单选题
{{B}}Part C{{/B}}
Answer questions 71~80 by referring to the
following games.
Note:Answer each question by choosing A,B,C or
D and mark it on ANSWER SHEET 1. Some choices may be required more than
once.
A= BOOK1 B= BOOK2 C= BOOK3
D= BOOK4
Which book(s) say(s) that...
·the climate affects the future sustainable agricultural development?
71.______
·environmental control is related with
the national revenues? 72.______
·the
environmental problems are not caused overnight? 73.______
·a variety of species are on the decrease?
74.______
·agriculture is also a factor for file degradation of
environment? 75.______
·pollution can be
controlled by increasing the production cost of polluting goods?
76. ______
·pollution control needs the support of
technology and techniques? 77. ______
·provides
lessons for agriculture, trade, land u~e and tax policy from an economic
perspective? 78.______
·the degradation of environment
causes the change of climate? 79.______
·the
approaches to research should be adjusted to the changing situation? 80.
______
A BOOK 1
The book
offers a comprehensive perspective on the consequences and possible policy
solutions for climatic change as we move into the twenty-first century. It
assesses the impact of potential feature global climate change on agriculture
and the need to sustain agricultural growth for the economic development.
The book begins by examining the role of international research
institutions in overcoming environmental constraints on sustainable agricultural
growth and economic development. The authors then discuss how agricultural
research systems may be restructured to respond to global environmental problems
such as climate change and loss of genetic diversity. The discussion then
extends to consider environmental accounting and indexing, to illustrate how
environmental quality can be included formally in measures of national income,
social welfare and sustainability. The third part of the book focuses on the
effects of and policy responses to climate change. Chapters in this part examine
the effect of climate change on production, trade, land use patterns and
livelihoods. They consider impacts on the distribution of income between
developed and developing countries remain a major economic activity. Authors
take on an economy-wide perspective to draw lessons for agriculture, trade, land
use and tax policy.
B BOOK 2
The ozone layer is threatened by chemical emissions; the climate is
endangered from fossil and deforestation, and global biodiversity is being lost
by reason of thousands of years of habitat conversions. Global environmental
problems arise out of the accumulated impacts from many years' and many
countries' economic development. In order to address these problems the states
of the world must cooperate to manage their development processes together--this
is what an international environmental agreement must do. But can the world's
countries cooperate successfully to manage global development? How should they
manage it? Who should pay for the process, as well as for the underlying
problems?
This book presents an examination of both the problem
and the process underlying international environmental lawmaking: the
recognition of international interdependence, the negotiation of international
agreements and the evolution of international resource management. It examines
the general problem of global resource management by means of general principles
and case studies and by looking at how and why specific negotiations and
agreements have failed to achieve their targets.
The book is
designed as an introductory text for those studying global environmental policy
making and institution building. It will also be of interest to practitioners
and policy makers and scholars in the areas of environmental economics and law.
C BOOK 3
Industrialization to
achieve economic development has resulted in global environmental degradation.
While the impacts of industrial activity on the natural environment are a major
concern in developed countries, much less is known about these impacts in
developing countries. This source book identifies and quantifies the
environmental consequences of industrial growth, and provides policy advice,
including the Use of clean technologies and environmentally sound production
techniques, with special reference to the developing world.
The
developing world is often seen as having a high percentage of heavily polluting
activities within its industrial sector. This, combined with a substantial
agriculture sector, which contributes to deforestation, the erosion of the top
soil and desertification, has led to extreme pressures on the environment and
impoverishes the population by destroying its natural resource base. This crisis
suggests that sound industrialization policies are of paramount importance in
developing countries' economic development, and calls for the management of
natural resources and the adoption of low-waste of environmentally clean
technologies.
The authors consider the industrial sector as a
pollutant to other sectors of the economy, and then focus on some
industrial-specific pollutants within the manufacturing sector and some
process-specific industrial pollutants. They conclude by reviewing the economic
implications of promoting environmentally sound industrial development,
specially adressing the question of the conflict or complementarily which may
exist between environmental goods and industrial production.
D BOOK 4
This is an important book which
presents new concepts of the marginal cost of substituting non-pollu-tive for
pollutive goods. Technically in its approach it complements the other literature
in the field and will be a significant contribution to the understanding of
microeconomic issues in pollution control. The book focuses on the three main
concepts: substitutions in consumption, emission abatement and exposure
avoidance. The first part considers the adjustment of the scope and combination
of goods produced as a method for controlling pollution.
The
author argues that pollution is controlled by increasing the relative price of
the polluting goods in the production process, thereby reducing demand and
subsequent production of the goods. In the second part, the discussion is
extended to include the possibilities of preventing or abating emissions in
relation to three models: first, pollution prevention when non-polluting inputs
and processes are substituted for pollutants; second, when a proportion of the
polluting output is recycled rather than being discarded; and finally
end-of-pipe abatement where additional technology is used. In conclusion, the
author assesses the extent to which pollution damage is controlled by avoidance
of emissions, with avoidance being modeled as an add-on technology with its own
returns to scale.