Here is an interesting short (3 minute) video on You Tube about the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP):
Watch the video and then answer these questions:
1) How much land in Europe is used for agriculture?
2) How much money will be spent on the CAP from 2014-2020?
3) 75% of global food comes from how many plant and animal species?
4) How much meat did the average EU citizen eat in 2011?
5) How much water is required for 1kg of beef?
What do you think about the CAP? Should it be reformed? How?
Let us know what you think!
Answers below!
ANSWERS!
1) 40%
2) 371.72 Euros (37% of the budget)
3) 12 plant and 5 animal species
4) 85.7kg
5) 15,500 litres
intro
Welcome! This site is for students to practice their English and keep up to date with environmental issues.
You can find a mixture of reading, crosswords, videos and short English lessons: these will normally be vocabulary, but I may also treat you to some grammar!
There are now over 260 lessons on this blog. Look through the Blog archive, Post labels and Popular Posts to find what you want.
If you want to print a lesson, click on the lesson title and then look for the Print Friendly icon.
''Let nature be your teacher''
William Wordsworth, poet, 1770-1850
''Joy in looking and comprehending is nature's most beautiful gift''
Albert Einstein, physicist, 1879-1955
Albert Einstein, physicist, 1879-1955
''... to find the word, or words, by which [an] idea may be most fitly and aptly expressed''
P.M. Roget, lexicographer, 1779-1869
P.M. Roget, lexicographer, 1779-1869
Wednesday, 7 March 2012
Shale gas in Bohemia
Level: Advanced / C1
A What is shale gas?
B Is there any in your country?
C What are the problems with it?
D Vocabulary. Check the meaning of these words:
Local Czechs rally against shale gas
drilling in Bohemia
A What is shale gas?
B Is there any in your country?
C What are the problems with it?
D Vocabulary. Check the meaning of these words:
1 rally
2 gather
3 deposit
4 mayor
5 pressure group
6 subsidiary
7 water table
8 insulate
9 contaminate
10 anticipate
Now
read the article:
Hundreds gathered on the main square of the northwest
Bohemian town of Náchod to protest against the planned exploration and eventual
extraction of shale gas deposits in the region. Although the Ministry of
Environment has already issued a survey licence to an Australian-owned company,
local municipalities have appealed against the decision.
“We want to support
the mayors who have clearly expressed their opposition to exploration and
extraction of shale gas in this region. We have also found out that the owners
of the firm should be here and we want to show them their plans won’t go
through in our region,” said Jiří Malík, an ecologist and representative of the
anti-shale gas pressure group STOP HF.
Hutton Energy says its subsidiary, Basgas Energia Czech,
“will be one of the first independent oil and gas companies to focus on
unconventional [shale] gas resources” in the Czech Republic. The company says
its 777 km² in the Náchod, Trutnov and Broumov districts has been identified as
a “Silurian
shale gas with similar characteristics to others in Poland and North
America.” Based on initial exploration in Poland, the fact the site has “high
organic content and silica content means it has high potential for shale gas
production.”
Opponents of shale gas extraction claim it damages the
environment and can contaminate water tables and thus water supplies for local
residents. “Any hydraulic fracturing [fracking] in the Czech Republic will lead
to the contamination of groundwater,” Malík said.
Pavel Lhotský from Basgas Energia Czech tried to reassure the
meeting that exploration and extraction would not pose any threat to local
water supplies. “Each bore hole will have concrete and steel shielding,” he
said during the debate hosted by the regional governor.
Lhotský also claimed that in the US, where shale gas has been
extracted for over 10 years, there has not been a single case of contamination
of groundwater from the process. However, in April 2011 the US National Academy
of Sciences published a study showing that water
supplies in upstate New York and Pennsylvania have been contaminated with
methane as a result of shale gas extraction.
The anticipated reserves of shale gas lie around 1.5 km under
the ground, whereas the groundwater tables are at a maximum depth of 500 metres.
According to Malík, “it is absolutely certain” that some materials will get
into the groundwater, such as chemicals used in the extraction process and
the gas itself.
The Náchod district assembly passed a motion on February 20
opposing local shale gas exploration. Some 50 local administrations in the
region have signed a petition against surveying for shale gas, and submitted a
formal objection to the Ministry of Environment against the permit issued to
Basgas Energia Czech.
The permit for exploration includes a site near the town of
Náchod, which is a key source of local drinking water. “We must not let anyone
ever drill here. What’s important for us here isn’t gas but water,” assembly
member Fiedler Libor said at the meeting. “Náchod is around 80 percent
connected to the Polická křídová basin, and there is a great danger of
contamination of the groundwater,” Náchod Mayor Jan Birke said at the same
meeting. Franc is also opposed to Hutton Energy’s plans. Drilling towers “don’t
belong in the shadow of the Krkonoš Mountains or above the Babiččiný Valley,”
he said.
Apart from its plans in the Náchod, Trutnov and Broumov districts,
Basgas Energia Czech also wants to survey a 946 km² block in the Beroun
district 30 km southwest of Prague.
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