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The image contains two separate data representations on carbon dioxide emissions. The first part shows two pie charts for 2002 and 2030 with three categories: OECD, Transition economies, and Developing countries. In 2002, OECD has 52%, Transition economies 10%, and Developing countries 38%; in 2030, OECD has 43%, Transition economies 9%, and Developing countries 48%. The second part shows a bar graph titled "Worldwide Carbon Dioxide Emissions by sector" with two bars for each sector representing 2002 and 2030. Sectors include Other sectors, Waste combustion, Transportation, Consumer, and Industry. In 2002, Other sectors have less than 2 billion tons, Waste combustion around 1.5 billion tons, Transportation nearly 6 billion tons, Consumer over 2 billion tons, and Industry approximately 10 billion tons. By 2030, Other sectors increase to just under 4 billion tons, Waste combustion around 2 billion tons, Transportation nearly 10 billion tons, Consumer around 3.5 billion tons, and Industry close to 12 billion tons.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The pie charts demonstrate greenhouse gas emission by OECD,Transition economies and developing countries, while bar chart illustrate CO2 emission around the world by different sectors between 2002 and 2030.
Overall,in the past the most produced greenhouse output producer was OECD nevertheless the predictions show developing countries will be the most produced greenhouse gas. In bar chart the most released sector was industries, however in the future it will stay same for industry.
In 2002, OECD countries were responsible for about 52% of global emissions, which was the highest share. Developing countries produced 38%, while transition economies had the smallest proportion at 10%. However, by 2030 the situation is predicted to change. The percentage for OECD countries will decrease to 43%, while developing countries will increase significantly to 48%. Transition economies will slightly fall to 9%.
Looking at the bar chart, industry produced the highest level of carbon dioxide in both years. It was about 8 billion tons in 2002 and is expected to rise to around 12 billion tons in 2030. The consumer sector also shows a big increase from about 4 to nearly 9 billion tons. Transportation emissions grow from roughly 3 to 7 billion tons. Waste combustion and other sectors produce much smaller amounts, but they also increase a little.
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