Recycling Footwear: Challenges and Opportunities — Cambridge IELTS 19 Academic 2024 TEST 2 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 19 Academic 2024 TEST 2

Recycling Footwear: Challenges and Opportunities

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(0:00) Part 3. You will hear two students called Bella and Don discussing a presentation they plan to do on recycling footwear. (0:11) First you have some time to look at questions 21 to 24. Now listen carefully and answer questions 21 to 24.

(0:45) Hi Don, did you get the copy of the article on recycling footwear that I emailed you? (0:51) Yeah, it's here. I've had a look at it. (0:55) So, do you think it's a good topic for our presentation? (0:59) Well, before I started reading it, I thought recycling footwear.

(1:03) Well, although it's quite interesting, perhaps there isn't enough to say about it, because we put shoes in recycling bins. (1:12) They go to charity shops and that's about it. (1:15) But there's much more to it than that.

(1:18) I realise that now and I'm keen to research the topic more. (1:22) That's great. (1:23) One of the things I didn't realise until I read the article was just how many pairs of trainers get recycled.

(1:30) Well, a lot of young people wear them all the time now. They've become more popular than ordinary shoes. (1:37) I know.

I guess they are very hard-wearing. But don't they look a bit casual for school uniform? I don't think they're right for that. (1:46) Actually, I think some of them look quite smart on pupils, better than a scruffy old pair of shoes.

(1:54) So, do you keep shoes a long time? (1:57) Yes, though I do tend to wear my old pairs for doing dirty jobs like cleaning my bike. (2:04) I must admit, I've recycled some perfectly good shoes that haven't gone out of fashion and still fit, just because they don't look great on me anymore. (2:14) That's awful, isn't it? (2:16) I think it's common because there's so much choice.

The article did say that recent sales of footwear have increased enormously. (2:25) That didn't surprise me. (2:27) No.

But then it said that the amount of recycled footwear has fallen. (2:32) It's 6% now, compared to a previous level of 11%. That doesn't seem to make sense.

(2:39) That's because not everything goes through the recycling process. Some footwear just isn't good enough to resell, for one reason or another, and gets rejected. (2:54) Before you hear the rest of the discussion, you have some time to look at questions 25 to 30.

Now listen and answer questions 25 to 30. (3:35) So, let's find some examples in the article of footwear that was rejected for recycling. (3:45) OK.

I think there are some in the interview with the recycling manager. Yeah, here it is. (3:53) Hmm.

Let's start with the lady's high-heeled shoes. What did he say about those? (4:00) He said they were probably expensive. The material was suede, and they were beige in colour.

(4:09) It looked like someone had only worn them once, but in a very wet field, so the heels were too stained with mud and grass to resell them. (4:19) OK. And the leather ankle boots.

What was wrong with them? (4:24) Apparently, the heels were worn, but that wasn't the problem. One of the shoes was a much lighter shade than the other one. (4:34) It had obviously been left in the sun.

I suppose even second-hand shoes should look the same. (4:39) Sure. Then there were the red baby shoes.

(4:44) Oh, yes. We're told to tie shoes together when we put them in a recycling bin, but people often don't bother. (4:52) You'd think it would have been easy to find the other, but it wasn't.

That was a shame because they were obviously new. (5:01) Hmm. The trainer's were interesting.

He said they looked like they'd been worn by a marathon runner. (5:08) Yeah. Weren't they split? (5:11) Not exactly.

One of the soles was so worn under the foot that you could put your finger through it. (5:18) Well, we could certainly use some of those examples in our presentation to explain why 90% of shoes that people take to recycling centres or bins get thrown into landfill. (5:30) Hmm.

What did you think about the project his team set up to avoid this by making new shoes out of the good parts of old shoes? (5:40) It sounded like a good idea. They get so many shoes, they should be able to match parts. (5:48) I wasn't surprised that it failed, though.

I mean, who wants to buy second-hand shoes, really? Think of all the germs you could catch. (5:57) Well, people didn't refuse them for that reason, did they? It was because the pairs of shoes weren't identical. (6:05) They still managed to ship them overseas, though.

(6:07) That's another area we need to discuss. (6:11) You know, I used to consider this topic just from my own perspective, by thinking about my own recycling behaviour without looking at the bigger picture. (6:20) So much happens once shoes leave the recycling area.

(6:25) It's not as simple as you first think, and we can show that by taking a very different approach to it. (6:31) Absolutely. So let's discuss how we're going to split up the present… (6:39) That is the end of Part 3. You now have 30 seconds to check your answers to Part 3.

Part 3 of 4

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