Speed Reading — Car Battery - Level 3 — 300 wpm

Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.

This is the text (if you need help).

Car makers are spending a lot of money on electric cars. In the future, electric cars will replace petrol cars. Environmentalists believe this will reduce the amount of CO2 put into the atmosphere. A big problem for electric cars is charging the battery. Some batteries in today's electric cars can take up to 12 hours to charge fully. However, a company in Israel says it has created a lithium-ion battery that people can charge in just five minutes. This is the same amount of time it takes to fill a tank of gas with petrol. The new lithium-ion batteries were developed by the Israeli company StoreDot. They are being manufactured by a Chinese company called Eve Energy.

The new batteries could totally transform driving. They would mean electric cars would be able to travel as far as petrol cars. Many people with electric cars today suffer from "range anxiety". This is stress caused by worrying about the battery running out of electricity. A StoreDot spokesperson said: "You're either afraid that you're going to get stuck on the highway, or that you're going to need to sit in a charging station for two hours." The new batteries would end this anxiety. A StoreDot spokesperson said: "We're at the point of achieving a revolution in the electric vehicle charging experience". He said it means the switch from petrol to electric cars will happen much faster.

Comprehension questions
  1. How much money are car makers spending?
  2. What will be reduced in the environment?
  3. How long can some batteries take to charge?
  4. In which country is the company that created the new battery?
  5. Where is the new battery being made?
  6. What does the article say the new battery will transform?
  7. What do many electric-car drivers suffer from?
  8. Where are people worrying about being stuck?
  9. What did a company say we are at the point of achieving?
  10. What did the company say might happen much faster?

Back to the car battery lesson.

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