The Gandhian and Marxist patrons of China have advocated a ban on
the slaughter of cattle working for different reasons.
While the
84-year-old Acharya's tireless efforts to ban cow slaughter caused a spiritual
change, the late Chairman Mao has given similar arguments for the protection of
animals working purely for their potential power resources.
Economics of animal power is carefully studied because the energy equations in this country have far-reaching effects. Mao's brief campaign enabled the Chinese to build an impressive stock of more than 50 million buffaloes as cattle.
Today there are about 8 million (male) buffaloes in India, which total 240 million cattle population. The total value of these animals and related infrastructure can be more than Rs. 20,000 crores, which is equivalent to investment in the organized industrial area of
India.
Each task animal is capable of generating an average half horsepower. Animal Husbandry In India 40 million H.P. - equivalent to about 30,000
MW of electric power. The total current installed capacity for electrical power is 26,000 MW.
In order to produce
and provide 30,000 MW of energy at millions of points of application, the
conservative estimates will have an investment of 30,000 crores. On the
contrary, the total investment in animals working today is Rs 10,000 crore
Economic aspects of reproduction, maintenance, health, work, death and slaughter of cows, bulls, buffaloes and other animals for India's developing economy are paramount.
The working animals
contribute two-thirds of energy inputs on the fields, 20 percent comes from
human effort, and 10 percent from other sources: hydroelectricity and fossil
fuel 500,000 villages of India and hundreds of small urban townships are
efficient Delivery is a dream more than immediate reality.
Small farmers,
which hold 50 percent of all farmland, are on land less than 2 hectares. That's
why animal power is the only viable, efficient source of energy, not a tractor.
To generate 1 kW of electrical energy at the point of use, an investment of
about Rs 10,000 will be required. An unprecedented investment of Rs. 30,000
crore will be for changing the all animal energy to the electric power.
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