Our system will evaluate the answer based on this AI-generated description.
The image presents a line graph depicting goods transport in the UK from 1974 to 2002 in million tonnes via road, water, rail, pipeline. Road transport: 1974 (70), 1978 (75), 1982 (80), 1986 (82), 1990 (85), 1994 (95), 1998 (98), 2002 (100). Water transport: 1974 (40), 1978 (42), 1982 (45), 1986 (50), 1990 (50), 1994 (58), 1998 (60), 2002 (63). Rail transport: 1974 (40), 1978 (39), 1982 (35), 1986 (30), 1990 (30), 1994 (40), 1998 (45), 2002 (40). Pipeline transport: 1974 (5), 1978 (10), 1982 (15), 1986 (18), 1990 (20), 1994 (20), 1998 (21), 2002 (22).
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.
This line graph compares the amount of goods delivered in UK from 1974 to 2002 by 4 different modes of transportation.
Looking into more details, the amount of British goods that are delivered by road rose slightly from 70 million tonnes in 1974 to 80 million tonnes in 1994, and then it jumped dramatically to 90 million tonnes in 2002. The amount of British goods that are delivered by road increased slowly from 39 million tonnes in 1974 to 50 million tonnes in 1998 with some fluctuation. The amount of British goods that are delivered by railway stays constant from 40 million tonnes in 1974 to 40 million tonnes in 1994. The figure for pipeline increased slowly from 5 million tonnes in 1974 to 21 million tonnes in 2002.
Overall, the most common ways of transport goods are road and water. Expect rail, every single transport is climbing.
Word Count: 148