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Line chart comparing power sources produced in France,in terawatt hours; In

France, the use of electricity sources such as thermal, nuclear, hydroelectric and
renewables is calculated from 1980 to 2010.

Overall,nuclear power is by far the most popular means of energy production for
most of the period, while renewables do not have a significant share in the
industry. On the other hand, thermal and hydroelectric power plants generate
approximately the same amount of wax power per year.

in 1980,120 TW-h of electricity was produced from thermal energy and it became
the most used energy in France at that time . In the same year, nuclear and
hydroelectric also produced 75 TW-h of electricity; and renewables provide a
negligible amount of electricity at that time .

between 1980 and 2010 , nuclear quickly became the most popular source of
energy in the country , and its numbers continued to increase rapidly and peaked
at around 430 TW-h in 2005 . In contrast , the number for thermal power dropped
to just 50 TW-h in 1985 and remained the same for the rest of the period . The
amount of electricity produced from hydroelectric power remained relatively
stable, around 50 TW-h to 80 TW-h over the course of 30 years. The amount of
renewables electricity did not change over the 20 years from 1980 to 2000 and
from 2000 it increased only slightly in the last 10 years .

The bar chart delineates the rate of overweight people, categorized by genders, in
Australia between 1980 and 2010.
Overall, it is clear that the proportion of men who are overweight is significantly
higher than that of women each year. In addition, the proportion of both men and
women who were overweight increased during the study period.
In 1980, just under 50% of Australian men were overweight, compared with only
about a third of women, the lowest figure for each sex during the study period.
Over the next 20 years, the proportion of overweight male and female citizens in
Australia both increased significantly, with the male prevalence peaking at almost
70% in 2000.
Between 2000 and 2010, men were slightly less balanced, as shown by a decline
of about 3% in 2010, while the proportion among women was unchanged, with
exactly half of women Australia was overweight in the final year.

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