The bar chart illustrates the total distance traveled in passenger kilometers by five modes of transport in the UK between 1990 and 2000.
Overall, buses and trains were the most frequently used modes of transport, whereas bicycles, motorbikes, and air travel accounted for significantly lower figures. While bicycle and motorbike usage declined slightly over the decade, air, bus, and rail travel all experienced modest increases, contributing to the overall rise in passenger kilometers.
In 1990, bicycles and motorbikes recorded 5 billion and 6 billion kilometers, respectively. By 2000, both had declined by 1 billion kilometers. Conversely, air travel showed an upward trend, increasing from 5 billion to 6 billion kilometers over the same period.
Meanwhile, buses were responsible for a substantial 45 billion kilometers in 1990, which rose marginally by 1 billion kilometers in 2000. A similar pattern was observed for rail transport, which accounted for 44 billion kilometers initially before increasing to 47 billion after a decade. These increases contributed to growth in total passenger kilometers, which rose from 105 billion in 1990 to 110 billion in 2000.
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Overall, buses and trains were the most frequently used modes of transport, whereas bicycles, motorbikes, and air travel accounted for significantly lower figures. While bicycle and motorbike usage declined slightly over the decade, air, bus, and rail travel all experienced modest increases, contributing to the overall rise in passenger kilometers.
In 1990, bicycles and motorbikes recorded 5 billion and 6 billion kilometers, respectively. By 2000, both had declined by 1 billion kilometers. Conversely, air travel showed an upward trend, increasing from 5 billion to 6 billion kilometers over the same period.
Meanwhile, buses were responsible for a substantial 45 billion kilometers in 1990, which rose marginally by 1 billion kilometers in 2000. A similar pattern was observed for rail transport, which accounted for 44 billion kilometers initially before increasing to 47 billion after a decade. These increases contributed to growth in total passenger kilometers, which rose from 105 billion in 1990 to 110 billion in 2000.
#Band_8.0
#180_words