Answer: This is in the wrong subject and this isnt a question. please fix
Explanation:
The Missouri Compromise effects:
Effect 1: Maine became a free slave state in return.
Effect 2: Slavery was excluded to all new states in the Louisiana Purchase on the southern boundary of Missouri.
The Compromise of 1850 effects:
Effect 1: The south gained by the enforcement of the fugitive slave law.
Effect 2: The north got a new free state, California.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 effects:
Effect 1: Allowed people in territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide if slavery is allowed.
Effect 2: Prohibited slavery north of latitude.
Answer:
Graphs show a pattern in something that we are following. So by using those patterns on the graphs, we can see how the process that we are following is changing and we can conclude that without anything drastic happening the process will continue with the same pattern.
An example would be a pattern in weight loss. If a graph shows that a person is losing weight 1 pound per week we can conclude that the next week the person will have 1 pound less. This will only change if the person starts eating more which would be a drastic change to the pattern.
Answer:
1. Small and uneconomic size of mills
2. High cost of Production
3. Government policy
Explanation:
1. Small and uneconomic size of mills:
Most of the sugar mills in India are of small size with a capacity of 1,000 to 1,500 tonnes per day. This makes large scale production uneconomic. Many of the mills are economically not viable.
2. High cost of Production:
High cost of sugarcane, inefficient technology, uneconomic process of production and heavy excise duty result in high cost of manufacturing. The production cost of sugar in India is one of the highest in the world. Intense research is required to increase the sugarcane production in the agricultural field and to introduce new technology of production efficiency in the sugar mills.
3. Government policy
The Sugarcane sector and Sugar Industry as a whole is heavily controlled by the government. While it is obligatory for sugar mills to purchase all sugarcane cultivated by farmers, the government has no plans in place to restrict production as per demand and requirement.