The pie charts below show how dangerous waste products are dealt with in three countries.
Summarise information +comparison.
The pie charts illustrate the current trend in solving hazardous waste products in Republic of Korea, Sweden and the UK.
It can be clearly seen that in Korea, more than two-thirds of the total amount of rubbish is recycled. The other popular methods are burying and burning them, accounting for 22% and 9% respectively.
Similarly, those measures are frequently adopted by Sweden. However, rubbish in Sweden is mainly buried rather than recycled in Korea. Recycling holds the second place with one fourth of the total amount, while incineration remains the least popular method, having the percentage of 20%.
As regards the UK, this country has a wider variety of ways of dealing with waste products than the others. In particular, burying waste is the most popular, whose proportion is 10 times as much as that of chemical treatment or dumping at sea, each of which stands at 8%. Like Sweden and Korea, the smallest amount of rubbish is burnt (2%) in the United Kingdom.
Overall, burying rubbish is the common solution to waste products while burning is restricted in all these countries for the time being.
Summarise information +comparison.
The pie charts illustrate the current trend in solving hazardous waste products in Republic of Korea, Sweden and the UK.
It can be clearly seen that in Korea, more than two-thirds of the total amount of rubbish is recycled. The other popular methods are burying and burning them, accounting for 22% and 9% respectively.
Similarly, those measures are frequently adopted by Sweden. However, rubbish in Sweden is mainly buried rather than recycled in Korea. Recycling holds the second place with one fourth of the total amount, while incineration remains the least popular method, having the percentage of 20%.
As regards the UK, this country has a wider variety of ways of dealing with waste products than the others. In particular, burying waste is the most popular, whose proportion is 10 times as much as that of chemical treatment or dumping at sea, each of which stands at 8%. Like Sweden and Korea, the smallest amount of rubbish is burnt (2%) in the United Kingdom.
Overall, burying rubbish is the common solution to waste products while burning is restricted in all these countries for the time being.