The table compares the energy production by different fuel sources in the UK in 2014 and 2018.
The pie charts illustrate the percentage of energy production in terms of five different fuel sources in the UK between 2014 and 2018. Overall, while the energy generation by coal and nuclear decreased, with the former seeing a marked decline, the reverse was true for renewables. Notably, the shares pf 'oil and other' and gas in producing energy remained stable in both years, the latter being consistenly the most used fuel source in both years.
There was a notiecable drop in the share of coal and nuclear sources. The proportion of coal started with 28.4% in 2014, making it the second most utilized energy source among the five, a figure that then dipped significantly to 18.1% in 2018. Similarly, beginning at 22.5% in 2014, the percentage of nuclear expereinced a slight decrease, reaching 21.6% in the final year.
In contrast, the share of renewables in energy production saw a significant growth, rising sharply from 15.0% in 2014 to a high of 26.2% in 2018.
Meanwhile, the percentage of gas and 'oil and other' fuel types in the generation of energy maintained stability, at 30.1% and 4.0% respectively in both years.
#piechart #changegraph #task1 #ulugbekwrites #reportbyme
😎 @ulugbeks_english
The pie charts illustrate the percentage of energy production in terms of five different fuel sources in the UK between 2014 and 2018. Overall, while the energy generation by coal and nuclear decreased, with the former seeing a marked decline, the reverse was true for renewables. Notably, the shares pf 'oil and other' and gas in producing energy remained stable in both years, the latter being consistenly the most used fuel source in both years.
There was a notiecable drop in the share of coal and nuclear sources. The proportion of coal started with 28.4% in 2014, making it the second most utilized energy source among the five, a figure that then dipped significantly to 18.1% in 2018. Similarly, beginning at 22.5% in 2014, the percentage of nuclear expereinced a slight decrease, reaching 21.6% in the final year.
In contrast, the share of renewables in energy production saw a significant growth, rising sharply from 15.0% in 2014 to a high of 26.2% in 2018.
Meanwhile, the percentage of gas and 'oil and other' fuel types in the generation of energy maintained stability, at 30.1% and 4.0% respectively in both years.
#piechart #changegraph #task1 #ulugbekwrites #reportbyme
😎 @ulugbeks_english