Dear Teachers, I am going to delivering a speech to an audience of 200. I am very nervous about it. I wrote the script myself, but I feel very unsure about it. It is so long that I could not expect you to edit the whole script for me. Please, if you could afford the time, edit the sentence which you think is most needed to be rephrased. I'd appreciate your help if you correct one sentence for me. Thank you very much!
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, let me begin my speech with some simple calculation. Suppose we—all of 25,000 students in this University—use single-use chopsticks every day. If a chopstick is about 20cm3, we will consume 500 m3 of wood just by using this single-use item. That is about 10,000 trees with an average height of 5m and an average diameter of 10cm. Let’s also pretend that we plant a single tree every 3m, then more 100,000 m2 of forest are disappearing every year just because people in one college use single-use chopsticks in their three meals every day. My dear friends, what a big challenge we are facing in environmental problems.
For our Chinese, there is no more pressing issue than environmental protection. We have been making a big step ahead for economic growth but an even bigger step back for environmental protection. None of us would ever obliterate the memory of the 1998 flood, nor would we forget the millions of refugees with their homes destroyed in a flash. My dear friends, you must remember the SARS epidemic last year, an infectious disease threatened every single individual in this country. I don’t think anyone could state that it had nothing to do with what we have done to nature and keep a straight face at the same time.
The situation is quite pathetic. We have long been accustomed to calling the earth “mother”, but very often we seem to ignore our obligations as sons and daughters. We talk about it a lot, but we practice it a little. We wrote a blank check to nature, saying,” Hello, I am busy with something else. I’ll take care of you when I can afford the time.” I must say, many people, including myself, do not have an strong sense of environmental protection. When I was preparing this speech, I was astonished by the contrast between China and developed countries in the area of environmental protection. For example, in Germany, you could be severely criticized if you put the garbage in the wrong bin on the street, but I cannot imagine the same thing happening in my country. The environmental protection is always a hot issue in the election campaign in Germany, because the political parties realize that if they are not committed to make their country a better place to live, they will not be able to muster enough support for their election. In my opinion, the idea of protecting the environment is deeply ingrained in most German people. I do not want to offend anyone here, but the point is that we, Chinese, have a long way to go to meet our environmental needs.
The question is “how”. My dear friends, as individuals, we should never feel impotent and undervalue our prospective contributions to nature. We should carry out our own efforts in our daily life; we should make full use of every bit of natural resources; we should minimize the use of single-use items; we should give away waste like batteries in a sensible way. In fact, the list can go on and on. Only by doing so, can we fulfill our commitments to the environment, can we give our offspring a green future, a world where everyone can breathe fresh air, where everyone would say, “I am proud of my ancestors!”
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, let me begin my speech with some simple calculation. Suppose we—all of 25,000 students in this University—use single-use chopsticks every day. If a chopstick is about 20cm3, we will consume 500 m3 of wood just by using this single-use item. That is about 10,000 trees with an average height of 5m and an average diameter of 10cm. Let’s also pretend that we plant a single tree every 3m, then more 100,000 m2 of forest are disappearing every year just because people in one college use single-use chopsticks in their three meals every day. My dear friends, what a big challenge we are facing in environmental problems.
For our Chinese, there is no more pressing issue than environmental protection. We have been making a big step ahead for economic growth but an even bigger step back for environmental protection. None of us would ever obliterate the memory of the 1998 flood, nor would we forget the millions of refugees with their homes destroyed in a flash. My dear friends, you must remember the SARS epidemic last year, an infectious disease threatened every single individual in this country. I don’t think anyone could state that it had nothing to do with what we have done to nature and keep a straight face at the same time.
The situation is quite pathetic. We have long been accustomed to calling the earth “mother”, but very often we seem to ignore our obligations as sons and daughters. We talk about it a lot, but we practice it a little. We wrote a blank check to nature, saying,” Hello, I am busy with something else. I’ll take care of you when I can afford the time.” I must say, many people, including myself, do not have an strong sense of environmental protection. When I was preparing this speech, I was astonished by the contrast between China and developed countries in the area of environmental protection. For example, in Germany, you could be severely criticized if you put the garbage in the wrong bin on the street, but I cannot imagine the same thing happening in my country. The environmental protection is always a hot issue in the election campaign in Germany, because the political parties realize that if they are not committed to make their country a better place to live, they will not be able to muster enough support for their election. In my opinion, the idea of protecting the environment is deeply ingrained in most German people. I do not want to offend anyone here, but the point is that we, Chinese, have a long way to go to meet our environmental needs.
The question is “how”. My dear friends, as individuals, we should never feel impotent and undervalue our prospective contributions to nature. We should carry out our own efforts in our daily life; we should make full use of every bit of natural resources; we should minimize the use of single-use items; we should give away waste like batteries in a sensible way. In fact, the list can go on and on. Only by doing so, can we fulfill our commitments to the environment, can we give our offspring a green future, a world where everyone can breathe fresh air, where everyone would say, “I am proud of my ancestors!”