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The image shows pie charts of electricity production by fuel source in Australia and France for the years 1980 and 2000. In 1980, Australia's total production was 100 units distributed as Coal: 50, Oil: 10, Natural Gas: 20, Hydro Power: 20, and Nuclear Power: 0. By 2000, with a total of 170 units, Australia's distribution was Coal: 130, Oil: 2, Natural Gas: 2, Hydro Power: 36, and Nuclear Power: 0. France's total production in 1980 was 90 units, allocated as Coal: 25, Oil: 20, Natural Gas: 25, Hydro Power: 5, and Nuclear Power: 15. In 2000, with a total of 180 units, the distribution was Coal: 25, Oil: 2, Natural Gas: 25, Hydro Power: 2, and Nuclear Power: 126.
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The pie charts illustrate the units of electricity generated by five fuel sources in Australia and France in 1980 and 2000.
Overall, both countries increased their total output, but their energy mixes moved in opposite directions. Australia became more coal‑dependent, while France shifted dramatically toward nuclear power.
In Australia, production rose from 100 to 170 units. Coal, the main source, grew from 50 units (50 %) to 130 units (76 %). Hydro stayed at 20 units, reducing its share from 20 % to 12 %. Natural gas remained at 20 units, and oil fell from 10 to 0 units.
In France, output increased from 90 to 180 units. Nuclear power expanded from 15 units (17 %) to 126 units (70 %), becoming dominant. Coal dropped from 25 to 8 units and oil from 20 to 2 units. Hydro stayed at 25 units, but its proportion fell.
The charts show that while both nations produced more electricity, Australia relied increasingly on coal and France on nuclear.
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