Bengaluru Outlaws Meat for 24 Hours
Published 2 days ago in News

Bengaluru Outlaws Meat for 24 Hours

Bengaluru will implement a one-day ban on meat sales and slaughter on November 25, 2025 in observance of a religious and cultural anniversary.

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Martina Osmak
Director of Marketing

On November 25, 2025, the Greater Bengaluru Authority (GBA) will enforce a ban on the sale of meat and slaughter of animals within its jurisdiction.


This means that for that day:

  • No meat sales by retail butcher shops are allowed.

  • Slaughterhouses are prohibited from conducting animal slaughter operations.

  • The action applies across the city area defined by the GBA.

Reasoning:
The date coincides with the birth anniversary of Sadhu T. L. Vaswani (November 25), who was a spiritual leader and advocate of vegetarianism.


Moreover, this date is marked globally as International Vegetarian Day and International Meatless Day.

Implications for meat-industry professionals:

  • Suppliers, processors and retailers in Bengaluru will need to plan inventory and operations with this ban in mind for November 25.

  • Retail operations for that day will be required to suspend meat sales — staffing, logistics and customer communication should reflect this.

  • Slaughterhouses must halt animal slaughter on the designated day; this could require rescheduling of supply or slaughter slots.

  • While the prohibition is time-limited (one day) it may affect upstream supply chains (live animals, transport, chilled meat stock) and downstream retail demand for that day.

  • For those operating in adjacent regions, it may influence cross-border flows of meat or live animals (either inbound or outbound) as the day may shift demand or supply patterns temporarily.

Context and operational considerations:

  • The ban is not framed as a permanent regulatory change for the industry, but rather a one-day measure tied to cultural observance.

  • Businesses may need to anticipate and adapt to changes in customer behaviour (e.g., shift of purchases to the day before or day after) and adjust staffing and inventory accordingly.

  • While the stated reasoning is religious/cultural, there may also be indirect operational effects: increased demand for non-meat protein alternatives (though this is incidental to the policy) as noted in the reporting.

  • Compliance: ensure that local licensing, slaughterhouse operations and retail permissions align with the prohibition for the day.

Conclusion:
For meat-industry stakeholders in Bengaluru, the November 25 meat-sale and slaughter ban is a scheduled, one-day operational constraint dictated by the Greater Bengaluru Authority in line with cultural observance. While not a structural policy shift, it demands forward planning to mitigate supply, sales and logistics disruption on that date.

Source: https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/new-updates/bengaluru-bans-meat-sale-on-november-25-to-mark-no-no-veg-day-heres-why/articleshow/125531778.cms