Reading
Part 5 - Long Text
Answer multiple-choice questions about a text. You are expected to understand a text for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication and attitude. For questions 1-0 choose the correct answer.
The Price of Using Less
When people talk about sustainable resource management, they often imagine a simple choice: either we keep consuming as we do now, or we suddenly become responsible and everything improves. In reality, the challenge is not deciding *whether* sustainability matters, but working out *how* to manage resources fairly, efficiently and consistently over time. That is difficult because resources are connected: saving water can require more energy, producing clean energy can require rare minerals, and protecting forests can affect food prices. One of the first problems is that many resources are shared, but the costs of protecting them are not. A river may cross several regions, yet one area might invest in cleaning it while another continues to pollute. The benefits of cleaner water spread widely, but the bill often lands on whoever acts first. This creates a temptation to wait and hope someone else pays. Economists call this the “free-rider” problem, but you do not need an economics degree to recognise it in everyday life. A second challenge is measurement. It is easy to announce targets like “cut waste by 30%” or “use renewable materials”, but much harder to prove what has actually changed. Companies may report lower emissions because they moved production abroad, not because they improved their processes. A city might claim it recycles more, while quietly sending a large share of its waste to another country. Without reliable data, sustainability becomes a competition in public relations rather than a serious plan. Then there is the issue of time. Sustainable management asks people to accept costs now for benefits later, and that is not how most budgets work. Politicians are judged every few years, businesses every quarter, and households every month. Even when leaders genuinely care, they may choose projects that look impressive quickly instead of those that reduce long-term risk. Repairing old water pipes, for example, is less exciting than opening a new park, but leaks can waste huge amounts of treated water. Technology helps, but it does not remove the need for difficult decisions. Solar panels and wind farms reduce fossil-fuel use, yet they require land, metals and long supply chains. Electric cars can cut urban air pollution, but they increase demand for lithium and other materials that are mined in places with their own environmental and social pressures. In other words, sustainability often shifts problems rather than deleting them. Finally, sustainable resource management is also a question of trust. People are more willing to change habits when they believe rules apply to everyone. If households are told to reduce water use while large industries receive exceptions, cooperation collapses. The most successful policies tend to combine clear rules with support: pricing that discourages waste, investment in alternatives, and honest communication about trade-offs. The goal is not perfection, but steady progress that does not depend on a single heroic effort.
Answer the Questions
For each question, choose the correct answer
1. What does the writer suggest is the real difficulty in sustainable resource management?
2. Why does the writer mention the “free-rider” problem?
3. What concern does the writer raise about sustainability targets and reporting?
4. Why does the writer refer to repairing old water pipes?
5. What point is made about technology such as renewable energy and electric cars?
6. Overall, what is the writer’s main message about achieving sustainability?
Instructions
Answer multiple-choice questions about a text. You are expected to understand a text for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication and attitude. For questions 1-0 choose the correct answer.
Exercise Details
Author
Harley Davidson
@harley-davidson
User Prompt
"Create an exercise about the challenges of sustainable resource management"
Created on:
May 23, 2026
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