I don't get how answer E has anything to do with the stimulus. What do "biological requirements" have anything to do with it, and why are air and water being compared to finite resources? I know they specify "clean air" and "clean water," but I still don't get how that relates to "running out of important natural resources."
I guess you could say if clean water dwindles, you can't make a technology to use something else, because you have to use water. But that just weakens a premise at the beginning. How is this saying that we will run out of resources? Isn't it safe to assume that in June 1994 they regularly used technology that cleaned water, and that water isn't a resource that is going to run out?
I selected (C), that the cost of some new technologies is high enough that the developers might lose money at first. I know it's far from a perfect answer, but this at least gives a reason to weaken "Because new technologies constantly replace old ones, we can never run out of important natural resources," because it gives a reason why technology may not always replace old ones. It might cost too much for anyone to want to develop the technology.
Thanks in advance to anyone who can help me