英语听力早读mp3每日听力BBC六分钟-6

英语听力早读mp3(每日听力BBC六分钟-6)

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每日听力内容来自BBC英语六分钟,仅供学习。该节目英式英语,每日更新,和实际生活密切相关。每个听力文件6分钟,而且每次都有听力题目,可以用来备考四六级等各种英语考试考试。

听力方法:1. 听3-5遍以上,2. 对照文本听2遍,并查5-10个单词 3. 盲听5遍以上。4. 留言处写下问题的答案。只要你留言,我就给你上墙,留言格式:昵称 天数,e.g 爱酱-Day 4,分享朋友圈更欢迎!

Do manufacturers design technology so that it eventually fails? Or is it just that consumers expect less these days? Neil and Catherine explore our relationship with buying new technology and teach you six items of useful vocabulary.

This Weeks Question

How much electronic waste is thrown away every year globally?

a) 420 tonnes

b) 4.2 million tonnes

c) 42 million tonnes

Listen to the programme to find out the answer.

Transcript

Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript

Neil

Welcome to 6 Minute English, where we bring you an interesting topic and six items of vocabulary.

Catherine

And all in just six minutes, of course. Im Catherine.

Neil

And Im Neil. Today – is technology built to fail? And are we throwing away too much technology and harming the planet? Catherine, tell me - how old is your TV?

Catherine

My TV has just had its fifth birthday.

Neil

And your mobile phone?

Catherine

Its about two and a half.

Neil

So you do like to have gizmos, but not necessarily the latest.

Catherine

Exactly.

Neil

Gizmo– nice word. Agizmois a small piece of technology – otherwise called a gadget.

Catherine

And of course Im not alone in buying gadgets from time to time. They actually keep on getting more advanced – so people keep buying new ones.

Neil

Technology also gets cheaper and cheaper. In fact, many gadgets are more expensive to fix than replace.

Catherine

And this means that we throw a lot of gadgets away – but how many?

Neil

See if you can guess: how much electronic waste is thrown away every year globally? Is it…

a) 420 tonnes,

b) 4.2 million tonnes or

c) 42 million tonnes?

Catherine

And I do actually know the answer to this once, so Im gonna keep quiet, just for once!

Neil

Ah, first time for everything! So, to bring us back to our main point. Is technology no longer built to last? Lets hear first from Professor Tim Cooper who is an expert in sustainableconsumption and production at Nottingham Trent University in the UK.

Catherine

Sustainable, by the way, means able to continue over a long period of time. We often use it to mean able to continue without causing harm – like environmental damage. Whats the problem with mobile phones?

INSERT

Tim Cooper, Professor of Sustainable Consumption and Production at Nottingham Trent University

The classic example of this is the mobile phone, where, for example, screens are glued into the product. Now they know that if there was a screwthere, the consumer could easily, when that screen cracks, which is obviously a very common problem with mobile phones,unscrewit and put a new screen on. They dont. They know perfectly well that that would be a way in which mobile phones would last longer. They dont want that, they want you to replace your mobile phone every year or two.

Neil

Professor Cooper says that mobile phones screens crack often – and generally when that happens people buy a new one.

Catherine

Thats partly because mobile phones screens are glued on rather than screwedon. Now ascrewis a piece of metal like a nail but with a raised twisted part – and we use screws to join two things together.

Neil

The verb form is the same – to screw– and the opposite is tounscrew. If you couldunscrewa cracked screen and then replace it, thered be no need to buy a whole new phone, he says.

Catherine

He thinks that generally, people have lowered their expectationswhen it comes to how long things should last.

Neil

Expectationsis a good word – anexpectationis a strong belief something will happen.Expectationscan be raised orlowered.

Catherine

Or managed – to manage your expectations means to not let your expectations get so high that you then become disappointed when something fails.

Neil

Yes, by way of an example, Professor Cooper says that his parents washing machine lasted for 37 years. These days, they last between five and ten.

Catherine

Yeah. And we dont see electrical products as an investment in the same way that people used to. We now worry that what we buy today will become obsolete tomorrow.

Neil

Obsolete– no longer valid or useful. And also – he says weve become so used to cheap products that we dont want to spend more on good quality.

Catherine

So whats to be done?

Neil

Cooper suggests that if we can afford it, we really should try to buy higher quality products. And manufacturers should put labels on their products saying how long they are designed to last.

Catherine

An interesting idea. Cooper says that over 2m pounds worth of electrical goods are thrown away each year in the UK. He calls it a throwaway culture.

Neil

A culture in which we throw things out much more easily. Not good for the planet either. So – will you try to keep your mobile for a bit longer, or are you already tempted by the latest model, Catherine?

Catherine

Im happy with the one Ive got, but Im gonna protect the screen very carefully.

Neil

Yes, a good idea. Maybe this will help you make up your mind, though. I asked how many tonnes of electrical waste are thrown away globally.

Catherine

And I said I know the answer – its actually 42m tonnes, according to a UN report back in 2015. The figure could be a lot higher now. And as you know – my mobile isnt very heavy – so 42m tonnes is an awful lot of phones! While we try to picture that, lets quickly run through todays vocabulary. So first up was gizmo- a small piece of technology – a gadget.

Neil

Smartphones, smart watches, fitness trackers, sat navs – all gizmos!

Catherine

We had sustainable– able to last or continue. We talk aboutsustainableenergy,sustainableeconomic development…

Neil

The opposite would be unsustainable development… And another pair of words – toscrewand tounscrew.

Catherine

A screw is that little metal thing like a nail that we use to join things together. You canscrew shelves into the wall, you canscrewfurniture together…

Neil

And when you move house you unscrew it. Three more: tolower your expectations. What have you lowered your expectations about?

Catherine

Err, so many things… Becoming a millionaire - I dont think thats going to happen. Or I could say a company has lowered its expectationsabout performance over the next five years.

Neil

Yes – another one looking ahead into the future – Im pretty sure my computer will be obsoletein ten years. It will no longer be used – it will be out of date.

Catherine

I just urge you, Neil, when you do get a new one – please recycle this one responsibly. We already live in a throwaway culture.

Neil

Yes – its pretty unsustainable. Now, before your laptop or phone becomesobsolete– I suggest you check out our Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube pages! Bye for now.

Catherine

Bye!

Vocabulary

gizmo

a small piece of technology – otherwise called a gadget

sustainable

able to continue over a long period of time (or able to continue without causing harm)

to screw

to join together using a screw: a nail with twisting raised edges

to lower your expectations

to reduce your belief something good will happen

obsolete

no longer used, out of date

throwaway culture

describes a society in which people throw things out very easily

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