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The image depicts a line chart titled "U.S. Energy Consumption by Fuel (1980-2030)" with six labeled lines representing "Petrol and Oil," "Coal," "Natural Gas," "Nuclear," "Solar/Wind," and "Hydropower." The chart's X-axis spans from 1980 to 2030, with the years 1985, 1995, 2005, 2010, 2015, 2020, and 2025 marked. The Y-axis measures quadrillion units from 0 to 50, in increments of 5. "Petrol and Oil" begins at approximately 30 quadrillion units in 1980, peaking near 45 in 2010 and projected to rise slightly above that by 2030. "Coal" starts near 15, peaks at 25 around 2005, and is projected to decline to just above 20. "Natural Gas" begins below 15, surpasses "Coal" near 2010 just under 25, and is expected to reach 30 by 2030. "Nuclear" maintains a steady rise from 5 in 1980 to a projected 10 in 2030. "Solar/Wind" starts at 0, shows a sharp increase after 2010, and is projected to surpass "Nuclear" by 2030, reaching approximately 15. "Hydropower" hovers consistently around 5 quadrillion units throughout the timeline.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph given displays information about energy consumption in the United States categorized by six fuels from 1980 projecting until 2030 based on a 2008 report.
Overall, the consumption of energy using petrol and oil, coal, nuclear, and solar/wind is projecting to increase in 2030, while natural gas stays at a stable level after 2010 until 2030. Moreover, hydropower is expected to be the smallest number of fuel in energy consumption among the other fuels.
To specify, petrol and oil will increase from 35 quadrillion units in 1980 to approximately 50 quadrillion. Despite its fluctuation between 1980 and 2005, the fuel is still the highest figure it energy throughout the entire nations compared to all fuels. Coal-based energy could reach two times higher from slightly above 15 to almost 30 quadrillion in 2030. Meanwhile, nuclear and solar/wind possessed under 5 quadrillion initially and thereafter kept rising marginally to above 5 and around 5, respectively. Although, hydropower same number with nuclear and solar/wind, it fluctuated from 1980 to 2010 before decreasing notably below 5 quadrillion units since 2011 until 2030.
In conclusion, petrol and oil will still be the most used fuel in the USA’s energy consumption.
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