The table illustrates the amount of milk produced yearly in four different nations between 1990 and 2010.
Overall, there was an upward trend in the production of milk for all countries, except for a significant decrease in Australia over the given period. Moreover, the figure for the Netherlands was consistently highest during two decades.
In 1990, Netherlands’ milk production was the largest at 11,262,000 litres and it increased significantly to 11,466,000 litres in the final year, after a moderate drop to 11,155,000 litres in 2000. The quantity of milk produced in Tanzania was much lower than in the Netherlands, it doubled from 87,000 litres to 1,55,000 over the next twenty years. Similarly, the figure for Guemlata climbed nearly four fold from 26000 litres in 1990 to 84000 litres in 2020, which was two times lower than its for Tanzania.
By contrast, Australia’s annual milk production started at 11,246,000 litres in the first year and it consistently decreased by approximately 2,000,000 litres over the two decades. Despite a decrease, it was still the second higher country in terms of milk production rate, only about 2,000,000 litres lower than its for Netherlands
