The pie charts compare three main kinds of electricity resources generated in India, Sweden, Morocco, and Vietnam in 2003.
In general, hydropower contributed the largest proportion of the three surveyed electricity sources in Sweden and Morocco, while fossil fuels took up the main rate of electricity production in Vietnam and India in 2003. Considerably, Vietnam and Morocco were two nations that did not generate nuclear power in the given year.
Looking first at India and Sweden, two countries that created three types of electric resources in 2003, fossil fuels comprised the largest amount of electricity produced in India, accounting for over four-fifths. In contrast, those of Sweden took up the lowest rate, only 4%, which equaled the produced percentage of nuclear power in India. Moreover, while Sweden witnessed over half of their electricity production from hydropower, this type of resource accounted for just 14%.
Moving on to the remaining regions, in which nuclear power was not generated, a major part of the electricity sources created in Morocco were contributed by water power, at 95%. This percentage overdoubled that of Vietnam, at only 44%. Vietnamese electricity was mostly produced from fossil-fuel sources, accounting for 56%. In contrast, the figure for Morocco was truly marginal – only 5% in 2003.
