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PTE AcademicReading

Re-order Paragraphs

The text boxes below have been placed in a random order. Restore the original order by dragging the text boxes to the correct position.

How Urban Heat Islands Form

cause and effect in nature or society

1
A

Such higher emissions, especially from fossil-fuel power plants, worsen air pollution and add greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. Furthermore, warmer city air can speed up chemical reactions that produce ground-level ozone. These combined impacts raise health risks, which leads directly to the need for practical responses.

2
B

These design choices often replace trees and soil with dark asphalt and dense concrete. As a result, less shade and evapotranspiration are available to cool the air, while more sunlight is absorbed by urban surfaces. This stored heat becomes the key driver of temperature differences discussed next.

3
C

This stored heat is released slowly after sunset, so nights remain unusually warm in built-up areas. Therefore, people rely more heavily on air conditioning to maintain comfort. That increased electricity demand sets up the next effect: higher emissions from power generation.

4
D

Urban planners use the term "urban heat island" to describe cities that stay warmer than nearby rural areas. This difference is not random; it emerges from repeated design choices in buildings, roads, and vegetation. The following explanation traces how those choices create a chain of causes and effects.

5
E

Ultimately, the same causal chain suggests clear solutions: expand tree cover, use reflective roofs, and design cooler streetscapes. In conclusion, reducing heat absorption lowers night-time temperatures, which cuts energy use and limits pollution. This sequence shows how urban form can either amplify or reduce environmental harm.

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