Adam's Wine: Reading Passage 1
Adam's Wine: Reading Passage 1
Adam's Wine: Reading Passage 1
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-15, which are based on Reading Passage 94 on the following pages.
Adam’s Wine
A Water is the giver and, at the same time, the taker of life. It covers most of the surface of the planet we live on and
features large in the development of the human race. On present predictions, it is an element that is set to assume even
greater significance.
B Throughout history, water has had a huge impact on our lives. Humankind has always had a rather ambiguous
relationship with water, on the one hand receiving enormous benefit from it, not just as a drinking source, but as a
provider of food and a means whereby to travel and to trade. But forced to live close to water in order to survive and to
develop, the relationship has not always been peaceful or beneficial. In fact, it has been quite the contrary. What has
essentially been a necessity for survival has turned out in many instances to have a very destructive and life-threatening
side.
C Through the ages, great floods alternated with long periods of drought have assaulted people and their
environment, hampering their fragile fight for survival. The dramatic changes to the environment that are now a feature
of our daily news are not exactly new: fields that were once lush and fertile are now barren; lakes and rivers that were
once teeming with life are now long gone; savannah has been turned to desert. What perhaps is new is our naive
wonder when faced with the forces of nature.
D Today, we are more aware of climatic changes around the world. Floods in far-flung places are instant hews for the
whole world. Perhaps these events make us feel better as we face the destruction of our own property by floods and
other natural disasters.
E In 2002, many parts of Europe suffered severe flood damage running into billions of euros. Properties across the
continent collapsed into the sea as waves pounded the coastline wreaking havoc with sea defences. But it was not just
the seas. Rivers swollen by heavy rains and by the effects of deforestation carried large volumes of water that wrecked
many communities.
F Building stronger and more sophisticated river defences against flooding is the expensive short-term answer. There
are simpler ways. Planting trees in highland areas, not just in Europe but in places like the Himalayas, to protect people
living in low-lying regions like the Ganges Delta, is a cheaper and more attractive solution. Progress is already being
made in convincing countries that the emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases is causing considerable
damage to the environment. But more effort is needed in this direction.
G And the future? If we are to believe the forecasts, it is predicted that two¬thirds of the world population will be
without fresh water by 2025. But for a growing number of regions of the world, the future is already with us. While
some areas are devastated by flooding, scarcity of water in many other places is causing conflict. The state of Texas in
the United States of America is suffering a shortage of water with the Rio Grande failing to reach the Gulf of Mexico for
the first time in 50 years in the spring of 2002, pitting region against region as they vie for water sources. With many
parts of the globe running dry through drought and increased water consumption, there is now talk of water being the
new oil.
H Other doom-laden estimates suggest that, while tropical areas will become drier and uninhabitable, coastal regions
and some low-lying islands will in all probability be submerged by the sea as the polar ice caps melt. Popular exotic
destinations now visited by countless tourists will become no-go areas. Today's holiday hotspots of southern Europe and
elsewhere will literally become hotspots - too hot to live in or visit. With the current erratic behaviour of the weather, it
is difficult not to subscribe to such despair.
I Some might say that this despondency is ill-founded, but we have had ample proof that there is something not quite
right with the climate. Many parts of the world have experienced devastating flooding. As the seasons revolve, the focus
of the destruction moves from one continent to another. The impact on the environment is alarming and the cost to life
depressing. It is a picture to which we will need to become accustomed.
Questions 1-8
Choose the most suitable headings for paragraphs B-I from the list of headings below.
Write the appropriate numbers (i-xiii) in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.
Note: There are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use all of them.
List of Headings
1 Paragraph B x
2 Paragraph C i
3 Paragraph D iv
4 Paragraph E xi
5 Paragraph F xii i
6 Paragraph G ii
7 Paragraph H xiii
8 Paragraph I iv
Choose the appropriate letters A-D and write them in boxes 9-15 on your answer sheet.
A two-sided.
B one-sided.
D fairly frightening.
C we should not be in awe of the news we read and see on TV every day.
D our surprise at the environmental change brought about by nature is something new.
B people will need to get used to climate changes that cause environmental damage.
C people are now more used to environmental damage than they have been in the past.