The line graph illustrates the amount of manufacture of three forest industrial goods, namely timber, pulp, and paper, in a particular country in Europe between 1980 to 2000. Overall, all trends fluctuated over the whole period. Notably, the trend for paper became the dominant sector to compare than others towards the end of the year.
Regarding the figure for paper, it stood at 4 million tonnes initially, rising gradually over a decade till 1995. In 1995, it increased to 9 million tonnes and declined to 8 million tonnes in 1997. In the final year, it rocked its peak at 12 million tonnes as the highest amount.
Turning to the trends for pulp and timber, they started almost similarly at 6 and 5 million tonnes respectively. The former dipped modestly in 1985 to approximately 3 million tonnes, growing modestly to 7 million tonnes in 1985. From this year till 1996, the amount for pulp remained unchanged at 8 million tonnes, and in the final year it rose to 9 million tonnes. The latter was 5 million tonnes in 1980, doubled sharply to 10 million tonnes in 1985, and it fluctuated over the whole period. In 2000, the trend for timber witnessed as the lowest-used product at 7 million tonnes considerably.
