[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"external-lt-1150":3},{"payload":4,"id":45,"user":46,"level":52,"course":53,"activity":54,"activity_slug":55,"title":6,"topic":56,"tone":57,"stats":58,"created":61,"score":62,"is_favorite":63,"public":64,"is_external":63},{"text":5,"title":6,"answers":7,"questions":38},"When people talk about climate policy, they often imagine a simple chain of events: governments set targets, emissions fall, and everyone breathes cleaner air. In practice, policy is more like adjusting a complex machine while it is still running. A change in one part—energy prices, transport rules, farming standards—can produce results somewhere else that few voters expected. That does not mean climate policies are a mistake; it means their side effects need to be anticipated and managed.\n\nOne visible effect is on household budgets. When a country introduces a carbon tax or removes subsidies for fossil fuels, electricity and heating can become more expensive in the short term. Supporters argue that higher prices encourage people to waste less energy and that the revenue can fund public services. Critics reply that families on low incomes cannot easily replace an old boiler or insulate a rented flat. As a result, some governments combine price measures with rebates, grants, or “social tariffs” to protect vulnerable consumers.\n\nBusinesses also feel the impact, but not always in the same direction. Heavy industries such as steel or cement may face higher costs if they must buy permits for their emissions. This can push companies to modernise, yet it can also tempt them to move production to countries with weaker rules, a problem known as “carbon leakage”. To prevent this, some regions are developing border measures that charge imports based on their carbon footprint. These tools aim to keep competition fair, but they also risk trade disputes if other countries see them as disguised protectionism.\n\nTransport policy provides another example of mixed outcomes. Low-emission zones and stricter fuel standards can reduce pollution in city centres, improving health for people who live near busy roads. However, delivery firms and small tradespeople may need to replace vehicles earlier than planned. If public transport is unreliable, workers who commute from the outskirts may feel punished for choices they did not truly make. Well-designed policies therefore invest in buses, cycling routes, and charging infrastructure before applying strict restrictions.\n\nAgriculture and land use are often overlooked in public debates, yet they are central to climate plans. Rules that limit fertiliser use or encourage reforestation can cut emissions and improve biodiversity. At the same time, farmers may experience lower yields at first, and food prices can rise if supply tightens. Some countries respond by paying farmers for environmental services, treating them not only as food producers but also as managers of landscapes.\n\nOverall, the main effect of climate policy is not simply to reduce emissions; it is to reshape economic incentives. The writer’s view is that success depends on honesty about trade-offs and careful design. If policies are introduced without support for those who must adapt, public trust can collapse. But when governments pair targets with practical help, climate policy can deliver cleaner air, new industries, and a fairer transition.","The Unintended Effects of Climate Policies",{"1":8,"2":13,"3":18,"4":23,"5":28,"6":33},[9,10,11,12],"It is too technical for voters to understand.","It always works exactly as planned once targets are set.","It is mainly about improving air quality rather than reducing emissions.","It often produces unexpected knock-on effects that must be managed.",[14,15,16,17],"Because they consume more electricity than wealthier households.","Because low-income households are less concerned about climate change.","Because rebates are never offered alongside carbon taxes.","Because they have fewer realistic ways to invest in efficiency upgrades quickly.",[19,20,21,22],"The spread of new green technologies across borders.","Consumers choosing imported goods because they are lower-carbon.","Companies shifting production to places with looser climate rules, so global emissions may not fall.","A rise in carbon prices that makes exports more competitive.",[24,25,26,27],"Banning private cars from all city centres immediately.","Building reliable alternatives like public transport and charging facilities first.","Giving discounts on fuel so commuters are not affected.","Reducing the number of delivery companies operating in cities.",[29,30,31,32],"They replace farming with forestry as quickly as possible.","They remove all limits on fertiliser use to protect yields.","They import more food to keep domestic prices high.","They pay farmers for environmental services to support the transition.",[34,35,36,37],"They should be abandoned because the economic costs outweigh the benefits.","They are necessary but must be designed with support measures to maintain fairness and trust.","They mainly serve to create trade conflicts rather than cut emissions.","They are effective only when they focus on agriculture, not energy or transport.",{"1":39,"2":40,"3":41,"4":42,"5":43,"6":44},"What point does the writer make in the opening paragraph about climate policy?","Why can climate policies affect low-income households more strongly, according to the text?","What problem is described by the term “carbon leakage”?","What condition does the writer suggest is necessary before strict transport restrictions are applied?","How do some governments reduce the negative effects of climate rules on farmers?","What is the writer’s overall opinion of climate policies?",1150,{"id":47,"username":48,"first_name":49,"last_name":50,"image":51},25533,"shawki-wiki","Shawki","Wiki","https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a/ACg8ocLVa4Sy8MlqyPm-otYuBZZAjV171yiKRXmNIPK8CPpp2OTmsA=s96-c","B2","Reading","Long Text","long-text","Create an exercise about the effects of climate policies","Professional",{"times_played":59,"num_favorites":60},2,1,"2026-06-13T09:35:14",null,false,true]