The line graph provides information about the amount of three different forest industrial outputs which were produced in a particular country, specifically, timber, pulp and paper over the period of 2 decades.
Overall : all figures of three products witnessed an upturn during the given span. Notably, paper production increased dramatically, surpassing other goods.
The amount of pulp production saw a significant decline from 5,9 to 2,1 million tones between 1980 and 1983, before rising further to 7 million tones in 1985. Starting at 8 million tones in 1988, the quantity of pulp which was produced increased noticeably in 2000, reaching at 10 million tones. Similarly, starting at 4 million tones in 1980, the amount of timber which was manufactured increased to 9 million tones in 1995. However, the amount of timber production saw a slight decline to 7 million tones during the final year.
In contrast, the figure for paper which was produced started at 4 million tones in 1980, the figure that then rose to 9 million tones, before dropping slightly to 8 million tones in 1988. Then the amount of paper production increased dramatically from 1995 to 2000, peaking at 12 million tones.
