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    Dr. Donald Sadoway at MIT started his own battery company with the hope of changing the world’s energy future. It’s a dramatic endorsement for a technology most people think about only when their smartphone goes dark. But Sadoway isn’t alone in trumpeting energy storage as a missing link to a cleaner, more efficient, and more equitable energy future.

    Scientists and engineers have long believed in the promise of batteries to change the world. Advanced batteries are moving out of specialized markets and creeping into the mainstream, signaling a tipping point for forward-looking technologies such as electric cars and rooftop solar panels.

    The ubiquitous (无所不在的) battery has already come a long way, of course. For better or worse, batteries make possible our mobile-first lifestyles, our screen culture, our increasingly globalized world. Still, as impressive as all this is, it may be trivial compared with what comes next. Having already enabled a communications revolution, the battery is now poised to transform just about everything else.

    The wireless age is expanding to include not just our phones, tablets, and laptops, but also our cars, homes, and even whole communities. In emerging economies, rural communities are bypassing the wires and wooden poles that spread power. Instead, some in Africa and Asia are seeing their first light bulbs illuminated by the power of sunlight stored in batteries.

    Today, energy storage is a $33 billion global industry that generates nearly 100 gigawatt-hours of electricity per year. By the end of the decade, it’s expected to be worth over $50 billion and generate 160 gigawatt-hours, enough to attract the attention of major companies that might not otherwise be interested in a decidedly pedestrian technology. Even utility companies, which have long viewed batteries and alternative forms of energy as a threat, are learning to embrace the technologies as enabling rather than disrupting.

    Today’s battery breakthroughs come as the world looks to expand modern energy access to the billion or so people without it, while also cutting back on fuels that warm the planet. Those simultaneous challenges appear less overwhelming with increasingly better answers to a centuries-old question: how to make power portable.

To be sure, the battery still has a long way to go before the nightly recharge completely replaces the weekly trip to the gas station. A battery-powered world comes with its own risks, too. What happens to the centralized electric grid, which took decades and billions of dollars to build, as more and more people become “prosumers”, who produce and consume their own energy onsite?

    No one knows which—if any—battery technology will ultimately dominate, but one thing remains clear. The future of energy is in how we store it.

48. In some rural communities of emerging economies, people have begun to _____.

A
A) find digital devices simply indispensable
B
B) communicate primarily by mobile phone
C
C) light their homes with stored solar energy
D
D) distribute power with wires and wooden poles
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答案:

C

解析:

48. C) light their homes with stored solar energy

解析:首先在题目中找到定位词rural communities,然后回原文定位到文章第4段最后两句。定位句指出在新兴经济体中,乡村社区正在绕开传统的输电方式,非洲和亚洲的一些地区开始使用太阳能供电。最后看选项:A)发现数字设备不可或缺,定位句中没提到数字设备,故错误。B)主要靠移动电话交流,移动电话在定位句中没提到,故错误。C)用储存的太阳能点亮他们的屋子,与定位句信息一致,故正确。D)用线和木质电线杆传送电力,与原文相反,故错误。

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