The line graph gives information about three forest industry products in a european country, manufacturing pulp, timber, and paper, over a twenty-year period between 1980 and 2000.
Overall, the data shows significant fluctuations in the production levels of timber, pulp, and paper over the two-decade span. Paper production experienced a remarkable surge, while timber and pulp production demonstrated erratic patterns with notable peaks and declines.
Initially in 1980, paper production stood at just over 2 million tonnes, soaring to around 8 million tonnes by 1995 and approaching 10 million tonnes by 2000. In contrast, timber production started at approximately 4 million tonnes in 1980, dropped to 3 million tonnes by 1985, surged to 6 million tonnes by 1990, decreased to 5 million tonnes by 1995, and stabilized at 5 million tonnes in 2000. Pulp production began at 2 million tonnes in 1980, increased to 4 million tonnes by 1985, dropped to 3 million tonnes in 1990, rose to 6 million tonnes by 1995, and peaked at 8 million tonnes by 2000.
