SóProvas


ID
5418772
Banca
CESPE / CEBRASPE
Órgão
CBM-AL
Ano
2021
Provas
Disciplina
Inglês
Assuntos

How rich countries cause deforestation in poor ones


    Forests are crucial to the functioning of the Earth. They provide homes for plants and animals, absorb rainfall, produce oxygen and suck up carbon dioxide, helping to keep global temperatures in check. Environmentalists are increasingly worried about their loss. Ten thousand years ago, more than half of the world’s habitable land was covered in trees; since then one third have been cut down to make way for agriculture and an ever-growing number of humans. Efforts to reverse this trend, including tree-planting programmes in America, Europe, China and India, among other places, have helped replenish some of what is left of the world’s forests.

   

    But such gains do not tell the whole story. For all their tree-planting efforts at home, rich countries continue to contribute, through their consumption, to the levelling of vast tracts of forests in poor countries. A study, published on March 29th in Nature Ecology & Evolution, reveals the extent and location of the world’s “deforestation footprint”. Keiichiro Kanemoto and Nguyen Tien Hoang, of the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature in Japan, combined data on global forest loss with that on international trade between 2001 and 2015. They calculated that rich-country demand for goods led overwhelmingly to deforestation outside their own borders, and mostly in tropical countries. In G7 countries, for example, the area covered by forests increased every year between 2001 and 2015. But after adjusting for trade, the authors found that these countries contributed to a net loss of 20,000 square kilometers of forest in the rest of the world in 2015 alone.


Internet: <www.economist.com> (adapted).

Based on the text above, judge the following item.


It can be inferred that the more rich countries demand goods manufactured in poor countries, the more deforestation will take place in these poor countries.

Alternativas
Comentários
  • A questão cobra interpretação de um texto sobre como os países ricos causam desmatamento nos países pobres.

    Vamos analisar o enunciado:

    It can be inferred that the more rich countries demand goods manufactured in poor countries, the more deforestation will take place in these poor countries. Tradução - Pode-se inferir que quanto mais os países ricos demandarem bens manufaturados dos países pobres, mais desmatamento ocorrerá nesses países pobres.


    A resposta se evidencia nas seguintes linhas do 2o parágrafo:

    Rich countries continue to contribute, through their consumption, to the levelling of vast tracts of forests in poor countries. Rich-country demand for goods led overwhelmingly to deforestation outside their own borders, and mostly in tropical countries.
    Tradução - Os países ricos continuam a contribuir, por meio de seu consumo, para o nivelamento de vastas extensões de florestas nos países pobres. A demanda dos países ricos por bens levou ao desmatamento além de suas fronteiras e principalmente em países tropicais.


    Podemos perceber pela tradução acima que quanto mais os países ricos demandarem bens manufaturados dos países pobres, mais desmatamento ocorrerá nesses países pobres, pois os países ricos através de seu consumo exacerbado, forçam os países pobres ao desmatamento para poder produzir bens para suprir a demanda e dessa forma ganhar dinheiro com as exportações.


    Gabarito do Professor: CERTO.


  • Discordo do gabarito oficial:

    Em nenhum momento é dito que as mercadorias são manufaturadas no texto. Além disso, essa "demanda" por produtos pode ser interpretada como aumento do consumo interno, não uma compra direta de países pobres.