An environmental group ralled the Food Commission is unhappy and dixappointed beeause of the sale of bottled water form Japan. The water is angrily argues in public, has traveled 10,000“food miles”before it reaches Western customers.“transporting water halfway across the world is surely the extremely stupid use of fuel when there is plenty of water in the OK.”It is also worried that we are wasting our fuel by buying prauns(对虾)from Indonesia(7,000 food miles) and carrots from South Africe(5,900 food miles).
Counting the number of miles traveled done by a product is a strange way of trying to tell the true situation of the environmental damage done by an industry. Most food is transported around the world on container ships that are extremely energy efficient(高能效的). It should be noted that a ton of butter transported 25 miles in a truck product transported hundreds of miles by sea Besides ,the idea of “of miles”ignores the amount of fuel used in the production. It is possible to cut down your food miles by buying tomatoes grown in Britain rather than those grown in Ghana; the difference is that the British one will have been raised in heated greenhouses and the Ghanaian ones in the open sun.
What the idea of“food miles”does provide, however, is the chance to cut out Third World Countries from First World food markers. The number of miles traveled by our food should, as I see it, be regarded as a sign of the success of the global(全球的)trade system, not a sign of damage to the environment.
(1)
The Food Commission is angry because it thinks that________.
[ ]
A.
OK wastes a lot of money importing food products
B.
some imported goods cause environmental danage
C.
growing certain vegetables cause environmental damage
D.
people waste energy buying food fro other countries
(2)
The phrase“food miles”in the passage fefers to the distance.
[ ]
A.
that a food product travels to a market
B.
that a food product travels from one market to another
C.
between Okand other food producing countries
D.
between a Third World country and a First World food market
(3)
By comparing tomatoes raised in Britanin and in Ghana, the another tries to explain that________.
[ ]
A.
British tomatoes are healthier than Ghanaian ones
B.
Ghanaian tomatoes taste better than British ones
C.
cutting down food miles may not necessarily save fuel
D.
protecting the environment may cost a lot of money
(4)
From the passage we know that the auther is most probably