The bar chart illustrates how much emissions from three categories such as gas, oil, coal released in the United Kingdom from 1990 to 2010.
Overall, there was an increase in the number of tons related to gas emissions examined while opposite changes were seen in those of oil and coal. Notably, in 1990, the highest emission tons was belonged to coal which was surpassed by gas emissions, to be not a prioritise fuel in the final year of the period.
In 1990, gas started at 200 million tons of emissions, after which it experienced a dramatical growth by 100 million in the next 20-year period to reach a peak at over 300 million tons. By contrast, coal was a leader in generating carbon gasses in 1990, at roughly 320 million tons, and later fell gradually to under 200 million tons in the last year. Additionally, it was 100 million tons lesser than the number of emissions from gas and became into the lowest sources in the UK.
Merely 270 million tons of carbon emissions from oil was emmited in 1990, with a subsequent fluctuation in 10 years later and a final similar trend to coal emissions that continuously declined from 260 to 200 million tons.
