Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image shows two pie charts representing Australian household energy use and Australian household greenhouse gas emissions. The top pie chart on energy usage indicates that water heating constitutes 30% of the energy use, heating 42%, refrigeration 7%, other appliances 15%, lighting 4%, and cooling 2%. The bottom pie chart on greenhouse gas emissions presents a similar breakdown, with water heating representing 32%, heating 15%, refrigeration 14%, other appliances 28%, lighting 8%, and cooling 3%. Both charts consist of six sectors with different shades and patterns, with the largest segment being heating in energy use and other appliances in greenhouse gas emissions. The percentages for each sector are provided in a clear and concise manner.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Skyrocket your IELTS band score by 1-2 points in under a month with our premium plan!
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.
The first pie chart illustrates the consumption of energy in an average Australian household, while the second chart contains the information of greenhouse gas emissions which are produced from the energy use.
Overall, heating represents the largest share of energy use, however, it is the only type of energy source that produces less emissions than the amount of used energy. The rest of the types of used energy generate more greenhouse gases than the consume energy.
To begin with, heating takes up 42% of all energy use in an average family, whereas it only produces 15% of emissions. Water heating, on the other hand, requires 30% of power, but creates 32% of greenhouse gases. The exact case works with other appliances, energy usage is only 15%, while there is a 28% of generated emissions.
Furthermore, refrigeration and lightning produce twice as much greenhouse gases (14% and 8% respectively) than the energy they use (7% and 4% respectively). Moreover, cooling takes up just 2% of the whole energy use and creates only 3% of emissions.
Word Count: 174