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The line chart depicts the everyday quantity of carbon dioxide footprint individually by metric tons in the

European nations include UK, Sweden, Italy and Portugal from 1967 to 2007, in ten-year intervals.

Overall, despite fluctuations in the four countries in the period, United Kingdom and Sweden each
person carbon dioxide produces decreased while it rose in Italy and Portugal.

Regardless UK, the production of carbon dioxide started in 1967 at the highest of around 11 metric
tones according to individuals which then declined gradually toward an end of 9 metric tons, however
UK had remained the number one producer of carbon dioxide in the chart. Following that, per Swedish
release about 9 metric tons of carbon dioxide at the beginning and experienced a peak of over 10 tons in
1977

continue with a fall of approximately 5 metric tons for the rest of the years, letting Italy surpassed at 7
metric tons in 1987.

In contrast, an Italian had an average carbon dioxide emission of over 4 metric tons in 1967 before
steadily grew in the next 10 years which by that time at around 6.5 metric tons. After a slight dip of
about 7 tons in 1987, the production took over Sweden and reached a flat of below 8 metric tons until
the end period. Finally, Portugal people had identical fluctuation to Italy with a lower rate. At first in
1967, it was accounted for about 1 metric tons of carbon dioxide by a person in Portugal which follow by
a gradual increase until 1997 at over 5 metric tons and it noticeably reached the same amount of carbon
dioxide as Sweden at just below 6 metric tons in 2007.

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