TEXT E In general terms, the
greenhouse effect, which has been studied with wary and keen interest for as
long as a century, has to do with a gradual warming of the earth’s atmosphere.
The warming is caused by an increase in the amount of carbon dioxide in the air
around us; the CO2 holds heat from the sun instead of letting it be
radiated back into space. The more of it in the atmosphere, the more difficult
it is for the heat to escape. CO2 in huge amounts is
constantly being released into the atmosphere by the burning of fossil fuels for
energy, especially coal. In the last 25 years the concentration of
CO2 has risen from about 315 parts per million to 340. Not much, you
might say if you are used to dealing with such delicate chemical relationships
as the right blend of vermouth and gin. But this is a significant rise, and some
conservative experts believe that by the third quarter of the next century, say,
2065, the concentration will have doubled. Others say the doubling will come
sooner, in less than 50 years; all agree the CO2 content will keep
going up. The climatic effects of that kind of change are
potentially tremendous. Temperatures would rise everywhere. According to the EPA
(Environmental Protection Agency) projections, the global average temperature
could go up about 3.6’ F by 2040, and as much as 9’ F by the year 2100, giving
the New York of that sultry time a climate, in the words of an EPA spokesman,
"like Daytona Beach, Florida Farming conditions in some chilly places that now
have a very short growing season would be better, and some desert regions would
get plentiful rainfall. But many areas now fruitful would be hurt. Our own
Midwest would probably suffer more frequent and punishing drought, and land now
dependent on irrigation would lose its sources of water. The temperature
increases would cause large-scale melting of ice near the poles and a rise in
the sea level of about two feet in the 100 years-just for openers-with the tides
of the future quite possibly necessitating "a gradual retreat to higher ground.
’ Noah, can you spare a line The author writes the passage to tell the reader ______.
A.what is the greenhouse effect B.how serious the greenhouse effect would be C.it is important to reduce the use of fossil fuels D.how to change the greenhouse effect