Content
Malayalam Language Bill, 2025
Futuristic Marine and Space Biotechnology
NGT’s Suo Motu Action on Sewage-Contaminated Drinking Water
Ganga Biodiversity Recovery
INS Kaudinya’s Voyage to Muscat
Malayalam Language Bill, 2025
Why in News ?
Kerala government tabled and passed the Malayalam Language Bill, 2025 in the Kerala Legislative Assembly on 6 October 2025.
Bill has been passed after Subject Committee scrutiny and awaits Governor’s assent.
Karnataka government has opposed the Bill, calling it unconstitutional and harmful to Kannada-speaking linguistic minorities, especially in Kasaragod district.
Relevance
GS II – Polity & Governance
Official language policy; Centre–State relations.
Linguistic minorities’ rights (Articles 29–30, 345–347).
Role of Governor; federal accommodation in border regions.
What Does the Malayalam Language Bill, 2025 Entail?
Core Provisions
Malayalam formally adopted as the official language of Kerala.
Currently: Malayalam + English recognised.
Mandates use of Malayalam across:
Government administration
Education
Judiciary (phased translation of judgments)
Public communication
Commerce
Digital governance (IT domain)
All Bills and Ordinances to be introduced in Malayalam.
Education-Related Provisions
Malayalam to be the compulsory first language:
In government and aided schools
Up to Class 10
Does not automatically apply to:
Unaided private schools
CBSE/ICSE unless notified separately.
Institutional & Administrative Measures
Renaming of:
Personnel and Administrative Reforms (Official Language) Department → Malayalam Language Development Department.
Creation of:
Malayalam Language Development Directorate.
Role of IT Department:
Develop open-source software & digital tools to promote Malayalam in e-governance and IT.
Has a Similar Bill Been Introduced Earlier?
Yes (Over a decade ago):
Kerala had earlier attempted legislation to strengthen Malayalam’s official use.
The earlier initiative did not reach full statutory implementation.
2025 Bill is more comprehensive, covering:
Education, judiciary, IT, and digital governance.
Why Has Karnataka Opposed the Bill?
Core Objections
Impact on Kannada linguistic minority in Kerala, particularly:
Kasaragod district, a border region.
Key concern:
Students currently studying Kannada as first language may be forced to shift to Malayalam.
Data cited:
Kannada medium schools in Kasaragod declined from 197 to 192 in recent years.
Karnataka’s fear:
Bill could accelerate erosion of Kannada language presence in Kerala.
Constitutional Objection
Bill allegedly violates:
Rights of linguistic minorities.
Spirit of Articles 29 and 30 (cultural & educational rights).
Karnataka CM has stated:
State will use all constitutional remedies, including approaching the President.
Does the Bill Make Malayalam Mandatory Across All Schools?
Clear Answer: No (with qualifications)
Mandatory only for government and aided schools.
Applies only up to Class 10.
Special protections exist for linguistic minorities (see below).
Private unaided institutions retain flexibility, subject to policy rules.
Kerala Government’s Defence
Linguistic Minority Safeguards
Special provisions for linguistic minorities:
Tamil, Kannada, Tulu, Konkani speakers.
Minority citizens allowed to:
Use mother tongue for correspondence with:
State Secretariat
Heads of Departments
Local government offices in minority-dominated areas.
Legal & Constitutional Alignment
Kerala CM argues:
Bill aligned with:
Official Languages Act, 1963
Article 346 – Language for inter-State communication.
Article 347 – Recognition of minority languages in States.
Non-obstante clause (Clause 7):
Overrides general provisions to protect linguistic minorities.
Federal & Constitutional Dimensions
Relevant Constitutional Articles
Article 345 – State legislature may adopt official language(s).
Article 346–347 – Inter-State communication & minority language recognition.
Articles 29–30 – Protection of minority culture and education.
Core Federal Issue
Balance between:
State’s right to promote its official language
Minority linguistic rights in border regions
Raises questions of:
Cooperative federalism
Cultural accommodation vs linguistic homogenisation.
Governance & Policy Analysis
Merits
Strengthens:
Cultural identity
Vernacular governance
Access to justice (translated judgments)
Supports:
Digital inclusion through language tech.
Aligns with:
NEP 2020 emphasis on mother tongue education.
Challenges
Border districts with mixed populations.
Declining minority-language institutions.
Potential:
Inter-State linguistic friction.
Politicisation of language policy.
Way Forward
Explicit statutory exemptions for border linguistic pockets.
District-wise language flexibility in education.
Inter-State dialogue mechanisms under Inter-State Council.
Periodic review of minority-language school viability.
Judicial clarity post-Governor assent, if challenged.
Prelims Pointers
Bill year: 2025
Applies to: Government & aided schools
Mandatory language: Malayalam (first language, up to Class 10)
Special clause for linguistic minorities: Yes (Clause 7)
Opposition State: Karnataka
Border district concerned: Kasaragod
What is Futuristic Marine and Space Biotechnology?
Core Concept
Futuristic biotechnology exploits extreme and underexplored environments:
Deep oceans
Outer space
Objective:
Generate new biological knowledge
Develop novel materials, processes, and biomanufacturing pathways
Relevance
GS III – Science & Technology / Economy
Biotechnology, biomanufacturing, frontier technologies.
Blue Economy, Deep Ocean Mission, BioE3.
Space applications: microgravity biology, long-duration missions.
GS II – Governance
Mission-mode programmes; science policy coordination.
Marine Biotechnology
Focus areas:
Marine microorganisms
Algae & seaweeds
Deep-sea organisms
Products & applications:
Bioactive compounds (drugs, nutraceuticals)
Enzymes
Biomaterials
Food ingredients
Biostimulants
Unique advantage:
Organisms adapted to high pressure, salinity, low light, nutrient-poor conditions
Leads to novel molecules not found on land
Space Biotechnology
Studies biological systems under:
Microgravity
Cosmic radiation
Focus:
Microbial behaviour
Plant growth
Human physiology
Applications:
Closed-loop life-support systems
Space food production
Drug discovery & protein crystallisation
Regenerative medicine
Long-duration human space missions
Global Landscape
European Union
Large-scale funding for:
Marine bioprospecting
Algae-based biomaterials
Bioactive compounds
Institutional strength:
Shared research infrastructure such as European Marine Biological Resource Centre (EMBRC).
Policy approach:
Integration of research, sustainability, and industrial strategy.
China
Rapid expansion of:
Seaweed aquaculture
Marine bioprocessing
Focus on:
Scale
Export-oriented marine bio-products.
United States
Leadership in space biotechnology:
NASA + International Space Station.
Research domains:
Microbial behaviour
Protein crystallisation
Stem cells
Closed-loop life-support
Spillover benefits:
Drug discovery
Regenerative medicine
Space manufacturing.
Why Does India Need Marine & Space Biotechnology?
Natural Endowments
Coastline: ~11,000 km
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ): ~2 million sq. km
Rich marine biodiversity & biomass.
Strategic Rationale
India’s share in global marine bio-output remains low → underutilised potential.
Marine biomanufacturing can:
Unlock new sources of:
Food
Energy
Chemicals
Biomaterials
Reduce pressure on:
Land
Freshwater
Agriculture
Space biotechnology is essential for:
Human spaceflight
Long-term space habitation
Advanced biomanufacturing under extreme conditions.
Where Does India Stand Today?
Marine Biotechnology
Seaweed cultivation:
~70,000 tonnes annually (modest by global standards).
Dependence:
Imports agar, carrageenan, alginates for:
Food
Pharma
Cosmetics
Medical applications.
Policy push:
Blue Economy agenda
Deep Ocean Mission
BioE3 (Biotechnology for Economy, Environment & Employment).
Emerging ecosystem:
Private players:
Sea6 Energy
ClimaCrew
Public institutions:
ICAR–Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute
State initiatives:
Vibrant Gujarat Regional Conference.
Space Biotechnology
ISRO’s microgravity biology programme:
Experiments on:
Microbes
Algae
Biological systems.
Research objectives:
Food production in space
Life-support regeneration
Human health management under microgravity.
Why Are These “Futuristic” Frontiers?
Strategic Characteristics
High entry barriers.
Long gestation periods.
First-mover advantage leads to:
Technological leadership
Standard-setting power
Strategic autonomy.
Key Challenges for India
Fragmented R&D efforts.
Limited scale of marine biomass production.
Weak linkage between:
Research
Manufacturing
Markets.
Absence of:
Dedicated national roadmap
Clear timelines & outcome metrics.
Way Forward
Strategic Interventions
Develop a dedicated national roadmap for:
Marine biotechnology
Space biotechnology.
Define:
Clear milestones
Funding priorities
Translational pathways.
Strengthen:
Shared research infrastructure.
Public–private partnerships.
Integrate:
BioE3
Blue Economy
Space missions with biomanufacturing goals.
Promote:
Downstream biomanufacturing
Export-oriented marine bio-products.
Prelims Pointers
Marine biotechnology exploits extreme marine environments.
Space biotechnology studies biology in microgravity & radiation.
India seaweed output: ~70,000 tonnes/year.
Key missions:
Deep Ocean Mission
BioE3
ISRO microgravity biology programme.
NGT Suo Motu on Sewage-Contaminated Drinking Water
Why in News ?
National Green Tribunal (NGT) took suo motu cognisance of media reports on sewage contamination of drinking water in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh.
Principal Bench (Chairperson Prakash Shrivastava, Expert Member A. Senthil Vel) issued notices to State governments and concerned agencies; sought affidavits.
Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) directed to file a response.
Cities cited: Udaipur, Jodhpur, Kota, Banswara, Jaipur, Ajmer, Bora (Rajasthan); Greater Noida (UP); Bhopal, Indore (MP).
Relevance
GS III – Environment
Water pollution, urban environmental governance.
Enforcement of Water Act, 1974 & EPA, 1986.
GS II – Polity & Governance
Role of NGT; environmental adjudication.
ULB responsibilities (Art. 243W).
Facts & Evidence
Reports indicate decades-old, corroded pipelines with drinking water lines passing through open sewage drains.
Health impacts:
Greater Noida: residents (including children) reported vomiting and diarrhoea.
Bhopal: E. coli detected in drinking water due to sewage leakage into tube-wells.
Indore: at least six deaths linked to consumption of contaminated piped water.
NGT’s prima facie finding: violations of:
Environment (Protection) Act, 1986
Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974
NGT’s Jurisdiction & Legal Basis
Suo motu powers: NGT can act on its own based on credible information (including news reports) where environmental harm is alleged.
Mandate:
Adjudication of disputes under environmental laws.
Polluter Pays, Precautionary Principle, Sustainable Development.
Why Water Contamination fits NGT:
Drinking water contamination is both environmental pollution and public health risk.
Direct linkage to Water Act, 1974 and EPA, 1986.
Issues Identified by NGT
Infrastructure failure:
Aging pipelines, corrosion, poor maintenance.
Governance gaps:
Inadequate surveillance, delayed repairs, weak accountability of Urban Local Bodies (ULBs).
Public health emergency:
Water-borne diseases; risk amplification in dense urban settings.
Regulatory non-compliance:
Failure to prevent sewage ingress; unsafe distribution systems.
Constitutional & Governance Dimensions
Article 21: Right to life includes right to safe drinking water (SC jurisprudence).
Article 243W & 12th Schedule: ULBs responsible for water supply and sanitation—capacity and funding gaps evident.
Centre–State–ULB coordination:
CPCB/SPCB oversight vs municipal execution—fragmentation highlighted.
Environmental & Public Health Linkages
Water-borne pathogens (e.g., E. coli) signal faecal contamination.
Environmental neglect translates into acute health crises—NGT bridges this interface.
Reinforces One Health perspective (environment–animal–human health continuum).
Accountability & Compliance
Affidavits detailing:
Source of contamination; pipeline maps; age and material of networks.
Immediate containment steps; chlorination and flushing protocols.
Health surveillance data and compensation, if any.
Action plans:
Time-bound replacement of pipelines; separation of sewer and water lines.
Continuous water quality monitoring; public disclosure.
Liability:
Fixing responsibility on agencies; application of Polluter Pays where applicable.
Challenges
Chronic underinvestment in urban water infrastructure.
Lack of real-time water quality monitoring at distribution endpoints.
Poor asset management and GIS mapping.
Reactive responses post-outbreak rather than preventive maintenance.
Way Forward
Immediate:
Emergency disinfection, alternate safe water supply, health camps.
Short-term:
Audit and replace corroded pipelines; ensure physical separation from sewers.
Ward-level water testing with public dashboards.
Medium-term:
Asset management plans; leak detection; pressure management.
Strengthen SPCBs/ULBs with funds and technical capacity.
Regulatory:
Enforce Water Act standards; penalties for non-compliance.
Institutionalise NGT directions into municipal SOPs.
Prelims Pointers
NGT can take suo motu cognisance of environmental violations.
Water contamination falls under Water Act, 1974 and EPA, 1986.
CPCB is the apex technical body at the Centre.
E. coli indicates faecal contamination.
Ganga Biodiversity Recovery: Fish Species & Gharials
Why in News ?
230 fish species recorded in the Ganga River, the highest in ~50 years.
Over 3,000 gharials documented across the Ganges basin.
Findings from nationwide scientific assessments led by ICAR institutes and wildlife agencies.
Relevance
GS III – Environment & Ecology
River ecology, freshwater biodiversity, flagship species conservation.
Outcomes of Namami Gange; e-flow norms.
GS II – Governance
Basin-level, inter-State coordination.
Fish Diversity (Freshwater Biodiversity)
Survey agency: ICAR-CIFRI.
Coverage:
2,525 km of the Ganga mainstem.
67 tributaries + 6 floodplain wetlands.
Trend:
1822: 271 species
1974: 150 species
2004: 104 species
2023: 230 species (strong recovery signal).
High-diversity sites:
Farakka (109 spp.)
Buxar (85)
Baharampore (76)
Low-diversity sites:
Diamond Harbour (38)
Gadkhali (32)
Gharial Status (Flagship Indicator Species)
Assessment led by Wildlife Institute of India with partners.
Basin-wide count: >3,000 gharials.
Strongholds:
Chambal River (≈2,097 individuals).
Other rivers (Gandak, Ghaghara, Son, Ganga):
Much lower encounter rates (~0.02 per km surveyed).
Context:
Gharial = Critically Endangered; recovery indicates improved riverine conditions in select stretches.
What Explains the Recovery?
Governance & Policy Drivers
Namami Gange Mission:
Improved sewage treatment capacity.
Reduced industrial effluents.
River habitat interventions:
Wetland restoration.
Environmental flow (e-flow) norms.
Fisheries management:
Ranching & restocking by ICAR-CIFRI (e.g., ~47 lakh fish juveniles released since 2010; ~6,031 tagged).
Environmental Significance
Fish diversity = proxy for:
Water quality
Habitat connectivity
Flow regimes.
Gharials = apex, flow-dependent species:
Require deep, sandy banks and clean water.
Signals partial success of river rejuvenation, though spatially uneven.
Governance & Federal Dimensions
Multi-agency coordination:
ICAR, State fisheries departments, SPCBs, wildlife agencies.
River basin approach:
Tributaries and wetlands critical—not just the main river.
Need for inter-State coordination across the Ganga basin.
Economic & Livelihood Angle
Inland fisheries:
Support nutrition and livelihoods.
Biodiversity recovery can raise sustainable yields.
Eco-tourism potential:
Gharial and dolphin habitats (with safeguards).
Challenges
Spatial disparity:
Recovery concentrated in few stretches; delta & lower reaches lag.
Anthropogenic pressures persist:
Sand mining, barrages, fishing bycatch.
Flow fragmentation:
Dams/barrages affect migratory species and gharials.
Data continuity:
Need for long-term, standardised monitoring.
Way Forward
Scale basin-wide habitat restoration (tributaries + floodplains).
Strengthen e-flow enforcement and fish passages at barrages.
Expand community-based fisheries management.
Protect gharial nesting sites; reduce bycatch with gear modifications.
Integrate biodiversity metrics into Namami Gange performance dashboards.
Prelims Pointers
Highest fish species count in Ganga in ~50 years: 230.
Apex research body for inland fisheries: ICAR-CIFRI.
Gharial status: Critically Endangered.
Gharial stronghold: Chambal River.
Fish diversity hotspots vary significantly along the river.
INS Kaudinya Voyage to Muscat
Why in News ?
INS Kaudinya successfully completed a historic voyage to Muscat (Oman).
The journey recreated ancient Indian Ocean trade routes using a hand-stitched wooden ship, based on traditional shipbuilding techniques.
The expedition commemorates India’s maritime heritage and civilisational links with West Asia, especially Oman.
Relevance
GS II – International Relations
Maritime diplomacy; India–Oman ties.
Soft power; Indian Ocean Region engagement.
GS III – Security
Maritime awareness; SAGAR doctrine.
What is INS Kaudinya?
A traditional hand-stitched wooden vessel, inspired by ancient Indian shipbuilding.
Built without modern metal fastenings:
Wooden planks stitched together using traditional methods.
Operated as a seagoing vessel, not merely a ceremonial replica.
Named after Kaudinya, an ancient Indian mariner associated with early Indian Ocean trade and cultural diffusion.
Historical & Civilisational Significance
Ancient Indian Ocean Trade
India maintained robust maritime trade with:
Oman
Arabia
East Africa
Southeast Asia
Traded goods included:
Spices
Textiles
Beads
Metalware
Indian merchants and sailors were key carriers of:
Commerce
Culture
Ideas
Muscat’s Importance
Muscat was a critical node in:
Indian Ocean trade networks.
Reflects centuries-old India–Oman maritime linkages.
Strategic & Geopolitical Relevance
Maritime Diplomacy
Voyage reinforces India’s soft power through civilisational diplomacy.
Strengthens ties with:
Oman
West Asia
Complements India’s:
Indo-Pacific vision
SAGAR doctrine (Security and Growth for All in the Region).
Cultural Diplomacy
Demonstrates India as a historical maritime civilisation, not only a continental power.
Aligns with:
Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam
People-to-people connect initiatives.
Technological & Knowledge Dimension
Indigenous Knowledge Systems
Validates:
Traditional shipbuilding
Indigenous maritime engineering
Shows:
Ancient Indian ships were deep-sea capable, not limited to coastal navigation.
Reinforces the importance of:
Documenting and reviving traditional technologies.
Security & Naval Dimension
Highlights:
Indian Navy’s role beyond combat—heritage, diplomacy, outreach.
Enhances:
Maritime awareness
Oceanic domain familiarity.
Symbolically supports:
India’s role as a net security provider in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR).
Cultural & Educational Value
Encourages:
Public interest in maritime history.
Academic research on Indian Ocean studies.
Counters narratives that:
Underplay India’s seafaring past.
Challenges & Critiques
Symbolic initiatives must be:
Backed by academic research.
Integrated into school curricula & museums.
Risk of:
Remaining a one-off event without sustained follow-up.
Way Forward
Coastal community engagement.
Institutionalise maritime heritage diplomacy through:
Regular heritage voyages.
Joint research with IOR countries.
Integrate findings into:
NCERT curricula.
Maritime museums & digital archives.
Link heritage initiatives with:
Contemporary Indo-Pacific strategy.