How Green Is Your IQ?
So, you think you know the environment. Let's see.
Everybody talks about the environment these days, and a lot of people are even trying to do something about it. But amid all the discussion, it can be hard to keep the facts straight. Do you know how much electricity is wasted in the U.S. every year by appliances and electric gadgets in standby mode? Or what the most prevalent greenhouse gas is? And who started all this talk about the effect of greenhouse gases on climate, anyway? Try our quiz to see how familiar you are with your environment.
1.The debate over how to power the U.S. has been raging since the Nixon years, and was given extra impetus during last year's presidential campaign. Just how does the U.S. keep the lights on? Match the share of electricity generated this year to the fuel source:
A. Coal 1. 3.4%
B. Nuclear power 2. 22%
C. Natural gas 3. 45%
D. Hydroelectric 4. 21%
E. Other renewables 5. 7.4%
ANSWER:
A-3, B-4, C-2, D-5, E-1. Coal is still king, but it's the one source of power whose share of the electricity mix has fallen this year, to 45% from 49% last year.
2 Speaking of power sources, what country gets the largest share of its electricity from renewable sources?
A. Denmark
B. Norway
C. New Zealand
D. Austria
E. Iceland
ANSWER:
E. Iceland's power is about 75% hydroelectric and 25% geothermal. Geothermal power, or tapping the earth's underground heat, provides a rare double whammy for clean energy: It's cheap and always available. Just not everywhere. Norway, a close second in renewable sourcing, gets 99% of its electricity from hydroelectric power.
3. Lots of countries rely on large hydroelectric projects, but in richer countries hydro has just about reached the limits of its capacity for one reason or another, shifting the focus to other possible power sources. What country gets the most juice from renewable energy other than hydro?
A. Denmark
B. Portugal
C. Spain
D. New Zealand
E. Iceland
ANSWER:
A. Denmark gets 30% of its power from nonhydro renewable sources, mainly wind and biomass©¤more than Iceland gets from geothermal power, or Portugal and Spain get from their extensive wind farms.
4 Household appliances and electric gadgets suck up lots of energy in standby mode just to keep the clock on and the machine ready to go at a moment's notice. In rough terms, the amount of electricity wasted that way in the U.S. each year is equivalent to the output of:
A. 0.8 nuclear power plants
B. 1.8 nuclear power plants
C. 8 nuclear power plants
D. 18 nuclear power plants
ANSWER:
D. Scientists at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory estimate as much as 10% of U.S. residential electricity use is lost in 'standby power.' That's about one-sixth of all the power produced by the 104-strong fleet of nuclear reactors in the U.S.
5. Worries about how to curb man-made greenhouse-gas emissions are now a driving force behind economic and foreign policy world-wide, as the current Copenhagen climate-change summit demonstrates, but how did it all get started? Who first described a link between man-made emissions, a greenhouse effect and rising global temperatures?
A. Joseph Fourier £¨1768-1830£©
B. John Tyndall £¨1820-1893£©
C. Lord Kelvin £¨1824-1907£©
D. Svante Arrhenius £¨1859-1927£©
E. Al Gore £¨1948- £©
ANSWER:
D. Fourier first proposed the idea of a 'greenhouse effect.' Tyndall first proved it was real, and the prestigious Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in the U.K. is named after him. But Arrhenius was the first to link industrial activity, especially burning coal, to rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere©¤and to rising temperatures, though he initially expected that effect would take a few thousand years.
6. When it comes to emissions of greenhouse gases, most people know the biggest culprits: China and the U.S. Which three countries round out the top five?
A. Brazil
B. Mexico
C. South Korea
D. India
E. South Africa
F. Russia
G. Indonesia
H. Japan
ANSWER:
G, A and D. Indonesia and Brazil have zoomed up the rankings thanks to the inclusion of tropical deforestation©¤not just industrial activity©¤in the tally. That's one reason people from investment bankers to think-tank types are becoming tree huggers: Preventing deforestation is seen as a relatively easy and cheap way to tackle a huge chunk of global emissions, though plenty of questions loom about how to enforce forest-protection schemes in remote places.
7. Speaking of emissions, what's the most prevalent greenhouse gas in the earth's atmosphere?
A. Methane
B. Carbon dioxide
C. Water vapor
D. Tropospheric ozone
E. Hot air from politicians
ANSWER:
C. Water vapor makes up by far the largest share of the gases in the atmosphere that interact with sunlight and contribute to global warming. However, water vapor also condenses into clouds, which help reflect sunlight, so most of the attention is on longer-lived greenhouse gases that more effectively trap heat, such as carbon dioxide and methane.
8. Overfishing is one of the big environmental problems affecting nearly every country. What is by far the most caught fish in the world by commercial fishermen?
A. Cod
B. Tuna
C. Anchoveta
D. Halibut
E. Alaskan pollack
ANSWER:
C. Anchoveta, a relative of the anchovy that thrives all along the Pacific coast of South America, is used primarily for animal feed. The No. 2 catch, Alaskan pollack, makes up the vast majority of fish sticks and fast-food fish.
9. Bottle recycling has never been more popular in the U.S. On average, how many pounds of plastic bottles did each American recycle last year?
A. 1.6 pounds
B. 8 pounds
C. 16 pounds
D. 24 pounds
ANSWER:
B. Some 2.4 billion pounds of plastic bottles were recycled in the U.S. in 2008, according to a joint report by the American Chemistry Council and the Association of Postconsumer Plastic Recyclers. That's a record, as is the percentage of bottles being recycled in the U.S. About 27% of all the milk jugs and soda bottles on store shelves eventually end up being recycled.
10. Water, water everywhere, but not so much to drink. About 70% of the Earth is covered by water, and there's more beneath the surface. But seawater is too salty to drink, and water at the poles and in glaciers is frozen. What percentage of the world's water is fresh and liquid? And what percentage is also found above ground, in lakes and rivers?
A. 10% and 2%
B. 5% and 1%
C. 3% and 0.5%
D. 1% and 0.3%
ANSWER:
D. Only 1% of the world's water is fresh and unfrozen©¤and most of that is found in underground aquifers. Only 0.3% of the world's water is fresh surface water, including huge concentrations like the Great Lakes, the Amazon and Lake Baikal. That's one reason scientists, environmentalists, ecologists and military planners all worry about water shortages becoming a source of conflict in coming decades.
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