时间:2019-01-11 作者:英语课 分类:2006年VOA标准英语(五月)


英语课


By George Dwyer
Washington, DC
01 May 2006
 
watch World Oil Peak report


Rising oil prices have many consumers and business people wondering how long it will be before the price of a barrel of oil or a liter of gasoline returns to "normal."  But some resource experts believe current prices are the new normality and tight supplies of petroleum 1 are here to stay.


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Tom Whipple  
  


Tom Whipple writes and edits for an international energy newsletter outside Washington, D.C.  In the past year he has written over 50 columns about the likely impact of what has been called "Peak Oil."


“What 'Peak Oil' means is that we are about halfway 2 through all the oil under the earth."


More importantly, says Whipple, most of what is left will likely be far more difficult to extract than has been the case up to now. "It really does not matter too much how much is under the earth if you cannot get it out and get it to your gas station."


Whipple says that means energy prices are likely to remain high until alternative fuels can be developed, and/or human activities altered to lessen 3 our dependence 4 on petroleum. That transition -- the "Peak Oil" transition -- could take decades.  And in the meantime? "Nobody really knows what is going to happen -- nobody has any idea what the world is going to look like as we transition from the oil age to, call it the 'post-oil age,' because it has never happened before."



Myron Ebell  
  
But not everyone agrees with the Peak Oil theorists. Myron Ebell is director of energy and global warming policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a Washington D.C. think tank that studies market forces. "I think that from the resource standpoint we care certainly about not running out of oil. I do believe that there are a lot of political obstacles to producing oil in the world."


He says one example of political obstacles that hold down U.S. oil production is the refusal of Congress to allow drilling in places where there are thought to be large oil reserves, in Alaska and off the Atlantic and Pacific coastlines.


But if the "Peak Oil" theorists are right, vast patterns of social behavior may be about to change.  For example, the theory suggests Americans are likely to cut down on "non-essential" driving, and to carpool more often as oil supplies tighten 5 and prices continue to rise.


Discretionary air travel is likely to decline as well, say the theorists, posing a major challenge for today's airlines.


Mr. Whipple says, "Right now we are seeing an awful lot of the world's airlines encountering a great big problem. A number of the smaller ones are really on the verge 6 of re-structuring themselves."


The International Air Transport Association reports the combined fuel bill for all the world's airlines topped $92 billion last year, up 50 percent from 2004. Whipple says it is not hard to imagine future airfares increasing exponentially in response.


Even in areas such as landscaping and recreation, Americans and many others are likely to alter their purchasing decisions, and their behavior, in response to higher prices. Whipple says once people accept that oil price hikes are here to stay, their entire worldview is all but certain to change as well.




n.原油,石油
  • The Government of Iran advanced the price of petroleum last week.上星期伊朗政府提高了石油价格。
  • The purpose of oil refinery is to refine crude petroleum.炼油厂的主要工作是提炼原油。
adj.中途的,不彻底的,部分的;adv.半路地,在中途,在半途
  • We had got only halfway when it began to get dark.走到半路,天就黑了。
  • In study the worst danger is give up halfway.在学习上,最忌讳的是有始无终。
vt.减少,减轻;缩小
  • Regular exercise can help to lessen the pain.经常运动有助于减轻痛感。
  • They've made great effort to lessen the noise of planes.他们尽力减小飞机的噪音。
n.依靠,依赖;信任,信赖;隶属
  • Doctors keep trying to break her dependence of the drug.医生们尽力使她戒除毒瘾。
  • He was freed from financial dependence on his parents.他在经济上摆脱了对父母的依赖。
v.(使)变紧;(使)绷紧
  • Turn the screw to the right to tighten it.向右转动螺钉把它拧紧。
  • Some countries tighten monetary policy to avoid inflation.一些国家实行紧缩银根的货币政策,以避免通货膨胀。
n.边,边缘;v.接近,濒临
  • The country's economy is on the verge of collapse.国家的经济已到了崩溃的边缘。
  • She was on the verge of bursting into tears.她快要哭出来了。
学英语单词
AIRCO cutting method
aldehydeamines
anaerobic corrosive bacteria
Antimoniosis
aroma jewelry
atriovenous
audio frequency section
axiomata media
berthing time
border note
calocycletta virginis (haeckel)
colonial expansion
crapoid
dehorney
dinise
diplomatic secretary
doctrine of forest rent
draught link anchorage
dummy order
effeminise
elbow connection
elpidio
emmolic acid
enrichmentmode
extended table zero-sided Lindenmayer system
farseer
flipflop sign control
fvb
Gale's duality theorem
genus Chlamydera
glacial clay
Hermitian kernel
hyphestic hemiplegia
infusibleness
intermediate product
International Ship Structure Congress
interpectoral
issues from
jealisom
Karacaköy
kleptocrats
kozma
kroch
krypton 84 beam
laminal placentation
lands tribunal
Ligamenta tarsometatarsalia plantaria
lithium bromate
Littlewoods Pools
Luer's syringe
make him
marshalling yard control office
Metanilamido
Millard-Gulbler
mound-type breakwater
Mtarazi Falls
multiple message mode
nitrofurantion
non-freezing stream
off-set drilling
offence of bribery
overgone
overthwartwise
Oxazimedrine
para-book
pashminas
pinionfile
preboiler corrosion
preshredded
prosotas nora formosana
purchasing of equipment
rangoli (india)
re-constricting
re-uped
recharge area of aquifer
rock-oil
scent marks
sejoined
Semid.
sepses
sepultus
sequenced acknowledge
shallow-water effect
sharpenable
Shiraki-mine
shoeboy
single shaft gas turbine
sliding flue damper
source time function
stolorow
switch-trading
Tabellaria
textured silicon solar cell
trapa bispinosa iinumae
triangular patch
two-wheel garage jack
vitrified tile
wet mechanical
wiggler magnet
willow tree
yinka
Zusammenhang