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The image presents a bar chart with the top ten countries for production and consumption of electricity in 2014, ranking from 1 to 10. The chart has two different types of bars representing production (billion kWh) and consumption (billion kWh) for each country. For China, production is at 5,398 and consumption is at 5,322. For the United States, production is at 4,089 and consumption is at 3,866. Russia's production is at 1,057 and consumption is at 1,038. Japan has a production of 936.2 and a consumption of 856.7. India's production is at 871 and consumption is at 818.8. Canada has a production of 618.9 and consumption of 499.9. France's production is at 562.2 and consumption is at 461.9. Brazil has a production of 530.7 and consumption of 455.8. Germany's production is at 526.6 and consumption is at 582.5. Lastly, the Republic of Korea has a production of 485.1 and consumption of 449.5.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart shows the top ten countries for electricity production and consumption in 2014. China leads by a large margin, followed by the US. Most countries show similar production and consumption levels.
China is the top producer and consumer, with over 5,300 billion kWh in each category. The US is second, with around 4,000 billion kWh production and slightly less consumption. The gap between these two and other countries is very big.
Russia, Japan, India, and Canada have much lower figures. Their production and consumption are generally close, except for India where consumption is less than production. The remaining countries – France, Brazil, Germany, and Korea – have even lower amounts. Germany stands out because it consumes more electricity than it produces.
Overall, the chart highlights China’s dominance in electricity production and consumption. Most other countries have more balanced levels, except for Germany. It also shows the huge difference in energy use between the leaders and the rest of the top ten countries.
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