished, old beams and panels are easy to recycle into new structures. And for retrofitting older buildings to be more energy efficient, wood is a good insulator. A softwood window frame provides nearly 400 times as much insulation as a plain steel one of the same thickness and over a thousand times as much as an aluminum equivalent.
A race is on to build the world’s tallest fully wooden skyscraper. But such edifices are still uncommon. Industry fragmentation, vicious competition for contracts and low profit margins mean that most building firms have little money to invest in greener construction methods beyond what regulation dictates.
Governments can help nudge the industry to use more wood, particularly in the public sector — the construction industry’s biggest client. That would help wood-building specialists achieve greater scale and lower costs. Zero-carbon building regulations should be altered to take account of the emissions that are embodied in materials. This would favour wood as well as innovative ways of producing other materials.
Construction codes could be tweaked to make building with wood easier. Here the direction of travel is wrong. Britain, for instance, is banning the use of timber on the outside of tall buildings after 72 people died in a tower fire in London in 2017. That is a nonsense. Grenfell Tower was covered in aluminum and plastic, not wood. Modern cross-laminated timber panels perform better in fire tests than steel ones do.
Carpentry alone will not bring the environmental cost of the world’s buildings into line. But using wood can do much more than is appreciated. The second little pig was not wrong, just before his time. [br] Which of the following can be the title of this passage?
选项
A、Buildings Produce Carbon Emissions
B、Zero Carbon Standards
C、Using More Wood Would Be Greener
D、Carbon Emission Reduction
答案
C
解析
主旨题。全文围绕多使用木材建房更加环保这一主题展开,故C最适合作文章标题。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3920455.html
相关试题推荐
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
WhatDoesYourSecondIdentityTellaboutYou?Weliveinthedigitalage,mo
随机试题
Languagebelongstoeachmemberofthesociety,tothecleaner______totheprof
Whenanti-globalizationprotesterstooktothestreetsofWashingtonlastwee
我国现行主要的出版物购销形式,除了征订包销和征订经销之外,还有()。A.作者包
下列哪个波长的光是人肉眼可见的()。A.350nm B.570nm C.79
关于胎膜早破的叙述,下列哪项是不正确的A.破膜12小时给予抗生素 B.胎膜破裂
股权投资基金监管的目标,不同国家股权投资基金监管的目标不同,但至少包括( )
患者女,因脑挫裂伤入院2天,呈持续睡眠状态,可被唤醒,能够简单回答问题,但反应迟
教育与其他社会活动的根本区别集中体现在()。A.为人类社会所特有 B.培养人
小宝已经3岁了。近些天,孩子的“言行举止”比较特别。比如,有一天老师带孩子做户外
关于土方开挖施工技术的说法中,正确的有()。A.土方工程施工前,基坑内地下水位应
最新回复
(
0
)