The provided pie chart represents the percentage of water intake of various purposes in Australia by 2004, whereas the bar chart gives information regarding the rate of Australian resident’s water usage distribution at their residence in the same location and year. The units are measured in percentages.
Overall, both of the charts reveal two primary trends: a significant skew towards the water consumption for residential purposes which was specifically in the houses, and a high proportion of water usage in the bathroom, among other activities of Australian residents in 2004.
Detailing on the distribution of water consumption by varying parties in the country, the pie chart indicates a noticeable skew towards water intake by households in Australia, representing more than half of the total consumption which was exactly 57%. Followed by other residential purposes, the water intake in apartments took up 13% of the overall number of water consumption. Furthermore, the rest 30% in the pie chart was occupied by industries, business, government, and other purposes of water usage over the period in Australia.
Due to the fact that residential purposes took up the majority of the consumption, the bar chart further indicates the specified distribution of the usage in multiple water-consuming activities. Occupying the highest amount among other activities, the bathroom purposes’ rate of usage was at nearly 30%. Followed by the consumption in garden purposes at just above 25%, washing clothes at exactly 20%, and toilet at 15%. The activity that uses the least amount of water was the kitchen, with the percentage of merely 10%.
