Tuesday, 31 October 2017

Breaking News English

Lesson on Pollution


Listen to these piece of news

https://breakingnewsenglish.com/1710/171023-pollution.html

https://breakingnewsenglish.com/1710/171023-pollution_01.mp3


Now say if the following sentences are True or False:
a) One in six deaths worldwide is because of pollution. T / F
b) Most deaths from pollution were because of infectious diseases. T / F 
c) Most pollution-related deaths were in richer countries. T / F 
d) Bangladesh and Sweden have the lowest pollution-related death rates. T / F 
e) A researcher said pollution and social injustice are strongly linked. T / F 
f) The researcher said pollution threatens human rights. T / F 
g) Water pollution was the biggest killer. T / F 
h) A scientist said pollution is so bad it is reaching crisis point. T / F

Now read and check if you understood correctly:

Pollution is the world's biggest killer. It caused one in six, or 16 percent, of all global deaths in 2015. Most of these deaths were from diseases like heart disease, lung cancer and stroke. Researchers said 92 percent of pollution-related deaths were in poor countries, especially countries with a lot of economic development. Bangladesh and Somalia were the countries most affected. Brunei and Sweden had the lowest numbers of deaths because of pollution.
A researcher said: "Pollution, poverty [and] poor health…are deeply [linked]." He said pollution threatens human rights, such as the right to life and health. Air pollution was the biggest killer. It killed 6.5 million people in 2015. The second biggest killer was water pollution. Next, was pollution in the workplace. A scientist said: "Air pollution is reaching crisis point." People with breathing problems, children and the elderly are hardest hit.