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The illustrated pie charts outline the production of
units’ electricity by five different energy sources in two nations, Australia
and France from 1980 to 2000. A brief analysis of charts unfolds while coal was the largest fuel source throughout the given span in Australia, nuclear power dominated the total production in the end in France. Of Australia,
the total production in the beginning was 100 units and half of units were
coal. Slices of Hydro power and natural gas depict the same unit, 20, and the
rest of 10 units consist of oil. After 20 years, units grew up to 170. While
the supply of coal explosively ramped up by 80 from 50 units and that of
hydro power also escalated to 36 from 20 units, other energy sources
significantly shrunk to 2 units each and no nuclear power use is observed in
both charts. Considering
France, there are 90 units in initial data in total and the figures of
natural gas and coal shows 25 units, that of oil supplied 5 units lower than
that of natural gas and coal. Nuclear power and hydropower produced 15 and 5
units respectively. In 2000, units of electricity production doubled. When coal secured
the same units, that of oil increased by 5 from 20 units. It is noteworthy
that nuclear power became the major source; producing 126 units, whereas 0
units was seen in Australia. Hydropower and natural gas reduced to mere 2 units
accordingly. |
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Grammar |
Vocabulary |
Cohesion
and Coherence |
Task
Response |
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감사합니다.