Content
DHRUV64 Indigenous Microprocessor
India Faces Its Greatest Strategic Challenge in Bangladesh Since 1971
Retired Judges Reluctant to Serve as Ad Hoc Judges under Article 224A
IDF Diabetes Atlas 2025
Securities Market Code Bill, 2025
Bharat Stage–VI (BS-VI) Emission Norms
India–Oman Trade Deal and India’s West Asia Strategy
DHRUV64 Indigenous Microprocessor
Why is it in News?
15 December 2025: Ministry of Electronics & IT (MeitY) announced the launch of DHRUV64, an indigenous microprocessor.
Developed by C-DAC under the Microprocessor Development Programme.
Projected as a key step in building India’s indigenous processor pipeline and reducing dependence on imported chip designs.
Relevance
GS III – Science & Technology
Indigenous semiconductor and processor development
Digital sovereignty and strategic technologies
Electronics manufacturing ecosystem
RISC-V and open-source hardware architecture
What is DHRUV64?
Type: General-purpose microprocessor
Architecture: 64-bit, dual-core
Clock speed: ~1 GHz
Developer: Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC)
Parent Ministry: MeitY
Instruction Set: RISC-V (open standard)
Role: Acts as the “brain” of electronic systems, capable of running operating systems and embedded applications.
Why Microprocessors Matter Strategically
Microprocessors sit at the base layer of:
Telecom networks
Industrial control systems
Automotive electronics
Defence and space systems
Control over processor design + toolchain + update pathways implies:
Digital sovereignty
Cybersecurity assurance
Supply-chain resilience during sanctions or export controls
India is a major consumer but a minor designer/manufacturer of processors.
What Do DHRUV64’s Specifications Mean?
Capability Assessment
64-bit design:
Enables modern operating systems and contemporary software stacks.
1 GHz, dual-core:
Modest by consumer standards
Adequate for:
Telecom base stations
Routers
Industrial automation
Automotive modules
Not designed for:
High-end smartphones
AI-heavy consumer computing (no GPU/AI accelerators disclosed)
Comparative Perspective
Global top-tier processors:
Multiple cores
Higher clock speeds
Integrated GPUs and AI blocks
DHRUV64 prioritises:
Reliability
Determinism
Hardware–software co-design
Suitable for mission-critical but non-consumer workloads.
India’s Indigenous Processor Ecosystem
DHRUV64 is not standalone, but part of a broader pipeline:
Processor
Institution
Use Case
SHAKTI
IIT Madras
Strategic & commercial systems
AJIT
IIT Bombay
Control systems
VIKRAM
ISRO–SCL
Space applications
THEJAS64 (2025)
C-DAC
Industrial & strategic
DHRUV64
C-DAC
Platform-level processor
DIR-V Programme (Digital India RISC-V)
What is RISC-V?
An open instruction set architecture (ISA).
No licensing fees for the ISA itself.
Modular and extensible design.
Why Governments Prefer RISC-V
Avoids dependence on proprietary ISAs (e.g., ARM, x86).
Enables:
Strategic autonomy
Domestic innovation
Custom security features
DIR-V Objectives
Build a portfolio of RISC-V processors for:
Industry
Defence
Consumer electronics
DHRUV64 is the third DIR-V chip after:
THEJAS32 (fabricated in Malaysia)
THEJAS64 (fabricated at SCL Mohali)
Key Gaps & Unanswered Questions (Critical Analysis)
1. Performance Transparency
No benchmarks disclosed:
IPC, SPEC scores
Cache sizes
Memory controller features
Performance per watt
2. Fabrication Ambiguity
Foundry and process node not disclosed.
Raises concerns about:
Supply-chain sovereignty
Yield and reliability
Long-term availability (critical for telecom/auto sectors)
3. Meaning of “Fully Indigenous”
Ambiguous claim:
Indigenous ISA? (No — RISC-V is open, not Indian-origin)
Indigenous core microarchitecture?
Indigenous SoC integration?
Indigenous fabrication?
Indigenous toolchain?
“Indigenous” may currently apply mainly to design ownership, not the entire value chain.
4. Ecosystem Readiness
No clarity on:
Developer boards
OS support (Linux, RTOS, etc.)
Security certifications
Government anchor procurement
Without an ecosystem, processors fail commercially.
5. Roadmap Uncertainty
Next processors announced:
DHANUSH: 1.2 GHz, quad-core, ~28 nm
DHANUSH+: 2 GHz, quad-core, ~14/16 nm (reported)
No timelines or fabrication commitments disclosed.
Supporting Policy Ecosystem
Key Government Schemes
Chips to Startup Programme
₹250 crore over 5 years
Focus: training, prototyping, startups
Design Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme
Encourages domestic chip design firms
INUP-i2i
Access to nanofabrication facilities
Manufacturing Push
India Semiconductor Mission (ISM):
10 projects approved
6 States
Investment: ₹1.6 lakh crore
Strategic Significance
1. Technological Sovereignty
Reduces reliance on foreign-controlled architectures.
Critical during geopolitical disruptions.
2. Defence & Strategic Autonomy
Indigenous processors essential for:
Secure communications
Weapon systems
Space missions
3. Platform Approach
DHRUV64 positioned as:
A testbed for startups, academia, and industry
Lower-cost prototyping without foreign chips
Success depends on:
Software stacks
Reference designs
OEM adoption
Way Forward
Publish transparent technical documentation.
Ensure:
Anchor procurement by government agencies
Strong software & OS ecosystem
Clear fabrication roadmap within India
Move from one-off chips to SoC families.
Align processor design with:
Telecom standards
Automotive safety norms
Defence certifications
India faces its greatest strategic challenge in Bangladesh since 1971
Why is it in News?
2025: Report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs (Chair: Shashi Tharoor).
Assesses India–Bangladesh relations over the past two turbulent years.
Trigger:
Fall of Sheikh Hasina–led Awami League government (5 August 2024).
Political churn, youth-led movements, Islamist resurgence.
Growing Chinese and Pakistani influence in Bangladesh.
Report warns of India potentially losing strategic space in Dhaka without timely recalibration.
Relevance
GS II – International Relations
India–Bangladesh bilateral relations
Neighbourhood First Policy
Political transitions in neighbouring countries
GS II – Foreign Policy & Diplomacy
Managing strategic influence amid China–Pakistan outreach
Diplomatic recalibration and institutional engagement
Core Assertion of the Report
India’s greatest strategic challenge in Bangladesh since 1971.
Contrast drawn:
1971: Existential, humanitarian crisis; birth of a new nation.
Today: Subtler but possibly graver challenge:
Generational political shift
Reorientation of strategic alignments
Risk of India becoming irrelevant, not threatened by war.
Background: India–Bangladesh Relations (Context)
Traditionally strong pillars:
Liberation War legacy (1971)
Close ties with Awami League
Cooperation on:
Counter-terrorism
Border management
Connectivity
River waters
India’s Bangladesh policy heavily leader-centric, anchored around Sheikh Hasina.
What Has Changed?
1. Political Transition
Collapse of Awami League dominance.
Rise of:
Youth-led nationalism
Anti-incumbency narratives
India perceived as:
Over-aligned with one political party
Insensitive to generational aspirations.
2. Generational Discontinuity
Younger Bangladeshi population:
Less emotionally tied to 1971 legacy.
More assertive about sovereignty.
India’s historic goodwill no longer automatic.
3. Resurgence of Islamists
Re-entry of Islamist groups into mainstream politics.
Raises concerns for:
Internal security
Cross-border extremism
Minority rights in Bangladesh.
4. Strategic Inroads by China & Pakistan
China:
Infrastructure, ports, power, digital systems.
Defence supplies and economic leverage.
Pakistan:
Intelligence and ideological outreach.
Bangladesh increasingly hedging between India and rivals.
The Hasina Asylum Issue
India’s Decision
India provided shelter to Sheikh Hasina after her ouster.
Parliamentary panel:
Endorses humanitarian and moral rationale.
Warns against political misuse of Indian soil.
Diplomatic Sensitivities
Bangladesh authorities accuse Hasina and associates of:
Inciting unrest.
Hasina:
Issuing statements via personal communication devices.
Indian position (as stated by Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri):
India does not provide a political platform.
No official facilitation of political activity from Indian territory.
Strategic Risks for India
1. Loss of Strategic Space
India risks being sidelined in:
Security cooperation
Infrastructure influence
Norm-setting in the region.
2. Border & Internal Security
Porous border + political instability:
Risks of radicalisation
Smuggling
Insurgent revival.
3. Neighbourhood First Policy at Stake
Bangladesh is:
India’s most critical eastern neighbour.
Gateway to Northeast India and Act East Policy.
Erosion here undermines India’s regional credibility.
Committee’s Warning
Risk is not war, but irrelevance.
Strategic loss through:
Inattention
Overdependence on past alignments
Failure to engage emerging political forces.
What Recalibration Means for India ?
1. De-hyphenate from One-Party Dependence
Engage:
Opposition parties
Civil society
Youth groups
Shift from leader-centric to institutional engagement.
2. Narrative Reset
Move beyond 1971-centric diplomacy.
Address:
Economic aspirations
Employment
Climate vulnerability
Digital economy cooperation.
3. Strategic Competition Management
Offer credible alternatives to Chinese financing:
Quality infrastructure
Transparent development projects
Strengthen people-to-people ties:
Education
Health
Skill development.
4. Clear Red Lines on Security
Zero tolerance on:
Anti-India terror activities
Radical networks.
Quiet but firm security cooperation.
Retired judges don’t want to sit as junior ad hoc judges: CJI
Why is it in News?
December 2025: Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant disclosed that retired High Court judges are reluctant to return as ad hoc judges mainly due to institutional and personal discomfort—being “embarrassed” to sit as junior judges with younger serving judges.
Comes after the Supreme Court (January 2025) activated Article 224A to tackle massive criminal case pendency in High Courts.
Despite the ruling, many High Courts have not proposed names, leading to poor uptake.
Relevance
GS II – Polity & Constitution
Judiciary and constitutional provisions (Article 224A)
Separation of powers
Judicial independence and accountability
GS II – Governance
Pendency of cases and access to justice
Institutional reforms in higher judiciary
Scale of the Problem (Data)
Pending criminal cases in High Courts: 18,98,833 (25 HCs).
Cases pending >1 year: 68.27% (≈ 12,96,374).
Sanctioned HC judge strength: 1,122.
Vacancies (as of 15 Dec 2025): 298 (~26.6%).
Worst-affected HCs noted: Allahabad, Punjab & Haryana, Patna.
Constitutional Basics: Article 224A
Provision: Appointment of retired High Court judges as ad hoc judges.
Authority:
Initiated by Chief Justice of the High Court.
Requires consent of the retired judge.
President appoints after consultation.
Purpose: Temporary augmentation to clear arrears, especially criminal appeals.
Status: Not a substitute for regular appointments; a stop-gap measure.
Supreme Court’s Intervention
January 2025 judgment (building on April 2021 ruling):
Reactivated Article 224A.
Urged HCs to use ad hoc judges selectively for criminal backlogs.
Emphasised structured deployment and time-bound mandates.
Why Is the Uptake Poor?
1. Hierarchy & Bench Dynamics
Criminal appeals typically heard by Division Benches.
Retired judges feel discomfort sitting as junior members under younger judges.
Serving judges question sitting with a retired judge heading the Bench.
Result: Mutual hesitation disrupts bench formation.
2. Institutional Culture
Strong seniority norms in Indian judiciary.
Lack of clear protocols on bench composition involving ad hoc judges.
Perceived dilution of institutional authority.
3. Administrative Inertia
Several HCs have not forwarded names to the Supreme Court.
Absence of:
Incentive structures
Clear tenure/role clarity
Dedicated case allocation mechanisms.
Critical Assessment of Article 224A as a Solution
Strengths
Quick augmentation without long appointment cycles.
Utilises experienced judicial capital.
Focused relief for criminal appeals.
Limitations
Not scalable without cultural acceptance.
Risks creating a parallel, temporary judiciary.
Does not address root causes:
Chronic vacancies
Appointment delays
Procedural inefficiencies.
Structural Causes of High Court Pendency
Persistent vacancies due to:
Delayed collegium recommendations
Executive–judiciary friction
Rising criminalisation and complex litigation.
Limited judge-to-population ratio.
Inadequate case management and listing practices.
Way Forward
1. Normalize Article 224A Usage
Clear guidelines on:
Bench composition
Seniority protocol
Role clarity for ad hoc judges
Fixed-term, outcome-linked assignments.
2. Fix the Core Deficit
Fill sanctioned vacancies on priority.
Time-bound appointment processes.
Consider raising sanctioned strength in high-load HCs.
3. Procedural & Managerial Reforms
Dedicated criminal appeal benches.
Enhanced case-flow management.
Technology-driven listing and prioritisation.
4. Alternative Capacity Measures
Strengthen evening courts / special benches.
Expand judicial clerkship and research support.
Promote plea bargaining and ADR where appropriate.
IDF Diabetes Atlas 2025
Why is it in News?
2025: 11th edition of the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) Diabetes Atlas released.
Key findings published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology (2025).
Projects a sharp global rise in diabetes prevalence by 2050, with middle-income countries bearing the heaviest burden.
Relevance
GS II – Social Justice & Health
Public health challenges
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs)
Universal Health Coverage
GS III – Human Capital & Development
Productivity loss due to lifestyle diseases
Demographic transition and health burden
What is the IDF Diabetes Atlas?
Flagship epidemiological assessment by the International Diabetes Federation.
Estimates:
Prevalence
Trends
Projections of diabetes (ages 20–79).
Used by:
WHO
National health policymakers
Global health financing agencies.
Key Global Findings (Data-driven)
1. Scale of the Epidemic
2024:
People living with diabetes: ~580 million adults
Prevalence: 11.11% of global adult population
2050 (Projected):
Affected population: ~850–900 million adults
Prevalence: 12.96%
Diabetes growth is structural, not cyclical.
2. Income-Level Distribution
Middle-income countries:
Highest prevalence and fastest growth.
Reflects:
Rapid urbanisation
Lifestyle transition
Nutrition shift without commensurate healthcare access.
3. Urban–Rural Divide
2024:
Urban: ~400 million
Rural: ~189 million
2050 (Projected):
Urban: ~655 million
Rural: ~198 million
Indicates:
Diabetes increasingly an urbanisation-linked disease.
Rural burden stagnates but does not decline.
Country-wise Diabetes Load (Top 10 Focus)
2024 Rankings
China: ~148 million
India: ~90 million
United States
Pakistan
2050 Projections
China and India retain top two positions.
Pakistan projected to rise to 3rd, overtaking the US.
South and East Asia emerge as the global diabetes epicentre.
Why Is Diabetes Rising?
1. Lifestyle Transition
Sedentary work
Reduced physical activity
Ultra-processed food consumption
2. Urbanisation without Health Planning
Poor walkability
Stressful urban living
Inadequate preventive health systems
3. Demographic & Metabolic Factors
Population ageing
Early-life malnutrition → adult metabolic disorders
Genetic susceptibility (notably South Asians)
India-Specific Implications
Epidemiological Transition
Shift from communicable to non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
Diabetes now:
A leading cause of cardiovascular disease
Major driver of kidney failure and blindness.
Health System Stress
Long-term care costs
Productivity losses
Increased out-of-pocket expenditure
Policy & Governance Significance
Global Health
Diabetes threatens:
SDG 3 (Good Health & Well-being)
Universal Health Coverage goals
Requires preventive-first approach.
India’s Policy Landscape
National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases & Stroke (NPCDCS).
Ayushman Bharat:
HWCs for early screening
PM-JAY for tertiary care
Gap remains in:
Urban public health
Lifestyle modification at scale.
Expert Warning
Diabetes epidemic has continued unchecked since 2000.
Stronger action needed to:
Slow progression
Delay onset
Reduce complications
Way Forward
1. Population-Level Prevention
Fiscal tools:
Sugar-sweetened beverage taxation
Urban planning:
Active mobility infrastructure
Food labelling and marketing regulations
2. Early Detection & Management
Universal screening after 30 years.
Integration with primary healthcare.
Digital health monitoring.
3. Focus on High-Burden Countries
Targeted financing for middle-income countries.
South Asia–centric strategies.
Securities Market Code Bill, 2025
Why is it in News?
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman tabled the Securities Market Code Bill, 2025 in the Lok Sabha.
Referred to the Standing Committee on Finance.
Implements a reform announced in Union Budget 2021–22 to modernise India’s securities market regulation.
Relevance
GS III – Economy
Capital markets and financial regulation
Investor protection and market efficiency
Ease of doing business
GS II – Polity & Governance
Regulatory institutions (SEBI)
Parliamentary oversight and delegated legislation
Separation of powers concerns
What is the Securities Market Code Bill, 2025?
A consolidation and rationalisation law for securities markets.
Seeks to unify three major legislations:
Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act, 1956
SEBI Act, 1992
Depositories Act, 1996
Objective:
Provide a single, coherent regulatory framework
Enhance investor protection
Enable capital mobilisation at scale
Reduce regulatory fragmentation
Rationale for the Bill
Existing framework:
Multiple overlapping laws
Procedural complexity
Inconsistent enforcement provisions
Global context:
Need for agile capital markets
Alignment with modern regulatory best practices
Policy logic:
Ease of doing business + effective deterrence
Key Provisions of the Bill
1. Consolidation of Securities Laws
Replaces three separate Acts with one unified Code.
Benefits:
Legal clarity
Reduced compliance duplication
Faster adjudication and enforcement
2. Expansion of SEBI Board
SEBI strength increased:
From 9 members → 15 members
Composition:
Chairperson
2 Central Government nominees (ex-officio)
1 RBI nominee (ex-officio)
11 other members
At least 5 whole-time members
Current situation:
Only 3 whole-time members
Objective:
Strengthen institutional capacity
Improve sectoral expertise and oversight
3. Conflict of Interest Disclosure
Mandatory disclosure of:
Direct or indirect interests by SEBI Board members.
Intended outcome:
Institutional integrity
Transparency in decision-making
Reduced regulatory capture risk
4. Decriminalisation of Minor Violations
Shifts “minor, procedural, technical” violations:
From criminal prosecution → civil penalties
Criminal liability retained only for serious market abuse:
Insider trading
Trading on material non-public information
Rationale:
Faster enforcement
Reduced compliance burden
Business-friendly regulatory environment
5. Civil Penalties Framework
Introduces civil penalties for:
Unlawful gains or losses
Aligns punishment with:
Proportionality principle
Economic harm caused
6. Limitation on Inspections
No inspection allowed if:
8 years have passed since the date of contravention.
Purpose:
Legal certainty
Protection from indefinite regulatory exposure
Concern:
Potential weakening of long-term enforcement in complex frauds
Expert Assessment
Legal experts view changes as:
“Minor, procedural, and technical”
Aimed at balancing:
Speedy adjudication
Effective deterrence
Political & Constitutional Concerns Raised
Opposition’s Objections
Raised by:
DMK MP Arun Nehru
Congress MP Manish Tewari
Argument:
Excessive powers concentrated in SEBI
Violates the principle of separation of powers
Risk of over-centralised regulatory authority
Government’s Response
Finance Minister:
Defended referral to Standing Committee
Opened scope for parliamentary scrutiny and refinement
Critical Analysis
Strengths
Simplifies securities regulation.
Improves regulatory efficiency.
Reduces fear of criminalisation for genuine compliance lapses.
Strengthens SEBI’s institutional capacity.
Concerns
Over-centralisation of power in SEBI.
Eight-year inspection bar may:
Hinder investigation of long-running market manipulation.
Increased SEBI strength without:
Parallel accountability mechanisms.
Broader Significance
Economic
Supports:
Capital market deepening
Startup and MSME fund-raising
Long-term infrastructure financing
Governance
Reflects shift from:
Punitive regulation → trust-based compliance
Tests balance between:
Regulatory autonomy
Parliamentary oversight
Bharat Stage–VI (BS-VI) Emission Norms
Why is it in News?
Delhi–NCR intensified enforcement against older, non-BS-VI private vehicles amid severe winter air pollution.
Clarification issued that vehicles bought/registered after April 1, 2020 are BS-VI compliant, while older vehicles face:
Entry restrictions
Fines
Deregistration or scrappage-linked action
Public confusion over how to identify BS-VI vehicles triggered policy and enforcement debates.
Relevance
GS III – Environment & Ecology , Science & Techology
Air pollution and mitigation strategies
Vehicular emissions and urban air quality
Climate co-benefits (black carbon reduction)
What are Bharat Stage (BS) Emission Norms?
Bharat Stage norms are India’s vehicle emission standards.
Aim:
Regulate pollutants from internal combustion engines.
Pattern:
Broadly aligned with European (Euro) standards.
Progression:
BS-I → BS-II → BS-III → BS-IV → BS-VI
India skipped BS-V to fast-track pollution control.
What is BS-VI?
BS-VI implemented nationwide from 1 April 2020.
Applies to:
Petrol vehicles
Diesel vehicles
Two-wheelers, cars, commercial vehicles
Covers:
Vehicle engine standards
Fuel quality standards
How to Identify a BS-VI Vehicle?
Registration Certificate (RC):
Emission norm mentioned as BS-VI.
Fuel/engine label:
Often marked by manufacturer.
VAHAN portal / mParivahan app:
Official verification.
Key rule:
Registered on or after 1 April 2020 → BS-VI compliant
Vehicles registered before April 2020 → not BS-VI, even if upgraded later.
What Changed from BS-IV to BS-VI?
1. Emission Limits (Diesel Cars)
Nitrogen Oxides (NOx):
Reduced by ~68%
Particulate Matter (PM):
Reduced by ~82%
2. Emission Limits (Petrol Cars)
Significant reduction in:
NOx
Hydrocarbons
3. Fuel Quality
Sulphur content:
BS-IV: 50 ppm
BS-VI: 10 ppm
Enables:
Advanced emission-control systems
Longer engine life
Cleaner exhaust
4. Advanced Technologies
Diesel vehicles:
Diesel Particulate Filter (DPF)
Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR)
Petrol vehicles:
Improved catalytic converters
Mandatory On-Board Diagnostics (OBD).
Why Are Older Vehicles More Polluting?
Lack advanced emission-control systems.
Higher emissions of:
NOx
PM2.5 and PM10
Diesel vehicles particularly harmful:
Fine particulates penetrate lungs and bloodstream.
Urban impact:
Vehicles contribute disproportionately to winter smog due to:
Temperature inversion
Low wind speeds
Why Does Delhi–NCR Enforce Stricter Rules?
Delhi introduced tighter emission norms earlier than the rest of India.
Context:
Extremely high vehicular density
Unfavourable meteorology
Judicial backing:
Supreme Court–mandated measures
GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan)
Data cited by authorities:
~37% of vehicles in NCR are highly polluting, mostly older models.
Health & Environmental Rationale
Health Impact
Vehicular pollution linked to:
Asthma
Chronic bronchitis
Cardiovascular diseases
PM2.5 classified as carcinogenic by WHO.
Environmental Impact
Formation of:
Urban smog
Ground-level ozone
Long-term climate co-benefits:
Lower black carbon emissions.
Economic & Social Implications
Positive
Cleaner air
Reduced public health expenditure
Push towards:
Cleaner fuels
Electric vehicles
Challenges
Costlier BS-VI vehicles.
Maintenance issues:
DPF clogging in low-speed urban driving.
Impact on lower-income vehicle owners.
Policy Linkages
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP)
Vehicle Scrappage Policy
FAME scheme (EV push)
GRAP for Delhi–NCR
Critical Issues & Concerns
Enforcement-heavy approach:
Risks social backlash.
Air pollution is multi-source:
Construction dust
Biomass burning
Industrial emissions
BS-VI alone cannot solve urban air pollution.
Way Forward
Combine BS-VI enforcement with:
Public transport expansion
EV adoption
Urban planning reforms
Scrappage incentives over punitive bans.
Fuel quality monitoring nationwide.
Address non-vehicular pollution sources.
India–Oman CEPA (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement)
Why is it in News?
December 2025: India and Oman signed a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) in Muscat.
Marks:
India’s second CEPA in West Asia after UAE
A strategic response to:
Rising global trade protectionism (US tariffs, EU CBAM-type measures)
India’s need to de-risk supply chains away from China
Basics: What is a CEPA?
A deep, comprehensive trade agreement, broader than a Free Trade Agreement (FTA).
Covers:
Trade in goods
Trade in services
Investment
Mobility of professionals
Customs cooperation, standards, dispute settlement
India’s existing CEPAs:
UAE, Australia (ECTA), Japan, South Korea, now Oman
Key Provisions of India–Oman CEPA
1. Market Access – Goods
Oman → India
98.08% of tariff lines made duty-free
Covers 99.38% of India’s exports to Oman
One of the most liberal tariff concessions Oman has offered globally
India → Oman
Liberalisation of 77.79% of tariff lines
Covers 94.81% of India’s imports from Oman
2. Trade in Services (High Relevance for India)
Enhanced market access for Indian service providers in:
IT & IT-enabled services
Engineering & consultancy
Healthcare
Education & training
Mobility provisions:
Easier movement of Indian professionals
Recognition of qualifications through Mutual Recognition Agreements (MRAs) (to be operationalised)
Sector-specific gains:
Nursing quotas in some categories raised from 20% to 50%
3. Investment & Business Facilitation
Predictable and transparent investment regime
Protection against arbitrary regulatory measures
Encourages:
Indian investment in Omani ports, logistics, hydrocarbons, renewables
Omani sovereign investment in Indian infrastructure and manufacturing
India–Oman Trade Snapshot (Data-driven)
Total bilateral trade (2024–25): ~USD 10.6 billion
India’s exports to Oman:
USD 4.06 billion
0.93% of India’s total exports
India’s imports from Oman:
USD 6.5 billion
0.91% of India’s total imports
India runs a trade deficit, largely due to energy imports
CEPA aims to narrow the deficit through export expansion
Composition of Trade (2024–25)
India’s Key Exports
Machinery & mechanical appliances
Inorganic and organic chemicals
Aircraft parts
Plastics, textiles, jewellery
Mineral fuels (re-exports)
Export basket is manufacturing-intensive, aligned with Make in India
India’s Key Imports
Crude oil & LNG-related products
Bituminous substances
Fertilisers
Iron ore and minerals
Strategic Significance for India
1. Economic Significance
Boosts exports of:
Engineering goods
Pharmaceuticals
Automobiles & auto components
Textiles and food products
Reduces tariff disadvantage vis-à-vis:
China
ASEAN exporters
Facilitates India’s integration into Gulf and global value chains
2. Strategic & Geopolitical Significance
Oman’s geostrategic location:
At the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz
Gateway to West Asia, East Africa, and Europe
Strengthens India’s:
West Asia outreach
Maritime security interests
Complements India’s engagement with:
GCC
I2U2
Indo-Pacific trade diversification
3. Energy Security Dimension
Oman is a key supplier of:
Crude oil
LNG
CEPA deepens long-term energy partnerships
New cooperation avenues:
Green hydrogen
Petrochemicals
Renewables and energy storage
Energy transition technologies
4. Labour & Diaspora Dimension
Large Indian workforce in Oman
CEPA improves:
Job security
Professional mobility
Services export earnings
Supports India’s human capital export strategy
Why Oman Matters in India’s West Asia Strategy ?
1. Trade & Logistics Hub
Ports such as Duqm, Sohar, Salalah:
Less congested alternatives to Gulf hubs
Gateways to Africa and Mediterranean markets
Supports India’s hub-and-spoke trade model
2. Supply Chain De-risking
Oman offers:
Political stability
Neutral foreign policy
Strong maritime connectivity
Helps India reduce dependence on:
China-centric value chains
Protectionist Western markets
3. West Asia Reset
Shifts India’s engagement from:
Energy-only and diaspora-centric ties
Towards:
Trade–investment–technology partnership
Complements UAE CEPA:
UAE as financial/re-export hub
Oman as logistics and gateway hub
Together, anchor India’s western maritime arc
Concerns & Challenges
Trade volumes still modest relative to potential
Persistent trade imbalance
Risks for Indian MSMEs:
Limited awareness
Compliance and certification costs
Non-tariff barriers
Services gains depend on:
Effective implementation of mobility provisions
Way Forward
Establish CEPA utilisation cells for exporters and MSMEs
Fast-track:
Mutual Recognition Agreements (MRAs)
Skill and qualification recognition
Use Oman as:
A platform, not merely a destination market
Integrate CEPA with:
Make in India
PM Gati Shakti
India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC)