How can I help the environment? 6 Minute English

266,101 views ・ 2019-08-29

BBC Learning English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Neil: Hello. This is 6 Minute English. I'm Neil.
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Sam: And I'm Sam.
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Neil: Now, tell me about your teeth-cleaning routine.
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Sam: OK. Well, it’s pretty good, I think.
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I brush twice a day and change my brush
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every couple of months.
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Neil: And what kind of brush do you use?
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Sam: Nothing fancy, just a regular, cheap plastic one.
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Neil: Oh dear!
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Sam: What do you mean?
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Neil: Well, imagine all the toothbrushes you’ve
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used in your life,
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from your first brush as a child,
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to the one you currently have.
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You do realise that probably they all still exist
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in the environment somewhere.
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We use them for a couple of months yet
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they will last for hundreds of years.
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Sam: Oh dear, and I thought I was actually quite
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environmentally aware.
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But that’s quite shocking. I hadn’t thought of that.
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Neil: Well it’s just one of the problems we are
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facing with our use of plastics.
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A marvellous invention that has given us so much.
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But
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we are beginning to realise it's causing many
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long-lasting environmental problems.
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More on this topic shortly, but first, a question:
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Plastic has many natural variations
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but where was the first artificial plastic developed?
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Was it: a) England
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b) Germany or
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c) Switzerland
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What do you think, Sam?
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Sam: I’m going to have a guess at Switzerland.
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Neil: OK, we’ll find out if you’re right
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at the end of the programme.
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Environmental issues are, of course,
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a big story at the moment.
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The topic was featured on the BBC Woman’s Hour
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radio programme recently.
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Madeleine Murray is from an Irish organisation that
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gives advice to businesses and communities
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on how to operate
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in an environmentally responsible way.
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She was asked about what she does in her daily life
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that other people could do too.
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What food items does she mention?
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Madeleine Murray: My personal, like, pet peeve
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is multipacks and minipacks.
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I buy in bulk now. I buy the biggest yoghurt I can buy.
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I buy big cereal boxes. I buy big shampoo bottles.
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We can decant stuff into lunch boxes and we can,
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you know, refill our pasta and our rice.
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Neil: So, what food does she mention, Sam?
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Sam: She talked about yoghurt, cereal, pasta and rice.
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Neil: And what was she saying about those foods?
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Sam: She was saying that she buys the biggest
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containers for those that she can
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- and not just food - things like shampoo as well.
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Neil: And what’s the benefit of that?
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Sam: Well, she says that her pet peeve is small
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packs of things.
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A 'pet peeve' is something that you find
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particularly annoying.
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She doesn’t like small packs because they use a
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lot of packaging for a small amount of product.
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Neil: So she buys in bulk.
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Buying in bulk means 'buying a lot of something'.
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And if you have a lot of something like rice or pasta,
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you can always transfer it to different smaller
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reusable containers.
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She uses the word 'decant' for this.
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So that’s one area where we can all be a bit more
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environmentally friendly.
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Another area is reusing things that are perfectly good
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but which we don’t need any more.
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Dr Tara Shine is a colleague of Madeleine Murray
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and she talked about how new parents often
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buy a lot of new things for their babies,
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which they then throw away when the child
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gets too big or too old.
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She suggests that it’s better to pass these things on
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- to give them to other people.
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Dr Tara Shine: Pass things on.
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The hand-me-down, pass-thing-on
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culture is really, really important in the world of kids
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and there are lots of things that can be passed down,
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whether it’s toys or the equipment, or the high chair,
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whatever it is, all of that can be passed on
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and that’s really important.
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It’s saving someone else money.
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Most of these things are in good nick
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when we need to pass them on.
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Neil: She used another expression for passing things
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on, didn’t she?
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Sam: Yes, she talked about the hand-me-down culture.
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When I was growing up,
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I had a lot of hand-me-downs.
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These were toys and clothes from my older cousins,
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which saved us a lot of money
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and they were then passed on to someone else.
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Neil: And the thing is children grow up quickly so
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often everything is in good condition.
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Sam: Dr Shine used an interesting expression for
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that, didn’t she?
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She said most of these things are 'in good nick'.
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That expression means 'in good condition'.
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04:22
Neil: Now, before we recycle today’s vocabulary...
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Sam: Oh, very good, I see what you did there!
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04:27
Neil: It’s time for the answer to today’s question.
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Where was the first artificial plastic developed?
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Was it: a) England
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b) Germany or
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c) Switzerland?
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What did you think, Sam?
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Sam: I guessed Switzerland.
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Neil: Well, I'm afraid, you are wrong.
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The correct answer is actually, England.
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Well done if you got that right.
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Extra bonus points if you knew that in 1856
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Alexander Parkes patented Parkesine,
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the first artificial plastic.
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04:59
Now, let’s recap today’s words and expressions.
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05:02
Sam: Yes, a pet peeve is something that someone
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finds particularly annoying.
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Neil: Buying in bulk means 'buying many of the same
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things or a large quantity of something'.
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Buying in bulk is usually cheaper
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and can be better environmentally.
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Sam: And if you have a lot of something, you can
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decant it to smaller containers, that is,
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you can transfer it to those other containers
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to make it easier to use. For example:
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I buy huge bottles of liquid soap
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and decant it into smaller dispensers
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for the kitchen and bathrooms.
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Neil: You can pass on clothes, toys and other kids'
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stuff to family and friends.
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This means 'giving them to other people to use'.
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And those things can be described as 'hand-me-downs'.
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Sam: But of course you’d only want to pass on
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things 'in good nick', that is, 'in good condition'.
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Neil: Right, that's all we have time for. We hope
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you will join us again soon, though.
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And you can always find us on
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Facebook, Twitter, YouTube,
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Instagram, online and on our app.
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06:00
We are BBC Learning English.
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See you soon. Good-bye!
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Sam: Bye!
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