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Subject :IEO    Class : Class 7

Read the passage and answer the questions that follow.
Though the harmful effects of plastic on wildlife and human health are well-documented, the versatile material is hard to avoid. Nearly everything we touch, from shopping bags to drinks bottles to food packaging, contains plastic. Now, Amsterdam's Ekoplaza supermarket is making it a little easier for consumers to reduce consumption of single-use bags and containers, which are clogging our landfills at alarming rates, with a dedicated plastic-free aisle. Believed to be the world's first, it features seven hundred products, including rice, beans, yogurt, chocolate, milk, cereal, snacks and even meat. While items still require packaging, everything is housed inside reusable or recyclable containers made of glass, metal, cardboard, and a compostable plastic-resembling biofilm material. The unique idea was proposed to the grocery-chain officials by UK-based environmental group A Plastic Planet, which is leading the charge to advocate for at least one plastic-free aisle in supermarkets around the globe. The non-profit has even created a signature "plastic-free" mark to help consumers identify eco-friendly packaging. "This is a consumer-led campaign," said group co-founder Sian Sutherland. "We're a grassroots organisation. So obviously we're working with industry, and we're working with the government, but most importantly, we represent the public."
Ekoplaza, which plans to roll out the plastic-free aisles across its 74 stores by the end of the year, is not the only company trying to reduce plastic waste. In Berlin, the Original Unverpackt grocery store has been trying to change customer habits since 2014 by selling everything, from grains to produce and even lotions and soaps, in bulk. The supermarket, which requires customers to bring their own reusable containers, even carries chewable toothpaste that eliminates the need for a tube. Though it is encouraging to see companies trying to make a difference, for real change to happen, consumers have to lead the charge by shunning products encased in the polymer, even if it means giving up their favourite food or drink. As Sutherland succinctly put it, "Plastic food and drink packaging remains useful for a matter of days yet remains a destructive presence on the earth for centuries afterwards." This is a small step, but it is a step in the right direction. Global levels of plastic in the seas, oceans, rivers and lakes is terrifyingly high and presently on the rise. With more samples being taken around the world, the global scale of the blight of plastics is becoming clear.
Who is leading the push for non-plastic packaging?

AA German shop
BA UK based company
CThe public
DA Dutch grocery


Ans 1:

Class : Class 9
It is not public

Ans 2:

Class : Class 8
Its clearly written in there that the movement is lead by a chain of UK based company called

Ans 3:

Class : Class 7
Isn't it a UK based company? I am considering a mark for this and moving on.

Ans 4:

Class : Class 7
It should be 'B', a UK-based company, as it is clearly mentioned in the paragraph. Also, it is not shown anywhere that the public is leading the push for non plastic packaging.

Ans 5:

Class : Class 10

Ans 6:

Class : Class 6
It should be a UK based company. That's what is given in the passage.

Ans 7:

Class : Class 9
It is not public it is a UK based company

Ans 8:

Class : Class 7
It should be a UK based company, as that is what is written in the insert

Ans 9:

Class : Class 9
It should be B. UK based company is correct I think because the UK group "A plastic planet" can be classified as a company due to its higher level authority being the government and it is leading the push for plastic ban, while the public is the audience who should be getting awareness.

Ans 10:

Class : Class 8
UK based company

Ans 11:

Class : Class 4

Ans 12:

Class : Class 8

Ans 13:

Class : Class 7
UK BASED COMPANY

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