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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Voice 1
Voice 2
And I’m Liz Waid. Spotlight uses a special English method of broadcasting. It is easier for people to understand, no matter where in the world they live.
Voice 1
In 2009 one woman brought a message to one of the world’s largest companies. The company was Cargill, a major farm business. She told Cargill that she wanted them to change the way they worked. She saw how their business methods were harming the environment and her community. This woman was Matilda Pilacapio.
Voice 2
Matilda Pilacapio owns land in the Sangarai Valley. This is in Milne Bay province, Papua New Guinea. Pilacapio has been a government official. She fights for human rights. And she works2 with a local group called “Milne Bay Women in Agriculture”. As a community leader, Pilacapio believed she had to do something.
Voice 1
Milne Bay is a very small but important place. This is one of the places where large companies like Cargill work with local farmers. Together they grow oil palm plants. These plants produce very useful oil called palm oil. But there are many problems with the current system of farming oil palm plants. These problems influence the farmers and the environment. Pilacapio told the Rainforest Action Network:
Voice 3
“I think it is a disease3 all through the country. A lot of the land, especially the good land, has been taken up for growing palm oil. A lot of the vegetation4 plants are lost. A lot of the forests and everything seems to be just going into palm oil. It brings a lot of destruction5 when we lose a lot of land, resources, and the environment. It is something that is common going through Papua New Guinea. And it is causing a lot of problems. Rivers and creeks6 have dried up because palm oil takes a lot of water. And good water has just gone into oil palm roots. So it has brought a lot of destruction to the lives of our people.”
Voice 2
Palm oil is extremely useful oil. The oil comes from the fruit of the oil palm tree. Some people simply use it to cook fresh food. But companies use it in many different products too. It is used in packaged food - food that stays good for a long time. It is also found in body care products like lotion7 and make-up. And it can be used as a fuel to power vehicles. Because it is so useful, demand for palm oil is great. More and more people are producing and using this oil for all kinds of purposes.
Voice 1
But producing this oil comes at a great cost to the environment. Growing oil palm trees often means destroying valuable natural areas like peatland and rainforests. An internet blog of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy is called Think Forward. This blog reports that Papua New Guinea is home to some of the last remaining rainforests. These special ecosystems8 are home to many different plants, animals and people. This area in Papua New Guinea contains 5% of global biodiversity. Experts say that the people groups here speak over 830 languages. When the rainforests disappear, these people groups are affected9. The languages are lost. And the many plants and animals disappear.
Voice 2
Indonesia and Malaysia are the world’s biggest producers of palm oil. In Indonesia, many animals are losing their homes to make room for oil palms. Elephants, tigers, and orangutans all live in the rainforests. Many of these animals are endangered. They may disappear unless people do something to save them.
Voice 1
Rainforests and peatlands can also hold gases like carbon dioxide inside of them. Scientists believe that gases like carbon dioxide are bad for the environment. When these areas are destroyed, they release10 carbon dioxide into the air.
Voice 2
Pilacapio has seen this damage to the environment. But she has also seen much damage to the traditional way of life in Papua New Guinea. She has seen the negative result for the people there. She told the blog Think Forward:
Voice 3
“Life has changed in a big way. We have a traditional way of life of sharing and giving. What we have, we share with our village. Now our people live in a monetary11 world. Our people are at a point of change.”
Voice 1
Pilacapio is trying to change the way that Cargill works in this area. Traditionally, much of the land in Papua New Guinea is owned by a community. So companies try to find new ways to control the land. Many companies enter legal agreements with community members. The company charges the community for costs like transporting goods. Then, they will take much of the profit. The people agree to plant oil palm until they pay off the money they owe.
Voice 2
But Pilacapio argues that community farmers who enter these agreements suffer. They do not understand the legal documents they sign to work with Cargill. It is not easy to get legal help. And even if the farmers know where they can get it, it is often too far away.
Voice 1
Pilacapio also says these farmers depend too much on the oil palm plant. When the price of the palm oil changes, they do not have money or food. She also describes how many young people cannot become farmers. Too much land is used for oil palm. There is not enough new land to make new farms!
Voice 2
Pilacapio would like to see Cargill work more fairly with farmers. She wants farmers to understand the legal documents they sign to work with big companies. She also wants farmers to return to a more traditional way of farming. She wants them to grow groups of different crops. That way, if one crop fails, farmers can still depend on their other crops.
Voice 1
Cargill and other big companies that use palm oil have agreed to deal with these issues. They have agreed to work toward12 more sustainable methods of farming oil palm plants. Sustainable methods would save the natural environment of rainforests and peatlands. Other companies have also agreed to use less palm oil in their products.
Voice 2
Individual people can also have an influence on palm oil production. People can know if the products they use have palm oil in them. They can investigate to see if that palm oil is from a sustainable place. These are sometimes difficult things to do. But they could have a big influence on the environment and the people who farm palm oil. This is one way people can make a difference.
Voice 1
The writer and producer of this program was Liz Waid. The voices were from the United States. All quotes have been adapted for this program and voiced by Spotlight. You can hear this program again, and read it, on the internet at http://www.radioEnglish.net This .program is called “Palm Oil Problems”.
Voice 2
You can also receive Spotlight programs every week - directly to your computer - with the Spotlight podcast. Just follow the podcast link on the Spotlight website – radioenglish.net. If you have a comment or question about any Spotlight program you can email us at [email protected]. Or you can leave a comment on the script13 page of any program.
We hope you can join us again for the next Spotlight program. Goodbye.
点击收听单词发音
1 spotlight | |
n.公众注意的中心,聚光灯,探照灯,视听,注意,醒目 | |
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2 works | |
n.作品,著作;工厂,活动部件,机件 | |
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3 disease | |
n.疾病,弊端 | |
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4 vegetation | |
n.植物,草木,(植物)生长 | |
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5 destruction | |
n.破坏,毁灭,消灭 | |
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6 creeks | |
n.小湾( creek的名词复数 );小港;小河;小溪 | |
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7 lotion | |
n.洗剂 | |
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8 ecosystems | |
n.生态系统( ecosystem的名词复数 ) | |
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9 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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10 release | |
vt.发布,发表,发行;释放,放开 | |
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11 monetary | |
adj.货币的,钱的;通货的;金融的;财政的 | |
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12 toward | |
prep.对于,关于,接近,将近,向,朝 | |
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13 script | |
n.剧本,广播稿;文字体系;笔迹,手迹 | |
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