The line graph illustrates how many million tonnes of three forest industry products were utilized in a European country, over a twenty-year period between 1980 and 2000.
Overall, it is clear that the number of forest industry products jumped considerably over the period. The pulp was the main product among the remaining until 1990, it was overtaken by pulp. However, the paper was the largest share of the million tonnes in the final year but the pulp the smallest.
The only type to have seen a fluctuation is the timber. Having started as one of the largest share, 5 million tonnes, it showed a soar to 10 in 1985. This was followed by plummet with the product growing in 1995 and a subsequent decline to 7,5 in the final year – the third lowest figure in the final year.
The other two kinds of forest industry products showed primary upwards trends, with different degrees of changes. The pulp, ranked first in the initial year, comprised 5,9 million tonnes in 1980. For the rest period, it bottomed out at 2,2, with the tonnes rising to 9,9 in the final year. The million tonnes increases recorded for the paper were even more pronounced. It started at a mere 4 million tonnes, products thrice as much in 2000 as it did at the beginning year.
