Library/PT 115/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

By 2030 the world could have 10 billion people, and if everyone used metals, oil, and other resources the way people in rich countries do now, we would run out of key materials quickly and make massive amounts of trash. The passage says this shows why we must recycle, save materials, and use alternatives, and why we should redesign industry as an "industrial ecosystem" where one process’s waste becomes another process’s raw material—like how nature recycles. Some companies already do parts of this; recycling still costs energy and makes some pollution, and a fully closed system isn’t possible yet, but with changes in rich countries and cleaner choices by developing countries industry could become far more sustainable.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the sentence that mentions "designed offal" and read the surrounding evaluation: the author presents it as already in use and helpful for recycling but also notes it still requires energy and produces some by-products; choose the answer that reflects a promising but incomplete step.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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3.

The author of the passage would most probably agree with which one of the following statements about the use of "designed offal" (third sentence of the third paragraph)?

Correct Answer
D
"Some manufacturers are already making use of 'designed offal' in the manufacture of metals and some plastics: tailoring the production of waste from a manufacturing process so that the waste can be fed directly back into that process or a related one. Such recycling still requires the expenditure of energy and the unavoidable generation of some wastes and harmful by-products, but at much lower levels than are typical today." (third paragraph) Together with the final paragraph's point that "The ideal industrial ecosystem... will not be attained soon; current technology is often inadequate to the task," these lines show the author views 'designed offal' as a useful, already-employed step that reduces waste but does not by itself solve all problems. Thus answer D best captures the author's view: promising but not a complete solution.
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