Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
People and industry are using more water while supplies shrink, so rivers that cross borders are becoming more important and could cause fights. The U.N. wrote draft rules saying countries should share water fairly, not harm each other, and protect ecosystems. But those drafts often fix exact water amounts and don’t plan for future changes like climate change, which can make river flows rise or fall a lot. To avoid unfair outcomes when water drops, treaties should be more flexible—for example, give each country a share based on percentages or include clear backup plans for reduced flows.
Logic Breakdown
Approach: locate the author's explicit criticism of the Draft Articles: they recommend fixed, specific water allocations that the author says will be inflexible in the face of future, climate-driven changes. Supporting passage sentences: Treaties that allocate fixed amounts of water to various countries based on current usage, as suggested by the Draft Articles, will not be flexible enough to respond to these large fluctuations in river flows. Once specific water rights are allocated along a river in accordance with the Draft Articles, nations would have no mechanism for coping with a drastic reduction in the flow of the river. Adhering rigidly to these fixed allocations would unjustly favor those countries whose water usage is most extensive.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.In the passage, the author claims that the Draft Articles are flawed in that they
Correct Answer
D
D is correct because it paraphrases the passage's central criticism: the Draft Articles suggest treaties that stipulate specific quantities of water based on current usage, and the author argues that such fixed allocations will be insufficiently flexible and may become inequitable under future environmental changes. The passage explicitly states that treaties allocating fixed amounts 'will not be flexible enough to respond to these large fluctuations in river flows' and that 'Once specific water rights are allocated ... nations would have no mechanism for coping with a drastic reduction in the flow of the river.'
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