Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image shows a line graph with four materials' recycling rates from 1982 to 2010; Paper & cardboard starts at 20% and steadily increases to just under 80% by 2010; Glass containers exhibit a more gradual increase from 10% to just over 70%; Aluminum cans begin at around 5%, sees a sharp rise to 30% by 1986, fluctuates, and ends at nearly 60%; plastics start at negligible levels, see slow growth to just under 10% by 2002, but more rapid growth to nearly 30% by 2010; x-axis represents years at four-year intervals, y-axis shows percentages in increments of 10, from 0 to 90%.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
Skyrocket your IELTS band score by 1-2 points in under a month with our premium plan!
Note: Both the topic and the answer were created by one of our users.
The graph shows four diffrent materials in proportion that were recycled from 1982 to 2010 in a particular country.
Overall, we can observe an upward trend in recycling rate for selected materials throught out year 1982 to 2010. With a significant rise in all four materials in years 1990 to 1994.
Paper and cardboard have the highest recycling rate with around 65 per cent in 1982. Then we can observe a slight drop in 1990, and its peak in the year 1994. After that paper and cardboard shows a dowside trend dropping to 70 per cent in 2010. Glass containers were about 50 per cent recycling rate in 1982, and they were slightly dropping to 40 per cent rate in throught out 8 years period of time. After that, they growth to 60 per cent in 2010.
Aluminium can and Plastics both have a upward trend, with the peak in year 2010 with about 45 and 9 per cent recycling rate respectfully
Word Count: 162