The chart depicts the amount of waste treated by various ways namely landfill, burning and dumping in sea in a country of Europe in the separate years 2005 and 2008.
Looking at the graph, it is immediately obvious that solutions like burying and pouring into oceans had a tendency to become no longer popular, burning rubbish witnessed dramatic oscillation throughout the surveyed scale. Out of three methods, the largest rate of waste was solved by burning.
At the beginning, in 2005, the majority of waste disposal was kept underground for dissolving. During the time of 3 years, there was a stable drop in terms of landfill, about 10 million tons per year. Similarly, rubbish solved by dumping in the sea experienced the same trend. Remarkably, in 2007 and 2008, waste treatment in the aspects of burial and tipping into sea seemed nearly alike.
In the first year of the researched scale, the amount of burned garbage stood at approximately 65 million tons. Two years after, that plummeted down to 40 million tons and then continued fluctuated. In 2008, the scale quartered in comparison to the rate in the previous year, ending at over 60 million tons.
The chart depicts the amount of
waste
treated by various ways
namely
landfill, burning and dumping in sea in a country of Europe in the separate years 2005 and 2008.
Looking at the graph, it is immediately obvious that solutions like burying and pouring into oceans had a tendency to become no longer popular, burning rubbish witnessed dramatic oscillation throughout the surveyed scale. Out of three methods, the largest rate of
waste
was solved
by burning.
At the beginning, in 2005, the majority of
waste
disposal was
kept
underground for dissolving. During the time of 3 years, there was a stable drop in terms of landfill, about 10
million
tons per
year
.
Similarly
, rubbish solved by dumping in the sea experienced the same trend.
Remarkably
, in 2007 and 2008,
waste
treatment in the aspects of burial and tipping into sea seemed
nearly
alike.
In the
first
year
of the researched scale, the amount of burned garbage stood at approximately 65
million
tons. Two years after, that plummeted down to 40
million
tons and then continued fluctuated. In 2008, the scale quartered
in comparison
to the rate in the previous
year
, ending at over 60
million
tons.