时间:2018-12-19 作者:英语课 分类:Entertainment


英语课

  Anna:  Hello, I'm Anna Jones and this is Entertainment. In this programme we're


  going to be taking a look at a different kind of entertainment that's available to


  everyone and is also free to use.


  Today we're talking about the countryside and we'll be hearing from Helen


  Phillips who's the new chief executive of the new countryside agency known as


  “Natural England.” Natural England has been set up to be a source of advice


  and help for farmers and a protector of the environment. Is Natural England


  only concerned with the countryside though – what does Helen say?


  Helen Phillips


  I would say that Natural England is as much about the urban environment as it is about the


  rural environment and in many ways making the connection between both.


  Anna:  Helen says that Natural England is not just about the rural environment or


  countryside, it's also concerned with the urban or city environment. She says


  that it's an organisation 1 which tries to “make a connection” between the two


  environments. If you try to make a connection between two things then you try


  to bring them closer together in some way. Helen goes on to talk about where


  Natural England will spend some of its money. She says that three hundred


  million pound will go to farmers and other people in rural communities to help


  protect the environment. This money will help to maintain and enhance


  habitats– it will help to improve important habitats. Habitats are the natural


  surroundings in which a plant or animal usually lives. The money will also


  protect different species – species are a set of animals or plants in which the


  members have very similar characteristics to each other and can breed with


  each other.


  But what other practical actions will this money achieve in rural areas? Have


  listen to Helen – what does she say will happen to the uplands?   The uplan


  are areas of land that are situated 2 high up such as a hill or a mountain. And


  what does she say will happen to the peat lands? Peat lands are areas of land


  covered in a dark brown earth-like substance which was formed by plants


  dying. Here's Helen:


  Helen Phillips


  Three hundred million pounds of our payments are going to farmers and other people in rural


  communities and what they're doing in many ways is not only making sure that we maintain


  and indeed enhance important habitats and protect species for everybody but also take very


  practical actions for instance, if the uplands and the peat lands are managed properly they


  become carbon sinks rather than carbon emitters, they make sure the water is restored in a


  proper way so its much cheaper to treat when it comes down to the cities and towns and the


  water treatment works. It can reduce the flood risk. If the uplands are managed properly it can


  reduce flood risk in downstream towns by up to 20% . So there are huge connections about


  managing the land in an integrated way for the whole of the community.


  Anna:  Helen says that if both the uplands and the peat lands are managed properly by


  the farmers then they become “carbon sinks” instead of “carbon emitters. So


  instead of emitting or sending out harmful carbon gases, the uplands and peat


  lands become like sinks – the gases are absorbed or sink into the earth. The


  farmers also help to make sure that the water from the hillsides is looked after


  in a proper way so that it's cheaper to treat at the water treatment works in the


  cities. Helen says that if the uplands are well managed by the farmers the risk


  of flooding occurring in nearby communities is reduced – it goes down by


  about 20%. So the whole community benefits from the land being well looked


  after.


  But what about coastal 3 areas – areas of land next to the sea? How will Natural


  England ensure that people can enjoy the coast as well as the countryside?


  Helen Phillips


  We need to make sure that people get more access to the coast – we will be doing more work


  now on how it is we get access for folk to enjoy the coast.


  Anna:  Helen says that they will make sure that people have more access to the coast –


  they will ensure that they are able to visit it more easily. She says that Natural


  England will be doing more work to find out how folk – how ordinary people,


  can enjoy the coast. Well I'm off to the countryside this weekend – don't forget


  to join us next time for another edition of Entertainment.



1 organisation
n.组织,安排,团体,有机休
  • The method of his organisation work is worth commending.他的组织工作的方法值得称道。
  • His application for membership of the organisation was rejected.他想要加入该组织的申请遭到了拒绝。
2 situated
adj.坐落在...的,处于某种境地的
  • The village is situated at the margin of a forest.村子位于森林的边缘。
  • She is awkwardly situated.她的处境困难。
3 coastal
adj.海岸的,沿海的,沿岸的
  • The ocean waves are slowly eating away the coastal rocks.大海的波浪慢慢地侵蚀着岸边的岩石。
  • This country will fortify the coastal areas.该国将加强沿海地区的防御。
学英语单词
acceptance check of turbine foundation
airborne radar beacon
algebra of proposition
alpha-lobeline
amount limit
anterior brachio-radial septum
any-quantity rate
areal system
attrition grinder
aurelian
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Basic Law of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
bertini
blue moons
blunker
built-in sideburns trimmer
case grammar
cash ticket
co-sedimentation
common sword fish
confirmed irrevocable credit
constant level regulator
copper bound
cost composition
Darlowo
distancing
do not care a dime
El Zapotal, R.
electric-light blindness
electronic surveying
espacement
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extension agreement
external body parts
floating aerator
foramina nutricium
form standard
fresh water cooler tube
glacks
haplobiontic yeast
hepatogenic jaundice
Homerist
Imst
indicator of demographical trend
inland shelf
jop
judicial interpretation
landfils
lineids
marcotted
medial lumbocostal arch
mergus albelluss
meta directing group
minidomes
monobactam
necrosis of scrotum
neutral impurity
no waiting
noise equivalent pass-band
octple meter
operator cabin
optimum ship routing
ordered random sample
orgenon
Ormosia pubescens
ostrich-skin
papulovesicular pityriasis
patriotic song
photocomposed
phsophate
pinda
prespermatogonium
Professional Accountants Ordinance
progranid
proteobacteria
regression interpolation
runcinated
rushing
s-t
selfpossession
sequential interlace
Soap Lake
stenotypy
stretch blow moulding
striped flea-beetle
swaat
São Simão R.
thermoelastic effect
time of fall
toll canopy
ulceronecrotic
united world-chinese commercial bank
unliteralness
vacuum fishpump
vegetated shoulder
Venae portales hypophysiales
vermilion opal
Von Postbreen
xlier
y shaped
Yelcho Canyon
zero done