The table provides information about how much waste was produced by six different countries during three years with 10-year intervals. Overall, waste output rose in five out of six nations, with the US maintaining a significant lead. This country was followed distantly by two Asian countries—Japan and Korea, the latter of which was the only one to reduce its amount. The figures for the remaining countries, however, were significantly lower.
The figures for three countries were higher compared to those of others by a wide margin. The USA far surpassed others, producing 131 tons of waste in 1980, 151 tons a decade later and a staggering 192 tons in the final year. Japan was the second major waste producer, and although its amount almost doubled from 28 to 53 tons over the period, its figure was not nearly as high as the USA's. In terms of Korea, no data was disclosed in the initial year, and despite ranking third with 31 tons in 1990, this country had managed to minimize its wastage to 19 tons by 2000.
The remaining countries demonstrated negligible, albeit similar, quantities. Poland and Portugal reported almost identical amounts and growing trends, with the former always producing insignificantly more waste, commencing with 4 and 2 and finishing with 6.6 and 5 tons respectively. Ireland, however, exhibited the lowest amount initially, 0.6 tons, the figure which grew markedly by more than eightfold to 5 tons in 2000, the same as Portugal's figure.
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The figures for three countries were higher compared to those of others by a wide margin. The USA far surpassed others, producing 131 tons of waste in 1980, 151 tons a decade later and a staggering 192 tons in the final year. Japan was the second major waste producer, and although its amount almost doubled from 28 to 53 tons over the period, its figure was not nearly as high as the USA's. In terms of Korea, no data was disclosed in the initial year, and despite ranking third with 31 tons in 1990, this country had managed to minimize its wastage to 19 tons by 2000.
The remaining countries demonstrated negligible, albeit similar, quantities. Poland and Portugal reported almost identical amounts and growing trends, with the former always producing insignificantly more waste, commencing with 4 and 2 and finishing with 6.6 and 5 tons respectively. Ireland, however, exhibited the lowest amount initially, 0.6 tons, the figure which grew markedly by more than eightfold to 5 tons in 2000, the same as Portugal's figure.
BAND 8.0+
#task1 #mock_writing #table #alisher_types #aGoodOne
⚡️@alisherposts⚡️
⭐️@ad_astra_school⭐️