The line chart displays the proportion of energy consumption rate according to the four energy sources, namely, Coal, Oil, Natural Gas, and Renewables from 2010 to 2020.
Overall, throughout the given period, Natural Gas and Renewables energy sources experienced an upward trend which was peaked similarly in number at the last year. In contrast, the remaining of categories, which are Coal and Oil, witnessed a consistent falling trend year by year in the figure.
Initially, commencing at around 5 exajoules in 2010, Renewables energy source adoption is skyrocketing onward the next decade and similarly, the same pattern witnessed by Natural Gas. Even though the intiate number is stark different, which is over about 45 exajoules compared to Renewables, year on year the rate of energy consumption from the Natural Gas source is increasing steadily and by 2020 it is rose to approximately 48 exajoules.
Conversely, Coal and Oil did not had a vast gap in the starting number, respectively 50 and 45 exajoules. Thereafter, both of them lose a quite large of proportions slowly through the decade. In 2015, both are peaked at around 40 exajoules and dramatically sink to 25 and 35 exajoules in the last year.
