The two pie charts compare
energy
production by six different resources — natural Use synonyms
gas
, Use synonyms
oil
, nuclear, coal, hydrogen, and other renewables — in 1985 and 2003.
Use synonyms
Overall
, natural Linking Words
gas
was the dominant Use synonyms
energy
source in both years, though its share declined significantly over the period. Meanwhile, Use synonyms
oil
and coal saw notable increases, Use synonyms
while
nuclear Linking Words
energy
experienced a considerable drop.
In 1985, natural Use synonyms
gas
accounted for more than half of all Use synonyms
energy
production at 52%. Nuclear Use synonyms
energy
was the second largest source at 22%, followed by Use synonyms
oil
at 13%. Coal contributed 8%, Use synonyms
while
hydrogen and other renewables each made up a minimal share of 4% and 1% Linking Words
respectively
.
By 2003, the Punctuation problem
, respectively
energy
landscape had changed considerably. Natural Use synonyms
gas
remained the leading source, but its proportion fell sharply by 13 percentage points to 39%. Use synonyms
In contrast
, Linking Words
oil
rose from 13% to 23%, becoming the second largest contributor. Coal Use synonyms
also
grew substantially, more than doubling its share from 8% to 22%. Nuclear Linking Words
energy
, Use synonyms
however
, experienced a dramatic decline, dropping from 22% to just 8%. Other renewables increased modestly from 1% to 4%, Linking Words
while
hydrogen remained unchanged at 4%.
In conclusion, Linking Words
while
natural Linking Words
gas
continued to lead Use synonyms
energy
production in both periods, the Use synonyms
overall
trend between 1985 and 2003 suggests a shift away from nuclear Linking Words
energy
and towards Use synonyms
oil
and coal.Use synonyms