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The image is a graph titled "Seriousness of environmental issues" displaying the percentage of respondents deeming various issues 'very serious' from 2000 to 2010; includes averages for China, India, Germany, and the USA. Shortages of fresh water start at around 75%, peaking at 76% in 2002 and 2004, with a gradual decline to just over 70% by 2010. Air pollution begins just above 70%, dropping to around 65% in 2002, then climbing to 72% in 2006, and decreasing to about 67% by 2010. Automobile emissions show a steady increase from approximately 54% in 2000 to roughly 62% in 2010. Climate change starts at around 58%, rises to just over 60% in 2004, with slight fluctuations, and ends around the same level in 2010. The graph includes a line legend indicating the issue each line represents.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph depicted how seriously people in four countries take environmental issues over a 10 year period. These issues include fresh water shortages, automobile emissions, air pollution, and climate change.
Most candidates in the 2000s answered that air pollution was the most severe issue, with approximately 65 percent. It’s saw flacutations over the 10 years but remained the number one choice.
Next durning the 2000s more people answered that automobile emissions were more of an issue where approximately 60 percent agreed. However that changed in 2005, as people began answering that climate change was worse than automobile emissions.
Then in 2003, members of the 4 countries started meantioning that fresh water shortages was worse than air pollution, with close to 70 percent of the candidates voting for it. However is saw a drastic decline, and it reached a trough in 2007, but it then saw a rise in votes from 2007 to 2010.
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