Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image presents two graphs: a bar graph showing the average Australian annual residential water consumption for selected cities - last year, and a pie chart showing Australian water consumption distribution for 2014. The bar graph lists Sydney with consumption close to 300, Perth at 350, Adelaide just under 250, Brisbane at 200, Melbourne around 150, and Canberra with consumption close to 250. The pie chart has six sections indicating Agriculture at 67%, Mining at 2%, Households at 9%, Water supply, sewage, and drainage at 7%, Manufacturing at 4%, Electricity and gas supply at 7%, and Other industries at 4%.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Skyrocket your IELTS band score by 1-2 points in under a month with our premium plan!
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.
The bar chart and the pie chart provide key statistics about how much Australia consumes water annually for 5 different cities measured in kiloliters in the last year as well as the percentage used for 8 fields. Overall, as it is shown each property utilizes mostly over 200 kiloliters and most of the water goes to agriculture purposes. In addition, Perth allocated the highest numbers over the listed places whereas mining only targeted 2% among all the other.
As it is stated in the graph, Perth and Brisbane are on the two tops of 300 and 260 kilolitres, respectively. However, Melbourne and Canberra are the least two in terms of using water, nearly 150 kilolitres for each. Sydney’s rate is moderate which is 200 kilolitres.
On the other hand, it is clearly illustrated that water supply, sewage and drainage get 7% out of the water, exactly as electricity and gas supply. In comparison, households accounted for 9% of the distribution.
Word Count: 160