answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
alina1380
9 days ago
13

Read the passage. excerpt from "A Cooking Revolution: How Clean Energy and Cookstoves Are Saving Lives" by Chef José Andrés, Jun

e 7, 2016 Cooking: it's a simple act that has brought families around the world together for thousands and thousands of years. As a chef, I can think of few things more beautiful than that. However, I also know how deadly such a simple act can be , not only to our health, but to our environment. Think about it: For Americans, turning on the stove means simply turning a knob or switch. For people living in developing countries, particularly women and children, it means hours of collecting fuels like firewood, dung, or coal to burn in a rudimentary, smoky cookstove or over an open fire. The result is a constant source of toxic smoke that families breathe in daily, causing diseases like child pneumonia, heart disease, and lung cancer ,  not to mention taking a child away from her education. In fact, diseases caused by smoke from open fires and stoves claim 4.3 million lives every year. That's more than AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis combined. And the environment suffers, too. When people collect wood every day from their local forests to create charcoal or fuel for wood-burning stoves, it creates an unsustainable pace of deforestation that leads to mudslides, loss of watershed, and other environmental consequences. These stoves also contribute up to 25 percent of black carbon emissions, a pollutant that contributes directly to climate change. You see, from what we cook to how we cook, our food connects with our lives on so many levels. That's why having access to better technology and clean energy for cooking is as equally important as the ingredients in the food being prepared. It's also why I'm proud to support an effort to bring clean cookstoves and fuels to millions of people in developing countries. Together with the United Nations, the U.S. government, and partners around the world, the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves focuses on working with local communities and organizations to develop a market for cookstoves and fuels that significantly reduce emissions, cook more efficiently, and fit with local customs and culture. . . . The Obama administration's investment goes a long way toward achieving our goal of bringing access to clean cookstoves and fuels to 100 million households in places like China, Guatemala, Kenya, and India by 2020. Just last month, India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced his plan to connect 50 million Indian families to clean cooking gas over the next three years. This is an important step being taken at an unprecedented scale, and it could help protect the lives of millions, while also improving India's environment. That's powerful, people! Mothers can be healthier. Young girls have more time to go to school. Forests grow again. People can feed themselves without risking their lives to cook a meal. That's what we can accomplish by providing clean cookstoves and fuels. And that's a simple act that can change the world for years and years to come.
Read this paragraph from the excerpt:

And the environment suffers, too. When people collect wood every day from their local forests to create charcoal or fuel for wood-burning stoves, it creates an unsustainable pace of deforestation that leads to mudslides, loss of watershed, and other environmental consequences. These stoves also contribute up to 25 percent of black carbon emissions, a pollutant that contributes directly to climate change.

Why does the author place this paragraph immediately after the two paragraphs about diseases?


This paragraph makes a point that contrasts with the point of the previous two paragraphs.


This paragraph continues the previous two paragraphs by providing evidence for their idea.


This paragraph makes a related but broader point about environmental harm rather than harm to individuals.


This paragraph is less important than the previous ones, so it is placed later in the order.
English
2 answers:
Naddika [7.4K]9 days ago
8 0
The placement of this paragraph right after the two sections about diseases is intentional as it broadens the discussion to include environmental damage rather than solely focusing on individual harm.
Naddika [7.4K]9 days ago
7 0
The most suitable answer to the question would be indicated by this paragraph, as it presents a viewpoint that contrasts the points made in the prior sections.
You might be interested in
Match the bolded word in each excerpt from "Song of Myself" by Walt Whitman to its contextual meaning.
Gnom [7528]

Respuesta:

graft - combinar o integrar

transpire - ser revelado

to mottle - marcar con manchas

Explicación:

"Canto de mí mismo" es un poema de Walt Whitman, parte de su colección Leaves of Grass. También es el poema más extenso de esta colección y aborda la búsqueda de identidad.

En el primer fragmento del poema - ''El primero que injerto y aumento sobre mí, el segundo lo traduzco a nueva lengua'', el término 'injerto' significa combinar o integrar.

En el segundo fragmento - ''Podría ser que tú te descubras de los pechos de jóvenes'', la palabra 'descubrir' significa ser revelado.

En el último fragmento, "Tierra de brillo y oscura moteando la corriente del río", el contexto de 'moteando' se refiere a marcar con manchas o blotches.

5 0
1 month ago
Why was Hall concerned that the Germans would learn about the British reading their secret messages? The Germans would begin rea
Lady bird [7499]

The Germans would then seek alternative methods to transmit their communications.

7 0
27 days ago
Read 2 more answers
Which example uses an in-text citation correctly, according to MLA standards?
Naddika [7460]
I am quite confident it is a
4 1
1 month ago
Read 3 more answers
Name five examples of images or diction that evoke the American Dream in the first three paragraphs of
Flura [7041]

Answer:

In the introductory three paragraphs, the imagery or phrases that represent the American Dream include:

  1. America is a realm full of hope
  2. made from dreams,
  3. burning with yearning and aspiration.
  4. the land of promise
  5. freedom for my constrained spirit

Explanation:

The essay 'America and I' by Anzia Yezierska recounts her experience upon her arrival in America. Like countless other immigrants, she arrived with high hopes, dreams, and desires.

The terms or images that invoke the concept of the American Dream in the earlier paragraphs of the text are:

  1. America is a realm full of hope.
  2. made from dreams.
  3. burning with yearning and aspiration.
  4. the land of promise.
  5. freedom for my constrained spirit.
<pThrough these expressions, the writer illustrates the American Dream, initially declaring that America symbolizes hope, which is a sentiment shared by many immigrants. She portrays America as a tapestry of dreams, emphasizing the vision of the American Dream. The writer further connects America to the notion of a Promised Land, suggesting that to her and other immigrants from places like Russia, it represented the hope of liberation for their limited spirits.
5 0
1 month ago
What is the theme of the dancing partner?
Lady bird [7499]

Answer: Jerome K. Jerome's short story, The Dancing Partner, follows a group of young girls struggling to find suitable partners for dancing. One of the girls' fathers overhears their conversation and decides to create the perfect mechanical dancer, named Lt. Fritz, who would not make mistakes like stepping on toes. Initially, the girls are hesitant to dance with him, but one girl eventually takes the chance and discovers she is having fun. Trying to impress others, she loosens the screws on the mechanical dancer, causing him to spin faster and faster until she ultimately faints. They search for the creator but can’t locate him in time, and tragically, the girl ends up dead. From that moment onward, the inventor decides to focus on crafting smaller items.

Explanation:

4 0
1 month ago
Other questions:
  • Listen to an excerpt from Beowulf here. Write two to three sentences explaining what you notice about the language of the poem.
    15·2 answers
  • Read the excerpt below and answer the question. After the test, the group of conscripts was asked to sit at school desks and wri
    5·1 answer
  • Study the editorial cartoon How Fungal Bands Eliminate Asian Longhorned Beetles . . . by Don Landgren Jr. 3 mushrooms are in a b
    6·2 answers
  • in line 64,the speaker refers to “beaten silver paths.” To what does this image refer, and how is it connected to the silver bla
    5·1 answer
  • Read the excerpt below and answer the question. The mother understood, And wisely stepped away. Aunt Imogen Was there for only o
    10·1 answer
  • PART A: Which statement best describes the connection that Aristotle identifies between friendship and virtue?
    7·1 answer
  • Read the excerpt from Rena's Promise: Two Sisters in Auschwitz.
    7·2 answers
  • What is a question you can ask when analyzing the structure of a text?
    9·2 answers
  • Which statement best describes how the author develops her analysis of the treatment of women who defect from North Korea?
    10·1 answer
  • As a member of the Feel Power.org team, Noah explains, "I like to teach kids because I feel like I have good mentors in my life.
    7·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!