Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Rising anti-beef pitch sends cricket ball prices flying

- Jasvinder Sidhu jasvinder.sidhu@hindustant­imes.com

MEERUT: The Hindu nationalis­ts’ anti-beef drive is driving up prices of cricket balls made of cow and buffalo leather as vigilantes have stepped up attacks on traders to stop the slaughter of cows.

Factories making cricket balls in Uttar Pradesh, where cattle slaughter is banned, are saddled with a significan­t dip in the supply of cow hides. It has, in turn, spiked the price of cricket balls by 100%.

“We have to import leather from the UK. This is expensive because it involves import duty and other taxes. Ultimately, the consumer is suffering. A ball sold at `400 a year ago goes for `800 now,” said the director of a Meerut-based brand. Bigger brands are importing cow leather but smaller units had to fall back on a poor alternativ­e, buffalo skin that manufactur­ers said is not a good because of the thick hide.

“Buffalo skin is not suitable for alum tanning (the process of preparing the hide before making cricket balls). The hide has colour and waterproof­ing problems. It is also timeconsum­ing. If a man makes 10 balls with cow leather, he will make only six with buffalo hide,” said Rakesh Mahajan, director of BD Mahajan & Sons Private Limited.

“Earlier, the price of a sheet of cow skin was `600 to `700. But now it has touched `2,500. This has caused prices to double,” he said. There is no central law on slaughter of cows but it has historical­ly been banned in most states but rarely enforced.

The industry is dependent on cow leather procured from states where cattle slaughter is not banned. But the yield from these states is too little to sustain the country’s huge leather industry.

 ??  ?? A worker stitches a ball at a factory in Meerut. HT FILE
A worker stitches a ball at a factory in Meerut. HT FILE

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