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Jul 4, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Monday 6 July Prakhar CA Tuesday 7 July Gaurav CA  Wednesday 8 July Harshit CA  Thursday 9 July Tauha CA  Friday 10 July Lakshmikant CA Saturday 11 July Sushma CA

Jul 4, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 Oldest Accurately Dated Banyan Tree — Munger, Bihar Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow · Department of Science and Technology GS 1GS 3 02 NCW Women Helpline — 14490 National Commission for Women (NCW) GS 1GS 2 03 India's High-Speed Rail Future: Building a Standardised Path for Expansion National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL) · Ministry of Railways GS 3GS 2 Article 01 Article 01 Oldest Accurately Dated Banyan Tree — Munger, Bihar Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow · Department of Science and Technology (DST) Relevance: GS 1 (Indian heritage — living heritage trees) · GS 3 (Science & Technology, biodiversity conservation). GS 1GS 3 Issue in Brief A banyan tree (Ficus benghalensis) in Munger, Bihar, has been scientifically confirmed as the oldest accurately dated banyan tree in the world, at nearly 700 years old, using radiocarbon dating. The study was led by Dr. Trina Bose of the Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow — an autonomous institute under the Department of Science and Technology (DST) — with Dr. Mayank Shekhar and Dr. Akhilesh K. Yadava. Static Background Radiocarbon dating measures the decay of Carbon-14, a radioactive isotope, to estimate when organic material stopped exchanging carbon with the atmosphere — widely used in archaeology and palaeoclimatology. Dendrochronology (tree-ring dating) is the conventional method for ageing trees, but most tropical broadleaf species lack distinct annual growth rings, making it unreliable for trees like banyans. Banyan trees spread via aerial prop roots that thicken into secondary trunks, so a single tree can appear as a cluster — complicating age estimation without genetic/anatomical sampling. Historically, heritage tree ages in South Asia relied on folklore and local oral history, which lack scientific rigour and often produce inflated or inaccurate estimates. BSIP, Lucknow is India's premier institute for palaeobotany and palaeoclimate research, functioning under the DST. Key Dimensions Methodology: Researchers extracted alpha-cellulose (the most chemically stable component of plant cell walls) from wood near the pith — the earliest-formed wood — of a secondary trunk and an ancient primary branch. Technique used: Samples were dated via Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS), a high-precision radiocarbon technique, then calibrated using the IntCal20 curve and OxCal software for accuracy. Findings: Published in the journal Quaternary Research, dating placed the branch's wood formation at roughly 652 ± 37 years Before Present (~1342 CE), establishing a robust minimum age near 700 years. Historical correction: The tree was long believed to have been planted alongside the nearby 'Burra Bungalow' (a late Mughal–early British era structure, ~300–350 years old). The new dating proves the tree predates the building by centuries and is a surviving remnant of a natural forest. The methodology is replicable, offering a scientific protocol applicable to other heritage tropical trees across South Asia and beyond. Critical Analysis — Strengths Replaces subjective, folklore-based age estimates with verifiable scientific evidence, aiding accurate heritage documentation. The technique fills a methodological gap — since dendrochronology fails on tropical broadleaf trees, this offers the first reliable alternative. Supports biodiversity conservation, heritage protection, and historical-climate research by giving policymakers accurate ecological timelines. Critical Analysis — Limitations/Gaps The 700-year estimate is a minimum age, since older core wood may have decayed or not been sampled — actual age of the "genetic individual" could be higher. Scaling this method nationally requires funding, trained personnel, and AMS lab access, which remain concentrated in a few institutes like BSIP. Verification Required: Whether a national inventory/protocol for dating other heritage trees has been formally proposed by the government. Way Forward Develop a national heritage tree registry using radiocarbon-based protocols, prioritising trees linked to historical or cultural sites. Expand AMS lab capacity and interdisciplinary training (botany, chemistry, archaeology) to scale this methodology across states. Integrate heritage tree data into State Forest Department conservation plans and eco-tourism/heritage education initiatives. Prelims Pointers Oldest scientifically dated banyan: Munger, Bihar; ~700 years; species — Ficus benghalensis. Institute: Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow — under DST. Technique: Radiocarbon dating via Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS); calibrated using IntCal20 and OxCal. Key material sampled: Alpha-cellulose from pith of secondary trunk and primary branch. Published in: Quaternary Research journal. Why not dendrochronology: Tropical broadleaf trees lack distinct annual growth rings. Practice Mains Question "Scientific dating methods are increasingly vital for accurate documentation of India's natural and cultural heritage." Discuss with reference to recent advances in radiocarbon dating of heritage trees. GS Paper 3 · 150 words · 10 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding radiocarbon dating of the Munger Banyan tree: (1) It confirms the tree is older than the nearby historical "Burra Bungalow." (2) The dating relied on analysis of alpha-cellulose extracted from the tree's pith. (3) Dendrochronology (tree-ring counting) was the primary method used. Which of the statements given above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow, functions under which of the following? A) Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate ChangeB) Department of Science and TechnologyC) Indian Council of Agricultural ResearchD) Ministry of Culture Article 02 Article 02 NCW Women Helpline — 14490 National Commission for Women (NCW) Relevance: GS 1 (society — women's issues, vulnerable sections) · GS 2 (governance, welfare mechanisms, statutory bodies). GS 1GS 2 Issue in Brief The National Commission for Women (NCW) has expanded its 24×7 Women Helpline under the short toll-free code 14490, integrated with its existing helpline 7827170170. The helpline offers digital complaint registration, professional psychological counselling, and referral support for women facing violence, harassment, or distress. Static Background NCW is India's apex statutory body for women's rights, established under the National Commission for Women Act, 1990, and constituted in 1992. Its mandate covers safeguarding constitutional and legal rights of women, recommending policy, and addressing issues like dowry, workplace exploitation, and unequal employment. NCW's helpline was relaunched as the short-code 14490 in November 2025, replacing the harder-to-recall 10-digit number as the primary public-facing contact point. Eligibility: women and girls above 18 years can access the helpline; it currently operates in Hindi and English. The initiative is framed within Digital India's objective of technology-enabled, citizen-centric grievance redressal. Key Dimensions Services offered: complaint registration, psychological counselling by trained mental-health professionals, referral support, and information on government welfare schemes. Complaint processing: each complaint undergoes a jurisdictional review; valid complaints get a unique case number, while out-of-mandate complaints are closed with the complainant informed. Redressal actions include monitoring police investigation, ensuring statutory compliance by authorities, and facilitating mediation/counselling; serious crimes trigger an Inquiry Committee. Data-driven policy input: NCW analyses complaint trends to identify institutional gaps, feeding into corrective policy recommendations and sensitisation training for police, judiciary, and forensic personnel. Complaints commonly relate to domestic violence, dowry harassment, cyber abuse, and labour exploitation. Critical Analysis — Strengths A short, memorable code (14490) lowers the barrier to reporting, especially important during time-sensitive emergencies. Embedding trained counsellors directly into the helpline addresses the mental-health dimension of gender-based violence, not just legal redressal. The complaint-analysis feedback loop into police/judicial training strengthens systemic, not just individual, responses. Critical Analysis — Limitations/Gaps NCW's powers are largely recommendatory; it cannot independently prosecute or enforce compliance by state authorities. Helpline effectiveness depends on awareness and digital/phone access, which may be uneven in rural and remote areas. Current language support (Hindi and English only) may limit accessibility for women more comfortable in regional languages. Verification Required: Current annual complaint volume and helpline call statistics were not specified in official releases used here. Way Forward Expand helpline multilingual support to include major regional languages for wider accessibility. Strengthen coordination mechanisms between NCW, State Women's Commissions, and police to ensure faster ground-level action on registered complaints. Enhance outreach in rural and underserved areas through community organisations and educational institutions, as NCW has itself urged. Prelims Pointers NCW: established 1992 under the National Commission for Women Act, 1990. Helpline: 14490 (short code), linked to existing number 7827170170; 24×7; for women/girls above 18 years. Services: complaint registration, counselling, referral, scheme information. Serious cases: handled via an NCW Inquiry Committee. Alignment: part of the Digital India initiative for accessible grievance redressal. Practice Mains Question Statutory bodies like the National Commission for Women play a crucial but constrained role in addressing gender-based violence in India. Examine. GS Paper 2 · 150 words · 10 marks Practice MCQs Q1. With reference to the National Commission for Women (NCW), consider the following statements: (1) It was constituted under the National Commission for Women Act, 1990. (2) It has independent prosecutorial powers over cases of violence against women. (3) Its 14490 helpline is linked to an existing 10-digit helpline number. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? A) 1 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The NCW Women Helpline (14490) provides which of the following services? A) Only legal aid to accused personsB) Complaint registration, psychological counselling, and referral supportC) Direct disbursal of compensation to victimsD) Issuance of protection orders under criminal law Article 03 Article 03 India's High-Speed Rail Future: Building a Standardised Path for Expansion National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL) · Ministry of Railways Relevance: GS 3 (infrastructure, transport) · GS 2 (governance — public infrastructure planning). GS 3GS 2 Issue in Brief India is nearing completion of its first bullet train corridor — the Mumbai–Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail (MAHSR) — with the first section (Surat–Vapi) expected to open by August 2027. Lessons from MAHSR are shaping a standardised template for seven additional high-speed rail corridors announced under the Union Budget 2026–27. Static Background High-Speed Rail (HSR) generally refers to dedicated passenger rail systems operating above 250 km/h, requiring segregated tracks, advanced signalling, and specialised rolling stock. India's HSR journey began with the MAHSR project, for which the foundation stone was laid in 2017, using Japanese Shinkansen technology under bilateral cooperation. Existing semi-high-speed trains like Vande Bharat run at a design speed of 180 km/h, considerably lower than MAHSR's 350 km/h design speed. The project is implemented by the National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL), a Government of India company under the Ministry of Railways. The Union Budget 2026–27 marked a major policy shift by approving a ₹16 lakh crore blueprint for seven new HSR corridors beyond MAHSR. Key Dimensions MAHSR specifications: ~508 km corridor connecting Mumbai and Ahmedabad; 12 stations; design speed 350 km/h, operational speed 320 km/h; travel time reduced to about 1 hour 58 minutes. Technology used: J-Slab ballastless track (first in India), 2×25 kV overhead electrification with over 20,000 OHE masts, and dedicated Track Construction Bases for logistics. Standardisation approach: while foundations will be customised to local soil conditions, piers, viaducts, tracks, stations, electrification, and signalling will follow common engineering standards across future corridors. Seven new corridors (Budget 2026–27): Mumbai–Pune, Pune–Hyderabad, Hyderabad–Bengaluru, Hyderabad–Chennai, Chennai–Bengaluru, Delhi–Varanasi, and Varanasi–Siliguri, spanning nearly 4,000 km with an estimated investment of ₹16 lakh crore. Rationale for standardisation: unified designs simplify spare-part management, staff training, and procurement, aiming to cut costs and speed up execution for future corridors. Critical Analysis — Strengths Moving from a one-off project to a replicable template can significantly reduce costs and construction time for future corridors by avoiding repeated design cycles. MAHSR has already built domestic capacity in areas like Full Span Launching Method (FSLM) viaduct construction, reducing future reliance on foreign expertise. A phased, staggered rollout (Surat–Vapi first) allows early operational learning to be fed into later project phases. Critical Analysis — Limitations/Gaps MAHSR itself has faced cost escalation (from an initial ~₹1.08 lakh crore to a reported ~₹1.98 lakh crore) and multi-year delays, mainly due to land acquisition challenges. Standardisation assumes similar terrain and demand patterns across regions; hilly, coastal, or seismic zones may require significant deviations, diluting cost benefits. The ₹16 lakh crore investment for seven corridors is a large fiscal commitment; funding models and cost-sharing with states need further clarity. Verification Required: Detailed Project Reports (DPRs) and construction timelines for most of the seven new corridors are still at early/preparatory stages. Way Forward Institutionalise lessons-learned documentation from MAHSR (land acquisition, clearances, technology adaptation) into a formal knowledge-transfer framework for new corridors. Prioritise completion of DPRs and land acquisition early for the seven new corridors to avoid MAHSR-style delays. Explore blended financing models (multilateral loans, PPPs) to manage the ₹16 lakh crore investment without excessive fiscal strain. Prelims Pointers MAHSR: India's first bullet train corridor; Mumbai–Ahmedabad; ~508 km; 12 stations; design speed 350 km/h. Technology: Japanese Shinkansen; J-Slab ballastless track (first in India); implementing agency — NHSRCL under Ministry of Railways. First operational section: Surat–Vapi, expected August 2027. Seven new corridors (Budget 2026–27): Mumbai–Pune, Pune–Hyderabad, Hyderabad–Bengaluru, Hyderabad–Chennai, Chennai–Bengaluru, Delhi–Varanasi, Varanasi–Siliguri (~4,000 km; ~₹16 lakh crore). Vande Bharat design speed: 180 km/h — for comparison with true HSR (250 km/h+). Practice Mains Question India's high-speed rail strategy is shifting from isolated projects to a standardised, replicable model. Discuss the significance of this approach and the challenges in scaling it nationally. GS Paper 3 · 150 words · 10 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the Mumbai–Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail (MAHSR) corridor: (1) It uses Japanese Shinkansen technology. (2) It has a design speed of 350 km/h. (3) J-Slab ballastless track technology is being used for the first time in India on this corridor. Which of the statements given above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The seven new high-speed rail corridors announced under the Union Budget 2026–27 do NOT include which of the following? A) Delhi–VaranasiB) Mumbai–PuneC) Mumbai–AhmedabadD) Chennai–Bengaluru

Jul 4, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 The Iran Conundrum and the Decline of the West M.K. Narayanan, Former NSA & IB Director · West Asia, US-Iran relations, power transition GS 2 — International RelationsGS 3 — Energy SecurityEssay 02 Building Water Security in a Rapidly Drying India Nitin Bassi, Fellow, CEEW · Water stress, irrigation, urban infrastructure GS 3 — Water SecurityGS 2 — Governance & FederalismEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 The Iran Conundrum and the Decline of the West M.K. Narayanan — Former Director, Intelligence Bureau; former National Security Adviser; former Governor of West Bengal · The Hindu Relevance: GS 2 (India’s neighbourhood and West Asia, international groupings and agreements, IAEA/UNSC mechanisms), GS 3 (energy security via the Strait of Hormuz) and Essay (decline of unipolarity, shifting global power balances) — built around the 2026 U.S.-Iran settlement. GS 2 — International RelationsGS 3 — Energy SecurityEssay — Power Transition 1 — Issue in Brief The U.S.-Iran conflict, which followed U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran (28 February 2026), has ended in a negotiated settlement that the author reads not as a diplomatic breakthrough but as a marker of American strategic retrenchment. A 14-point Memorandum of Understanding was signed at the Palace of Versailles on 17 June 2026, followed by formal talks in Switzerland, leading to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and an easing of the U.S. blockade on Iran. The author frames this as a case of a superpower conceding ground to a much weaker state — comparing world reaction to "Goliath being worsted by David" — with implications for how other nations read U.S. resolve going forward. Knock-on effects flagged: a rupture in U.S.-Israel relations, potential Gulf recalibration away from reliance on U.S. security guarantees, and consolidation of hardline/IRGC influence inside Iran. 2 — Static Background The JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) was signed on 14 July 2015 between Iran and the P5+1 (US, UK, France, Russia, China) plus Germany, requiring Iran to curb uranium enrichment and accept IAEA inspections in exchange for sanctions relief; endorsed by UNSC Resolution 2231 (2015). The U.S. withdrew unilaterally from the JCPOA in May 2018 under the first Trump term; Iran progressively breached enrichment limits thereafter, and the UN Security Council reimposed pre-2015 sanctions in September 2025 via the "snapback" mechanism triggered by France, Germany and the UK — the backdrop to the 2026 settlement. The Abraham Accords (2020) normalised diplomatic relations between Israel and the UAE and Bahrain (September 2020), later joined by Morocco and Sudan — reflecting a Gulf tilt toward Israel driven by shared concerns over Iran; this is the architecture underlying the article’s claim of a U.S.-Israel-Gulf realignment. The IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) is the UN’s nuclear verification body; its inspection access is the technical benchmark for judging whether any Iran settlement meaningfully restrains its nuclear programme. The Strait of Hormuz is the narrow chokepoint between Iran (north) and Oman (south) linking the Persian Gulf to open sea lanes; a significant share of global oil and LNG trade transits it, making control over its security and any transit-fee arrangement geopolitically significant. The IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) is a parallel, ideologically-driven military-economic force in Iran, historically more hardline than the clerical establishment — relevant to the author’s claim (carried as his own assessment, not independently verifiable) of a succession trend favouring IRGC influence. 3 — Key Dimensions Power-transition signalling: a settlement widely seen as unequal is symbolically significant beyond the bilateral dispute — read globally as evidence of eroding U.S. "staying power," a phrase the author attributes to the late Ayatollah Khamenei. U.S.-Israel fracture: Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s bid to draw the U.S. into decisively weakening Iran did not translate into full U.S. backing, which the author frames as a lasting rupture with consequences for West Asian alignments. Domestic Iranian consolidation: hardliners and the IRGC may gain domestically from a narrative of having "defeated" the U.S., with possible spillover into Shia-Sunni tensions regionally and in countries with large Shia populations, including India (author’s claim). Gulf recalibration: possible reduced reliance on U.S. security guarantees and rising calls to scale back U.S. troop presence in West Asia. Terrorism/non-state actor risk: the author flags a possible re-emergence of groups such as al-Qaeda amid regional uncertainty — a speculative but exam-relevant angle on power vacuums. Russia-China non-gain: despite rhetorical support for Iran, neither power is assessed by the author to have secured tangible strategic gains from the episode. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — The optics are genuinely asymmetric: a superpower negotiating sanctions relief and Strait access with a state it recently struck militarily fits a broader post-Cold-War pattern in which military superiority has not reliably translated into decisive political outcomes. In favour — Global media framing corroborates the reading: the author cites a widely-noted headline comparing the Versailles signing to the 1919 Treaty of Versailles — a genuine external data point, not merely his own opinion. In favour — Structural drivers pre-date this episode: the piece situates the settlement within a longer arc of China’s rise and the growing prominence of middle powers, framing this as an accelerant rather than the sole cause of Western relative decline. Against — The inference is heavily interpretive: a negotiated de-escalation (reopened Hormuz, an IAEA-inspection pathway, an oil-sanctions waiver) can equally be read as pragmatic conflict termination rather than "surrender," especially since no U.S. funds flow directly to Iran and the pledge against nuclear weapons formally remains in place. Against — Nuclear-restraint claims are contested: the article itself notes Iran told its state media it made "no new commitments" on inspections — undercutting the U.S. claim of a nuclear-monitoring breakthrough and warranting caution before treating either side’s framing as settled fact. Against — One settlement is a thin base for a civilisational claim: attributing a durable "decline of the West" to a single regional settlement risks overstating one data point; U.S. military, financial and technological primacy remain intact in the near term. Against — The succession narrative is speculative: the framing of Mojtaba Khamenei as a "living martyr" successor and of IRGC ascendancy over the clerical establishment is the author’s own interpretation and is not independently verifiable from open sources. 5 — Way Forward For India: monitor Shia-Sunni tension risk domestically and diversify West Asia engagement, given continued dependence on energy supplies transiting the Strait of Hormuz. For the global order: track whether Gulf states visibly diversify their security partnerships (e.g., toward China or regional arrangements) — a genuine indicator of U.S. relative retrenchment, as opposed to rhetorical claims alone. For non-proliferation architecture: the durability of any renewed IAEA inspection access will be the real test of whether the 2026 settlement restrains Iran’s nuclear programme or merely defers the underlying question, given Iran’s own denial of new commitments. For India’s strategic community: avoid over-reading a single settlement as a wholesale power-transition event; continue independent assessment of U.S., Chinese and middle-power capabilities rather than following any one narrative uncritically. 6 — Data & Key Facts 28 Feb 2026Date of U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran that triggered the conflict 17 Jun 202614-point Memorandum of Understanding signed at Versailles 60 daysU.S. waiver period authorising sale/transport of Iranian crude oil $300 BnVague reconstruction/economic development commitment cited in the deal (author-reported) 2015Year JCPOA was signed between Iran and the P5+1 plus Germany 2020Year of the Abraham Accords (Israel-UAE-Bahrain normalisation) JCPOA (2015): Iran-P5+1+Germany deal curbing uranium enrichment in exchange for sanctions relief; U.S. withdrew in 2018; UN sanctions reimposed via snapback in September 2025. Abraham Accords (2020): Israel normalised relations with UAE and Bahrain (later Morocco, Sudan), reflecting shared concern over Iran — the architecture underlying present Gulf-Israel-U.S. dynamics. 7 — Prelims Pointers JCPOA — signed 14 July 2015; Iran + P5+1 (US, UK, France, Russia, China) + Germany; endorsed by UNSC Resolution 2231 (2015) Abraham Accords — 2020; Israel normalised ties with UAE and Bahrain, later Morocco and Sudan IAEA — International Atomic Energy Agency; UN’s nuclear verification and safeguards body, headquartered in Vienna Strait of Hormuz — chokepoint between Iran (north) and Oman (south); links Persian Gulf to the open sea; key global oil-transit route IRGC — Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps; parallel ideological military-economic force within Iran UNSC Resolution 2231 — 2015 resolution endorsing the JCPOA and setting its sanctions-relief schedule Exam note: Do not confuse the JCPOA (2015, nuclear-focused) with the Abraham Accords (2020, Israel-Arab normalisation) — they involve different parties and different subject matter, though both shape current West Asian alignments. Also note the Strait of Hormuz lies between Iran and Oman, not Iran and Saudi Arabia. 8 — Practice Mains Question "The recent U.S.-Iran settlement has been read less as a diplomatic breakthrough and more as a marker of American strategic retrenchment." Critically examine, with reference to shifting West Asian alignments.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · International Relations Intro: Briefly outline the 2026 U.S.-Iran settlement following the February strikes and the Versailles MoU, and the competing "retrenchment vs pragmatic de-escalation" readings of it. Body 1 — The retrenchment case: optics of a superpower negotiating with a recently-struck weaker state; global media framing (Versailles comparisons); the U.S.-Israel rupture and possible Gulf recalibration. Body 2 — The counter-case: the settlement preserves a formal no-nuclear-weapons pledge and an IAEA-inspection pathway (though contested by Iran); no direct U.S. funds to Iran; a single settlement is a thin base for a civilisational claim of Western decline. Conclusion: A balanced view treats this as one data point in a longer, multi-causal power-transition process (China’s rise, middle powers) rather than a definitive verdict on U.S. decline; India should watch Gulf security realignment and Hormuz-linked energy risk closely. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements: 1. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) was signed in 2015 between Iran and the P5+1 countries along with Germany. 2. The Abraham Accords led to the normalisation of diplomatic relations between Israel and countries including the UAE and Bahrain. 3. The Strait of Hormuz lies between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 Building Water Security in a Rapidly Drying India Nitin Bassi — Fellow, Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) · The Hindu (Letters to the Editor) Relevance: GS 3 (water security, irrigation efficiency, urban infrastructure, climate adaptation), GS 2 (federalism in water governance, urban local body capacity) and Essay (resource scarcity and sustainable development) — using India’s worsening water stress as an entry point into infrastructure, reuse, irrigation and data reform. GS 3 — Water SecurityGS 2 — Governance & FederalismEssay — Sustainable Development 1 — Issue in Brief Indian cities from Bengaluru to Mussoorie are under severe water stress; June 2026 saw a monsoon rainfall deficit of over 40%, and Delhi’s water supply has fallen to about 70% of its 1,250 million-gallons-per-day demand. CEEW research finds 11 of 15 major river basins in India are water-stressed (below 1,700 m³/person/year), with the Krishna, Cauvery, Mahi and Tapi basins below the 1,000 m³ scarcity threshold. A global UNU-INWEH report warns of "water bankruptcy" — closed and polluted river basins, depleted aquifers, and nearly four billion people facing severe water scarcity for at least one month a year worldwide. The author proposes four interrelated actions for India: climate-proofing water infrastructure, enabling urban water reuse, scaling micro-irrigation, and closing river-basin-level water data gaps. 2 — Static Background The Falkenmark Water Stress Indicator, the global benchmark underlying the thresholds cited in the article, classifies water stress below 1,700 m³/capita/year, water scarcity below 1,000 m³, and absolute scarcity below 500 m³ — developed by Swedish hydrologist Malin Falkenmark. The Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) was launched on 15 August 2019 by the Ministry of Jal Shakti, aiming to provide Functional Household Tap Connections (FHTC) to every rural household (target later extended to 2028); it subsumed the earlier National Rural Drinking Water Mission. The Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY) was launched on 1 July 2015, amalgamating the Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme, Har Khet Ko Pani, Watershed Development and Per Drop More Crop, to expand assured irrigation and improve water-use efficiency. India holds roughly 4% of the world’s freshwater resources while supporting about 18% of the world’s population — the structural basis of the country’s chronic water uncertainty referenced in the article. CEEW (Council on Energy, Environment and Water) is an Indian policy research institution whose river-basin and urban flood-risk analyses form the evidentiary base of the article (author-sourced; carried as reported per standard editorial convention). 3 — Key Dimensions Infrastructure paradox: despite JJM and PMKSY expanding physical access to water, poor upkeep, conveyance losses, inadequate wastewater treatment and low cost recovery persist as systemic weaknesses. Climate risk-blindness in planning: granular, location-specific climate-risk assessments (e.g., coastal/low-lying zones like Thane and Navsari, or critical-infrastructure zones like Ahmedabad) are needed to prioritise investment, but most cash-strapped urban local bodies and panchayats currently lack this capacity. Linear-to-circular shift: treated wastewater reuse for non-potable uses (car washing, landscaping, cooling data centres) is underexploited; the author cites CEEW estimates of a ₹3 lakh crore economic opportunity and 1,00,000 jobs by 2047 from scaling this. Irrigation efficiency gap: micro-irrigation covers only about 20% of India’s ~72 million hectares of potential irrigable area; current subsidy design (based on a 1-hectare unit) under-serves small and marginal farmers who typically hold smaller plots. The data deficit: India measures water availability reasonably well but has limited data on withdrawals, losses and consumption at the river-basin scale, enabling "free-riding" by users and complicating fair inter-sectoral allocation. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Low-regret, demand-side strategies: circular water reuse and micro-irrigation reduce pressure on freshwater sources without requiring new supply infrastructure, and are internationally validated approaches. In favour — Proven technology base: smart bulk-water metering is already being piloted in Delhi and Bhubaneswar, and India’s rollout of over 4.93 crore smart electricity meters offers a scalable, tested model for the water sector. In favour — Targets a genuine governance gap: the absence of basin-level withdrawal and consumption data is a well-documented weakness in Indian water governance, and closing it would materially improve allocation decisions. Against — Execution capacity constraints: the author himself flags that cash-strapped urban local bodies and panchayats may struggle to implement even well-designed schemes such as the Urban Challenge Fund-backed risk assessments. Against — Subsidy redesign has fiscal and verification costs: shifting micro-irrigation subsidy units to 0.4 hectares to include small farmers raises administrative and targeting-verification challenges not addressed in the piece. Against — Some figures rest on a single projection: the ₹3 lakh crore/1,00,000-jobs wastewater-reuse estimate is a CEEW projection and should be read as illustrative rather than a certainty. Against — Federalism constraint understated: water is a State subject under the Constitution; centrally-designed data and reuse frameworks require willing State cooperation, a point the article does not fully engage with. 5 — Way Forward Mandate granular climate-risk assessments for urban water infrastructure, prioritised and financed through mechanisms like the Urban Challenge Fund (as seen in Visakhapatnam’s ₹1,501 crore allocation, per the article). Scale treated-wastewater reuse for non-potable urban uses through city-level planning, following the Thane Municipal Corporation model. Redesign micro-irrigation subsidies around smallholder-realistic land units, paired with support for shifting to higher-value, lower-water crops and strengthened crop insurance under the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana. Build basin-level water accounting using AI-based monitoring and smart metering, modelled on India’s electricity-metering rollout, to close the withdrawal-and-consumption data gap. 6 — Data & Key Facts >40%June 2026 monsoon rainfall deficit reported across India 70%Delhi’s water supply as a share of its 1,250 MGD demand 11 of 15Major river basins found water-stressed by CEEW (below 1,700 m³/person) 1,700 / 1,000 m³Falkenmark thresholds for water stress / water scarcity per capita/year ~20%Share of India’s ~72 million ha irrigable potential covered by micro-irrigation 4.93 CrSmart electricity meters installed in India — cited as a model for water metering Jal Jeevan Mission (2019): Ministry of Jal Shakti; goal of Functional Household Tap Connections to every rural household, extended target to 2028. PMKSY (2015): irrigation efficiency scheme built around "Har Khet Ko Pani" and "Per Drop More Crop," amalgamating AIBP, watershed development and on-farm water management. 7 — Prelims Pointers Falkenmark Indicator — water stress <1,700 m³/capita/year; scarcity <1,000 m³; absolute scarcity <500 m³ Jal Jeevan Mission — launched 15 Aug 2019; Ministry of Jal Shakti; FHTC to every rural household PMKSY — launched 1 Jul 2015; "Har Khet Ko Pani," "Per Drop More Crop" CEEW — Council on Energy, Environment and Water; Indian policy research institution Urban Challenge Fund — urban infrastructure financing mechanism referenced for water-risk assessment funding Water as a subject — falls under the State List in the Constitution, shaping the federal dimension of water governance reform Exam note: Do not confuse the Jal Jeevan Mission (2019, drinking water, Ministry of Jal Shakti) with the Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (2015, irrigation efficiency) — they address different water uses under different schemes. Also recall that water is a State List subject, which shapes the federalism dimension of any central data or reuse framework. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India’s water crisis is less about physical scarcity and more about governance and data failure." Discuss with reference to river-basin management and urban water security.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Water Security + Governance Intro: Frame India’s uneven water endowment (4% of global resources for 18% of population) alongside the specific 2026 stress indicators (40%+ monsoon deficit, Delhi’s supply gap) as the live context. Body 1 — The governance/data case: limited basin-level data on withdrawals and consumption, poor infrastructure upkeep, low cost recovery, and weak urban local body capacity for risk assessment. Body 2 — Beyond governance, physical stress is real: 11 of 15 basins below the Falkenmark stress threshold, several below the scarcity threshold — a genuine supply-side constraint that governance reform alone cannot fully offset. Conclusion: A two-track response — closing data and governance gaps (basin accounting, smart metering, climate-risk assessments) alongside demand-side measures (reuse, micro-irrigation) — is needed; political will and inter-State cooperation remain the binding constraint. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements: 1. As per the Falkenmark Water Stress Indicator, a water availability below 1,700 cubic metres per capita per year indicates water stress. 2. The Jal Jeevan Mission was launched in 2015 under the Ministry of Rural Development. 3. The Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana focuses on improving irrigation water-use efficiency. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3