Content
Chief Justice of India on NJAC Revival Plea
How to Navigate a Complex Global Paradigm
SC Panel Suggests Creation of a Goa Tiger Reserve
Safran LEAP Engine MRO Facility in Hyderabad
Aravalli Hills Despite Forest Survey Warning
Chief Justice of India on NJAC Revival Plea
Why is it in News?
A fresh plea has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking revival of the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) and abolition of the Collegium system.
The petitioner has arraigned the CJI, the Supreme Court Collegium, the Union government, and several parties as respondents.
The plea terms the 2015 striking down of NJAC as a “great wrong”, arguing that it replaced the will of Parliament with the opinion of four judges.
CJI Surya Kant stated the Court would consider the plea.
Parallel political context: Debate over judicial transparency, “judicial primacy”, and allegations of nepotism resurfaces.
Relevance
GS-II: Polity & Governance
Separation of powers.
Judicial independence.
Constitutional amendments (99th CAA).
Role of Parliament vs Judiciary.
Appointment procedures.
Basic Structure doctrine.
GS-II: Parliament & Judiciary Relations
Institutional trust deficit.
Checks and balances architecture.
Judicial Appointments in India
Constitutional Scheme
Articles 124, 217: Judges of Supreme Court and High Courts appointed by the President after consultation with CJI, judges of SC, and Governor/Chief Justice of the state.
Original intent: Executive had a major role; judiciary was “consulted”.
Shift to Judicial Primacy (Judges Cases)
First Judges Case (1981): Executive primacy.
Second Judges Case (1993): Judicial primacy; Collegium created.
Third Judges Case (1998): Collegium expanded to 5 (SC) and 3 (HC).
Collegium System — Key Features
Supreme Court Collegium: CJI + 4 senior-most SC judges.
High Court Collegium: Chief Justice + 2 senior-most HC judges.
Functions: Recommends appointments, elevations, transfers.
Known issues:
Opacity (no stated criteria; limited public disclosure).
Alleged nepotism, favouritism, regional bias.
Frequent executive–judiciary clashes (delays in clearance).
HC vacancies persistently high (30–35% over years).
99th Constitutional Amendment (2014) + NJAC Act (2014)
Composition:
CJI (Chairperson)
Two senior-most SC judges
Law Minister
Two eminent persons (selected by PM, CJI, LoP panel)
Objectives
Democratise appointments.
Introduce checks and balances.
Increase transparency.
Reduce allegations of judicial monopoly.
Why NJAC Was Struck Down (2015, 4:1 bench)
Core Reason: Violation of Judicial Independence
Presence of Law Minister + eminent persons → possible executive interference.
Judicial independence recognised as part of Basic Structure (Kesavananda Bharati).
Eminent persons’ veto could block judicial choices.
Justice J. Chelameswar dissent
Criticised Collegium as opaque and unaccountable.
Strongly supported NJAC as balancing mechanism.
Current Plea: Key Arguments
Judgment should be declared void ab initio.
Collegium = “synonym for nepotism and favouritism”.
Appointments remain a “riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma” (reference to Churchill).
Parliament acted using its constituent power, yet its amendment was struck down.
Striking NJAC down “reduced Parliament to an inferior tribunal”.
CJI’s Initial Response
CJI Surya Kant said the SC “would consider the plea”, indicating judicial openness to examine the argument (though reopening a decided Constitution Bench judgment is rare and requires rigor).
Constitutional & Jurisprudential Analysis
A. Can a past Constitution Bench judgment be reopened?
Within Court’s powers under Article 137 (Review) + Curative jurisdiction, but:
Very high threshold.
Time-lapse of a decade reduces probability.
B. Legislature vs Judiciary: Separation of Powers Debate
Legislature: Claims judicial monopoly is anti-democratic.
Judiciary: Claims executive’s presence jeopardises independence.
C. Basic Structure Doctrine at Core
Judicial independence = non-negotiable.
The test: Does NJAC dilute independence?
Academic debate: scholars like Upendra Baxi, Madhav Khosla argue both sides.
Policy Issues Driving Renewed Debate
Persistent vacancy crisis: 450+ HC vacancies (varied over years).
Case pendency: Over 5 crore cases across courts.
Perception battles: From “judicial overreach” to “executive non-cooperation”.
Collegium’s opaque resolutions despite partial publication.
Critical Evaluation
Strengths of Collegium
Shields judiciary from executive capture.
Ensures judicial primacy (consistently upheld by SC).
Protects constitutional adjudication.
Weaknesses of Collegium
Opaque and non-accountable.
No institutionalised criteria for merit/representation.
Alleged kinship networks.
Strengths of NJAC Idea
Adds democratic legitimacy.
Potential for transparency reforms.
Balances judiciary–executive roles.
Weaknesses of NJAC (as struck down)
Eminent persons’ veto could stall judiciary.
Politicisation of appointments possible.
Ambiguous selection of “eminent persons”.
Middle Path Possibilities (Recommended by Experts)
Retain judicial primacy but:
Increase transparency.
Codify objective criteria (merit, diversity).
Create an independent secretariat for appointments.
Publish reasons for rejection/selection.
How to Navigate a Complex Global Paradigm
Why is it in News?
Hong Kong hosted the 6th China–U.S. Exchange Foundation (CUSEF) Forum in November 2025, titled “Circles for Peace”.
The forum took place amid deepening U.S.–China rivalry, declining people-to-people ties, technology-driven competition, and rising global uncertainty.
The discussions highlighted that traditional engagement frameworks (like guardrails, managed competition) are no longer adequate to manage today’s strategic rivalry.
Hong Kong was viewed as an “uneasy middle space” — a vantage point to explore new ideas and frameworks.
Relevance
GS-II: International Relations
U.S.–China strategic competition
Middle-power diplomacy
Strategic autonomy
Taiwan question
Crisis prevention mechanisms
GS-III: Security & Technology
AI governance
Dual-use technologies
Space governance
Technology security dilemmas
U.S.–China Relations in 2025
Relationship marked by strategic rivalry + deep economic interdependence.
Areas of friction:
Technology (semiconductors, AI, 5G)
Trade and supply chains
South China Sea
Taiwan
Human rights
Military deterrence
Both powers expect “sudden shocks” due to thin trust and high militarisation.
Key Themes from the Hong Kong Forum
A. Shrinking Space for Nuance
Domestic politics in both states have hardened narratives.
Specialist-level strategic anxieties have moved into public politics.
Younger generations in both countries have declining familiarity due to reduced student exchanges.
B. AI and Technology as the New Global Commons
AI viewed as an international public good — too consequential for one country to dominate.
Forum emphasised:
Equity
Transparency
Accountability
Concern over dual-use technologies (civilian + defence).
Need for:
Global AI governance regime
Future governance for outer space activities
C. Taiwan as a Driver of Militarised Tension
China warned U.S. is drifting towards a “one China, one Taiwan” posture.
Risk of accidental escalation (e.g., 2001 EP-3 incident).
Region lacks a durable crisis-prevention mechanism insulated from domestic politics.
D. The Diplomatic Climate
Strategic fatigue visible among experts.
Personality-driven diplomacy insufficient in a complex multipolar world.
Need for new vocabulary and mechanisms beyond Cold War models.
E. Ng Eng Hen’s “Dialectic Moment”
Current global order is in structural flux, driven by competing pressures.
U.S., Europe, and China will shape outcomes, but rest of the world must ensure:
Global commons are not collateral damage
No new hegemon emerges
Multiparty stewardship of the future
Hong Kong’s Role as a “Middle Space”
A. Why Hong Kong Matters
Historically a bridge between China and the West.
Despite recent political pressures, retains:
Connectivity
Cultural hybridity
Cosmopolitan networks
Transparency advantages
Acts as a metaphorical vantage point to think beyond binary geopolitics.
B. Middle Spaces in Global Politics
Enable:
Cross-border ideas
Dialogue outside official channels
Crisis de-escalation conversations
Hong Kong demonstrates that even constrained spaces can enable meaningful engagement.
Lessons for India
A. India’s Strategic Autonomy Imperative
India cannot control U.S.–China rivalry, but can manage its exposure.
Avoid copying U.S. rhetoric or accepting China’s narratives.
Must maintain:
Independent decision-making
Issue-based partnerships
Non-alignment in new-age geopolitical conflicts
B. Build Domestic Power
Technological capability
Economic resilience
Institutional strength
Innovation ecosystems
High-skill workforce
C. Avoid Rigid Binaries
Not “with the U.S.” or “with China”.
Build flexible, sector-specific cooperation with multiple poles (EU, Japan, ASEAN, Global South).
D. Strengthen People-to-People Channels
Youth exchanges, academic collaborations, technology partnerships.
These ties act as ballast during political shifts.
E. Develop Capabilities in Emerging Domains
AI governance
Space governance
Critical mineral security
Cyber norms
Supply-chain risk management
Implications for the Emerging World Order
A. U.S.–China rivalry will persist
It will not return to pre-2016 engagement.
Atmospherics remain turbulent.
B. The Alternative to Managed Rivalry is Worse
Cascading global risks:
Climate shocks
Pandemics
Fragile supply chains
AI weaponisation
Political polarisation
C. Future Order = Cooperative Stewardship
Practical cooperation > ideological competition.
Key sectors:
Energy
Health
Finance
AI and space governance
Climate adaptation
D. Strategic Middle Powers Matter More
India, ASEAN, South Korea, Gulf states, EU, African states — shape global “weather”.
Their choices will influence whether rivalry escalates or remains managed.
SC Panel Suggests Creation of a Goa Tiger Reserve
Why is it in News?
A Supreme Court–appointed Central Empowered Committee (CEC) has recommended the creation of a Goa Tiger Reserve in phases.
The report arises from the Goa government’s challenge to a Bombay High Court (July 2023) directive ordering the notification of five protected areas as a tiger reserve within 3 months.
The SC will now consider the CEC report in the next hearing.
The case involves conflicting claims by the Goa government on:
Human population inside sanctuaries
Whether Goa has “resident” tigers or only “transient” individuals
The CEC recommends linking Goa’s sanctuaries with Karnataka’s Kali Tiger Reserve, forming a 1,814 sq. km integrated landscape.
Relevance
GS-III: Environment & Ecology
Tiger conservation
Wildlife Protection Act
NTCA powers
Human–wildlife conflict
Western Ghats ecology
GS-I: Geography
Western Ghats biodiversity
Protected area management
What is a Tiger Reserve?
Legal basis: Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (Sec. 38V).
Components:
Core area: Inviolate, highest protection, minimal human pressure.
Buffer area: Lower protection, regulated human use.
Declared on recommendation of NTCA (National Tiger Conservation Authority).
Objective:
Secure tiger populations
Protect prey base & habitat
Maintain contiguous corridors across states
Background of the Case
High Court Order (2023)
Directed Goa to notify five protected areas as a tiger reserve:
Mhadei WLS
Bhagwan Mahavir WLS
Bhagwan Mahavir NP
Netravali WLS
Cotigao WLS
Goa Government’s Objections
Initially claimed 1 lakh people would be affected; later admitted only:
1,274 households
33 villages
5,000–6,000 individuals
Claimed Goa has no resident tiger population, only “transient” individuals.
Earlier affidavits contradicted this — reported by The Hindu.
CEC’s Intervention
Asked by SC to examine scientific, ecological and socio-economic implications.
Recommended a phased, minimal-displacement approach.
CEC Recommendations — Phased Tiger Reserve for Goa
A. Phase 1: Core + Buffer from Low-Human Habitation Areas
Core Zone (296.7 sq. km)
Netravali Wildlife Sanctuary
50 households
Cotigao Wildlife Sanctuary
41 households
Reason:
Directly contiguous with Karnataka’s Kali Tiger Reserve core
Lowest human presence
Critical landscape for tiger movement
Buffer Zone (171 sq. km)
Areas contiguous with Kali TR’s buffer:
Northern part of Bhagwan Mahavir WLS (9 households)
Bhagwan Mahavir NP (2 households)
Total Phase-1 Area
468.60 sq. km
Connectivity Advantage
Fully contiguous with Kali Tiger Reserve (1,345 sq. km)
Combined protected landscape: ~1,814 sq. km
B. Phase 2: Consider Mhadei Wildlife Sanctuary Later
Mhadei WLS:
208 sq. km
612 households
Only a limited boundary touches Kali TR buffer
To be included after extensive consultations due to:
Higher human habitation
Complex socio-economic implications
Why Phased Implementation?
Minimise displacement and livelihood disruption.
Address socio-political resistance in Goa.
Secure ecologically critical areas first.
Ensure tiger corridor continuity with Karnataka.
Build local trust before expanding the reserve.
Ecological Significance
A. The Goa–Karnataka Western Ghats Tiger Landscape
One of India’s most biodiverse tiger corridors.
Adjacent Kali Tiger Reserve has:
Stable resident tigers
Breeding females
Rich prey base
B. Why Tigers in Goa Matter
Presence of tigers proven by:
Camera traps
Scat analysis
Occasional sightings
Ensures genetic flow from Karnataka to Goa forests.
Protecting Goa’s forests helps:
Freshwater security
Climate regulation
Biodiversity stability
Governance and Legal Context
Key Institutions
Supreme Court
NTCA
State Forest Department
CEC (Supreme Court panel)
Legal Precedents
SC has repeatedly ruled that:
Core tiger habitats must remain inviolate
States must prioritise biodiversity over unverified human-impact claims
Federal Dynamics
Inter-state conservation challenges (Goa–Karnataka).
Need for collaborative ecological governance across Western Ghats.
Governance Concerns Raised
Goa govt submitted contradictory affidavits on presence of resident tigers.
Inflated displacement numbers weakened credibility.
CEC report implies:
Political reluctance
Administrative inconsistency
Possible resistance due to mining/lobby interests
High Court order forced accountability.
Implications for Goa
Positive
Boost to tiger conservation
Strengthening eco-tourism
Forest protection from mining & encroachment
Improved scientific monitoring
Challenges
Community rehabilitation
Human-wildlife conflict management
Funding requirements
Need for transparent community engagement
Safran LEAP Engine MRO Facility in Hyderabad
Why is it in News?
Prime Minister inaugurated Safran’s largest global MRO facility (Maintenance–Repair–Overhaul) for LEAP aircraft engines in Hyderabad.
It is Safran’s biggest such facility worldwide and a major addition to India’s aviation manufacturing ecosystem.
Marks India’s push from ‘Make in India’ → ‘Design in India’ in aerospace.
Strategic for civil aviation, defence, FDI inflows, and the domestic engine ecosystem.
Relevance
GS3 – Economy & Infrastructure
Aviation growth, foreign investment, PLI, MSMEs.
GS3 – Science & Technology
LEAP engine tech, 3D printing in aerospace, CMC materials.
GS2 – International Relations
India–France strategic partnership in defence & high tech.
What is an MRO Facility?
MRO = Maintenance, Repair, Overhaul of aircraft engines and components.
Essential for:
Flight safety and regulatory compliance.
Reducing turnaround time for grounded aircraft.
Lowering operating costs for airlines.
India currently sends majority of engines to Singapore, UAE, France, causing higher costs.
The LEAP Engine
What is the LEAP engine?
LEAP = Leading Edge Aviation Propulsion.
Manufactured by CFM International (joint venture of Safran, France + GE Aerospace, US).
Powers modern narrow-body aircraft (single-aisle) like:
Airbus A320neo family
Boeing 737 MAX
COMAC C919
Key Technical Features
Fuel efficiency: ~15% better than previous generation (CFM56).
Materials:
Ceramic Matrix Composites (CMCs)
3D-printed fuel nozzles
Carbon-fibre fan blades
Lower emissions:
CO₂ ↓ by 15%
NOx emissions ↓ 50% compared to regulatory limits
Noise reduction: 15–20% lower
Why LEAP matters for India?
India is among the fastest-growing aviation markets globally.
70% of India’s narrow-body fleet uses LEAP engines.
Massive domestic demand ensures stable MRO business and future engine localisation.
Why India wants engine design capability ?
Only a few countries have full aero-engine manufacturing capability (US, UK, France, Russia, China).
Engines are the highest-value component of an aircraft (25–30% of aircraft cost).
Defence dependency:
Indigenous fighter jets need indigenous engines (e.g., AMCA, Tejas Mk2).
GE–HAL F414 manufacturing is a step, but complete design capability remains absent.
Policy Framework Supporting Aerospace Manufacturing
FDI liberalisation
100% FDI permitted under automatic route in most sectors.
74% FDI automatic in defence manufacturing.
PLI schemes
Encouraging domestic component manufacturing in:
Electronics
Drones
Semiconductors
Aerospace components
Space and Aviation Reforms
Private participation allowed in:
Space launch services
Satellite services
Boosts high-tech ecosystem → spillover to aviation engines.
Why This Facility is Strategically Important for India ?
Economic Gains
Saves India’s airlines hundreds of millions annually in overseas MRO expenses.
Captures Asia’s growing MRO market (projected at $40+ billion by 2030).
Geopolitical & Strategic Gains
Deepening ties with France (Rafale, submarines, engines).
Reduces reliance on Singapore/Middle East.
Strengthens India as an aviation hub in South Asia.
Technology Transfer Potential
Safran’s presence could:
Enable joint R&D labs.
Improve supply chain localisation.
Create opportunities for Indian MSMEs in engine components.
Challenges & Caveats
India still lacks:
Core turbine design capabilities.
High-temperature material manufacturing (e.g., single-crystal blades).
MRO requires large certified workforce → skill gap.
Regulatory harmonisation needed with FAA/EASA.
Aravalli Hills Despite Forest Survey Warning
Why is it in News?
Supreme Court (20 Nov 2024) accepted a Union Environment Ministry panel’s recommendation to define Aravalli Hills as only those landforms with 100 m or more elevation + local relief.
This new definition excludes over 90% of Aravalli landforms, allowing potential mining and construction.
A Forest Survey of India (FSI) internal analysis had warned the government that such a definition would be ecologically disastrous — this “red flag” was ignored.
New data show only 1,048 of 12,081 Aravalli hills in Rajasthan (8.7%) are ≥100 m, meaning 91.3% lose protection.
Relevance
GS1 – Geography
Geomorphology of ancient fold mountains.
Desertification & land degradation.
GS2 – Governance
Environmental decision-making.
Regulatory bodies (MoEFCC, SC committees).
GS3 – Environment & Conservation
Air pollution (PM2.5, PM10).
Wildlife corridors.
Forest governance & definitions (critical).
Mining regulation and ecological risk.
Aravali Range
One of the oldest fold mountains (Precambrian).
Length: ~700 km (Gujarat–Rajasthan–Haryana–Delhi).
Natural barrier to dust storms from Thar Desert into NCR.
Key wildlife corridors (Sariska–Ranthambore, Kumbhalgarh, etc.)
Major groundwater recharge zone for semi-arid regions of Haryana & Rajasthan.
The “100m cut-off”
Hills counted as Aravalli only if:
Height ≥100 metres, AND
Local relief ≥100 metres, AND
Considered with slopes + adjacent land
Implication: Anything <100 m elevation = not Aravalli, even if geomorphologically part of the range.
FSI’s red flag
FSI analysis (reviewed by Indian Express):
Only 1,048 of 12,081 hills in 15 Rajasthan districts exceed 100 m.
Thus >90% Aravalli hills lose protection under the new definition.
FSI emphasized importance of lower hills:
Block coarse dust and slow down easterly dust flow into NCR.
Act as buffers against desertification.
Maintain ecological connectivity.
The ministry ignored these warnings in submissions to SC.
Why this matters for NCR Pollution ?
Upper Aravallis obstruct fine pollutants (PM2.5).
Lower Aravallis obstruct heavier dust particles.
Together they create a barrier protecting Delhi from dust inflow.
Removing protection accelerates:
Dust-laden winds into NCR
Temperature rise and heat-island effects
Loss of wildlife corridors
Groundwater depletion
What was the earlier yardstick(FSI – 2010 onwards)
FSI used a 3-degree slope method to identify Aravallis.
A 2024 technical committee revised this:
Slope ≥4.57°
Height ≥30 m
This older method covered ~40% of Aravallis, far more than the new definition.
Govt’s Submission
The ministry submitted:
Only hills ≥100 m count as Aravalli.
Confused height with slope, creating a subjective & improper definition.
Ignored FSI’s scientific warnings.
SC nevertheless accepted the panel’s recommendations.
Environmental Impacts
Mining intensification (legal + illegal).
Real estate expansion, especially in Gurgaon–Faridabad–Aravali belt.
Accelerated desertification of NCR and Haryana.
Decline in groundwater aquifers (Aravallis as recharge zones).
Collapse of wildlife corridors (leopards, hyenas, ungulates).
Increased PM10/PM2.5 loads in NCR.