The bar chart gives information about how much rice was produced across 4 different countries marked alphabetically (Countries A, B, C, and D) in three separate years with 10-year intervals: 1995, 2005, and 2015.
Overall, Country A consistently had the largest output in terms of growing rice, with Country B following closely, whereas Countries C and D were far behind in this regard, cultivating nearly equal amounts of the plant under scrutiny. It is also worth mentioning that all the countries had seen rises of varying degrees in their rice production by the end of the timeframe except for Country C whose figure fell back to its initial point eventually.
Focusing on the largest figures, Country A produced around 45 million tonnes of rice in 1995, slightly more than the amount Country B registered (well below 40 million tonnes). The former recorded steady growth, hitting its peak at as much as 50 million tonnes, while the latter showed unstable patterns, with its rice production ascending modestly by 2005 and dropping to roughly 41 million tonnes by 2015, though it was larger than its original level.
Turning to the remaining countries’ crop yields, around 5 million tonnes of rice was grown in Country C, nearly twice as much as the amount of the same crop produced in Country D in 1995. A decade later, the former followed an upward trajectory, reaching around 8 million tonnes before returning to its initial point by 2015, with Country D maintaining the same level until 2005 and recording a slight jump towards the end of the period when both of them showed parity.
