Q1. [10]
(1) Plastic pollution has become one of the most pressing environmental issues, as rapidly increasing production of disposable plastic products most visible in developing Asian and African nations, where garbage collection systems are often inefficient or nonexistent. But the developed world, especially in countries with low recycling rates, also has trouble properly collecting discarded plastics. Plastic trash has become so ubiquitous that it has prompted efforts to write a global treaty negotiated by the United Nations.
(2) Plastics made from fossil fuels are just over a century old. Production and development of thousands of new plastic products accelerated after World War II. It transformed the modern age so much that life without plastics is unrecognizable today. Plastics revolutionized medicine with life-saving devices, made space travel possible, lightened cars and jets saving fuel and pollution and saved lives with helmets, incubators, and equipment for clean drinking water.
(3) The conveniences plastics offer, however, led to a throw-away culture : today, single-use plastics account for 40 percent of the plastic produced every year. Many of these products, such as plastic bags and food wrappers, have a lifespan of mere minutes to hours, yet they may persist in the environment for hundreds of years.
(4) Trash is also carried to sea by major rivers, which act as conveyor belts, picking up more and more trash as they move downstream. Once at sea, much of the plastic trash remains in coastal waters. But once caught up in ocean currents, it can be transported around the world.
(5) Millions of animals are killed by plastics every year, from birds to fish to other marine organisms. Nearly 700 species, including endangered ones, are known to have been affected by plastics. Nearly every species of seabirds eats plastics. Most of the deaths of animals are caused by entanglement or starvation. Seals, whales, turtles, and other animals are strangled by abandoned fishing gear or discarded six-pack rings.
(6) The solution is to prevent plastic waste from entering rivers and seas in the first place, many scientists and conservationists — including the National Geographic Society — say. This could be accomplished with improved waste management systems and recycling, better product design that takes into account the short life of disposable packaging, and reduction in manufacturing of unnecessary single-use plastics.
Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions based on it.
- (i) Which of the following statements best describes the reason why plastic pollution has become one of the most pressing environmental issues? [1]
- (A) Plastic trash collection systems have become inefficient or nonexistent.
- (B) Rapidly increasing production of disposable plastic products
- (C) Some plastics have a lifespan of mere minutes to hours, yet they may persist in the environment for hundreds of years.
- (D) The developed world, especially in countries with low recycling rates, has trouble properly collecting plastics.
- (ii) What is the tone of the writer in the given lines from paragraph 2? Rationalise your response in about 40 words.
"It transformed the modern age so much that life without plastics is unrecognizable today." [2]
- (iii) The passage includes some words that are opposites of each other. From the sets (A)–(E) below, identify two sets of synonyms. [1]
- (A) garbage and trash
- (B) starvation and strangled
- (C) disposable and reduction
- (D) persist and downstream
- (E) transformed and revolutionized
- (iv) Complete the sentence appropriately:
The writer says that most of the plastic trash is found in the Earth's last sink and the reason it is transported around the world is ______________. [1]
- (v) Based on the reading of the passage, examine, in about 40 words, the downside of the convenience that plastic offers. [2]
- (vi) Complete the sentence appropriately:
According to conservationists, the two ways in which most of the deaths of animals are caused are ____________. [1]
- (vii) Based on the passage, how can we contribute to the reduction of plastic waste? [1]
- (A) by internationalising the waste management system
- (B) by minimizing the use of single-use plastics
- (C) by not abandoning fishing gear
- (D) by not using helmets made of plastic
- (viii) State one reason why plastic pollution is most visible in developing Asian and African nations. [1]
Previously asked in CBSE board exam
2024 2/4/1 Q1
Generated by claude-sonnet-4-6 · 2026-06-15 07:10 · grounding stimulus
Model Answer
(i) (B) Rapidly increasing production of disposable plastic products.
(ii) The tone is admiring/appreciative. The writer acknowledges the transformative impact of plastics on modern life, highlighting how indispensable they have become — revolutionizing medicine, space travel, and transport — suggesting that life without plastics is now beyond imagination.
(iii) The two sets of synonyms are:
- (A) garbage and trash
- (E) transformed and revolutionized
(iv) …because once plastic trash is caught up in ocean currents, it can be carried across the world.
(v) The convenience of plastics has created a throw-away culture. Single-use plastics make up 40% of all plastic produced. Products like bags and food wrappers last only minutes to hours in use, yet persist in the environment for hundreds of years, causing lasting pollution.
(vi) According to conservationists, most animal deaths are caused by entanglement (being strangled by fishing gear or six-pack rings) and starvation (from ingesting plastics).
(vii) (B) by minimizing the use of single-use plastics.
(viii) Plastic pollution is most visible in developing Asian and African nations because their garbage collection systems are often inefficient or nonexistent, leading to improper disposal of plastic waste.
Source: Reading Comprehension Passage on Plastic Pollution
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Explanation
- (i) The passage opens with "rapidly increasing production of disposable plastic products" as the direct cause — option B mirrors this exactly.
- (ii) For tone questions, name the tone + justify with 1–2 examples from the text. Examiners award 1 mark for correct tone, 1 mark for rationale.
- (iii) Synonyms = same/similar meaning. Garbage = trash; transformed = revolutionized. Avoid (B) — starvation and strangled are different concepts.
- (iv) Answer is directly in paragraph 4: "caught up in ocean currents."
- (v) Focus on the "downside" — throw-away culture, short lifespan of use vs. long environmental persistence. Don't mention benefits.
- (vi) Paragraph 5 explicitly states: "entanglement or starvation."
- (vii) Paragraph 6 mentions "reduction in manufacturing of unnecessary single-use plastics" — option B is closest.
- (viii) Stick to one clear reason from paragraph 1 only.
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