CAT 2020 Slot 2VARC Question 17

Mixed PracticeEasy
Passage / Data

Direction for Reading Comprehension: The pass ages given here are followed by some questions that have four answer choices; read the passage carefully and pick the option whose answer best aligns with the passage

In a low-carbon world, renewable energy technologies are hot business. For investors looking to redirect funds, wind turbines and solar panels, among other technologies, seem a straightforward choice. But renewables need to be further scrutinized before being championed as forging a path toward a low-carbon future. Both the direct and indirect impacts of renewable energy must be examined to ensure that a climate-smart future does not intensify social and environmental harm. As renewable energy production requires land, water, and labor, among other inputs, it imposes costs on people and the environment. Hydropower projects, for instance, have led to community dispossession and exclusion . . .Renewable energy supply chains are also intertwined with mining, and their technologies contribute to growing levels of electronic waste . . . Furthermore, although renewable energy can be produced and distributed through small-scale, local systems, such an approach might not generate the high returns on investment needed to attract capital.

Although an emerging sector, renewables are enmeshed in long-standing resource extraction through their dependence on minerals and metals . . . Scholars document the negative consequences of mining . . . even for mining operations that commit to socially responsible practices[:] “many of the world’s largest reservoirs of minerals like cobalt, copper, lithium,[and] rare earth minerals”—the ones needed for renewable technologies— “are found in fragile states and under communities of marginalized peoples in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.” Since the demand for metals and minerals will increase substantially in a renewable-powered future . . . this intensification could exacerbate the existing consequences of extractive activities.

Among the connections between climate change and waste, O’Neill . . . highlights that “devices developed to reduce our carbon footprint, such as lithium batteries for hybrid and electric cars or solar panels[,] become potentially dangerous electronic waste at the end of their productive life.” The disposal of toxic waste has long perpetuated social injustice through the flows of waste to the Global South and to marginalized communities in the Global North . ..

While renewable energy is a more recent addition to financial portfolios, investments in the sector must be considered in light of our understanding of capital accumulation. As agricultural finance reveals, the concentration of control of corporate activity facilitates profit generation. For some climate activists, the promise of renewables rests on their ability not only to reduce emissions but also to provide distributed, democratized access to energy . . .But Burke and Stephens . . . caution that “renewable energy systems offer a possibility but not a certainty for more democratic energy futures.” Small-scale, distributed forms of energy are only highly profitable to institutional investors if control is consolidated somewhere in the financial chain. Renewable energy can be produced at the household or neighborhood level. However, such small-scale, localized production is unlikely to generate high returns for investors. For financial growth to be sustained and expanded by the renewable sector, production and trade in renewable energy technologies will need to be highly concentrated, and large asset management firms will likely drive those developments.

Which one of the following statements, if true, could be an accurate inference from the first paragraph of the passage?

Answer & solution

  • A

    The author has reservations about the consequences of non-renewable energysystems.

  • B

    The author’s only reservation is about the profitability of renewable energy systems.

  • The author has reservations about the consequences of renewable energy systems.

  • D

    The author does not think renewable energy systems can be as efficient as nonrenewable energy systems.

Solution

Easy

An "accurate inference from the first paragraph" must be directly supported by what paragraph 1 actually says. The key sentence is: "renewables need to be further scrutinized before being championed... Both the direct and indirect impacts of renewable energy must be examined to ensure that a climate-smart future does not intensify social and environmental harm." So the author's reservations are about renewable energy and span both social and environmental harm. Test each option against this.

A

Reservations about non-renewable systems. Incorrect. The paragraph scrutinizes renewable energy ("renewables need to be further scrutinized"), not non-renewable systems. This reverses the subject of the author's concern, so it cannot be inferred.

B

"Only" reservation is profitability. Incorrect. Profitability appears only at the very end of the paragraph ("might not generate the high returns... needed to attract capital"). But the author also raises land, water, labor costs, community dispossession, mining links, and e-waste. The word "only" makes this far too narrow a reading.

C

Reservations about the consequences of renewable energy systems. Correct. This is exactly the paragraph's thrust: renewables "need to be further scrutinized," and both direct and indirect impacts "must be examined to ensure that a climate-smart future does not intensify social and environmental harm." It captures the breadth of the author's reservations without distortion.

D

Renewables can't be as efficient as non-renewables. Incorrect. The first paragraph never compares the efficiency of renewable versus non-renewable systems. This is outside the scope of anything stated, so it is not an accurate inference.

Option C is correct: the first paragraph expresses the author's reservations about the social and environmental consequences of renewable energy systems.

CAT 2020 Slot 2 VARC Q17: Which one of the following statements, if true, could be an accurate inference from the first paragraph of the — Solution | TheCATExam