The given line-graph represents data of the number of beers sold to pubs and supermarkets in between 2000 and 2016, and the bar graph illustrates the change in the total number of pubs in the UK in the same time-period. The units are calibrated in thousands of beers/pubs.
Overall, maximum number of beer bottles were sold to the pubs every year, however, in the later years of the survey the number of beer bottles sold to supermarkets was higher. Meanwhile, the number of pubs in the UK declined gradually over the years.
In 2000, the maximum number of beer bottles (25,000) were sold and given to the pubs, whereas, the supermarkets bought a little over 10,000 beer bottles. Thereafter, the amount of beer sold to the pubs showed a declining trend, while the numbers rose for the supermarkets. In 2014, approximately, 12,500 beers were sold to both the buyers and the number of bottles sold to the supermarkets turned higher than that in the pubs with almost 15,000 beers in supermarkets in 2016.
Furthermore, as per the bar chart, a little more than 60,000 pubs were operating in 2000 in the UK, however, gradually, every year the count of pubs dropped in numbers and plummeted to a total of 50,000 pubs by the end of the survey in 2016.
